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Migration: IOM, UNHCR urge EU countries to halt Mediterranean tragedies

The International Organisation for Migration (IOM), the UN Migration Agency and United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the UN Refugee Agency, and IOM are…

The International Organisation for Migration (IOM), the UN Migration Agency and United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the UN Refugee Agency, and IOM are appealing to European Union countries for concerted, region-wide action to greatly reduce needless loss of life at sea.

The two agencies who expressed concerns with the ongoing human tragedy in which almost 1,000 refugees and migrants have perished while being smuggled across the Mediterranean this year alone, said a new collaborative approach was needed to make disembarkation of people rescued at sea more predictable and manageable.

They said people rescued in international waters should be quickly brought ashore in safe locations in the EU, and potentially elsewhere too.

The approach needs to be complemented by more resettlement places, family reunification and other solutions within the EU, and increased support to countries where people are disembarked, they added.

“In the past 10 days we have had vessels on the Mediterranean Sea carrying rescued refugees and other migrants and unable to dock because of political deadlock in Europe.

"Upholding the right to asylum in EU Member States is absolutely crucial,” said UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi. “Denying rescue, or shifting responsibility for asylum elsewhere is completely unacceptable. We need countries to come together and chart a new way forward.”

“Our priority is saving the lives of all those who have been victimized by smugglers who cynically put men, women and children alike, into unsafe rafts on the high seas,” said William Lacy Swing, IOM’s Director General. “So far this year nearly 1,000 people have lost their lives due to this cruel calculus in which the smuggler always wins.”

Sea arrivals of refugees and migrants peaked in 2015 when more than a million desperate people crossed the Mediterranean to Europe and almost 5,000 died trying to make it.

Three years on, arrivals are back at pre-2014 levels and are dropping towards their long-term historic averages. So far, this year some 42,000 have crossed the Mediterranean to Europe, compared with 85,000 at the same period last year.
 

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