The number
of people seeking asylum in industrialized nations has risen by almost 25
percent in just one year, driven largely by wars in Syria and Iraq. Germany has
received the most claims.
Deutsche Welle, 25 Sep 2014
The UN
refugee agency said on Friday more people than ever are seeking asylum in
wealthy countries, largely because of war and instability in Syria, Iraq and
other global hotspots.
In the
first half of this year, around 330,700 people requested refugee status in
industrialized nations - a 24 percent increase on the same period in 2013.
Germany
topped the list of new asylum claims for the first time since 1999, with 65,700
applications - mainly due to a rise in applications from Syrians. That figure
was a 50 percent rise on January to June 2013 numbers.
Five
nations received almost two-thirds of new asylum claims - Germany, the United
States, France, Sweden and Turkey.
20-year
high
The overall
number for 2014 could top 700,000, "the highest total for industrialized
countries in 20 years and not seen since the 1990s conflict in former
Yugoslavia," the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) said.
"We
are clearly into an era of growing conflict," said UNHCR chief Antonio
Guterres.
"The
international community needs to prepare their populations for the reality that
in the absence of solutions to conflict, more and more people are going to need
refuge and care in the coming months and years," said Guterres, a former
prime minister of Portugal.
The EU's 28
member states registered 216,300 claims in the first half of 2014 - a 23
percent increase compared to last year. Italy, a frequent destination of people
escaping conflicts in the Middle East and Africa, had almost as many claims in
January to June 2014 as all of 2013.
But many
fail to reach Italy safely, with nearly 3,000 people dying in shipwrecks in the
Mediterranean this year.
Syria main
country of origin, Australia criticized
Claims
emerging from Syrians more than doubled in the first half of 2014, to 48,400.
That was followed by Iraq, with 21,300 applications, and Afghanistan's 19,300
claims.
The number
of asylum seekers in Australia fell by one-fifth, to 4,600. Australia has been
the target of UNHCR criticism over the past decade for sending refugees
arriving by boat to Pacific islands while their claims are assessed.
In a
separate statement on Friday, the UNHCR slammed Australia for a controversial
new deal, under which Canberra will start sending refugees to Cambodia.
jr/kms (Reuters, AFP)
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