Arab News

Migrant arrivals in Germany drop in early 2017

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GENEVA: European countries must stop returning asylumseek­ers to Hungary due to deteriorat­ing conditions there for new arrivals including children, and allegation­s of abuse, the UN said Monday.

The situation for asylum-seekers and other migrants has long been considered dire in Hungary, but it has worsened since the country last month introduced a new law on the systematic detention of all asylum-seekers.

“I urge states to suspend any Dublin transfer of asylum-seekers to this country until the Hungarian authoritie­s bring their practices and policies in line with European and internatio­nal law,” said Filippo Grandi, UN High Commission­er for Refugees.

The so-called Dublin Regulation, which aims to stop people making asylum claims in multiple countries by requiring asylum-seekers to be sent back to the first European country they arrived in, applies to EU nations as well as nonmembers Switzerlan­d and Norway.

Grandi said he was “encouraged” by a European Commission decision to work with Hungarian authoritie­s in a bid to bring Budapest’s practices in line with EU law, but stressed in a statement that “urgent measures are needed to improve access to asylum in Hungary.”

The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) has repeatedly cautioned that Hungary’s use of physical barriers and restrictiv­e poli- cies basically deny the access to asylum guaranteed under internatio­nal law.

Since Hungary’s new law came into force on March 28, all new asylum-seekers, including children, have been “detained in shipping containers sur- rounded by high razor fences at the border for the entire length of their asylum procedures,” the UNHCR pointed out.

According to the government 324 shipping container homes have been installed at two separate locations called “transit zones” built into a fence that Hungary erected along the 175-km-long border in 2015.

The UNHCR warned last month that the new practice would “have a terrible physical and psychologi­cal impact on women, children and men who have already greatly suffered.”

As of last Friday, 110 people, including four unaccompan­ied children and children with their families, were being held there, the UNHCR said.

EU member Hungary previously sys- tematicall­y detained all asylum applicants but suspended the practice in 2013 under pressure from Brussels, the UN refugee agency and the European Court of Human Rights.

Grandi on Monday hailed recent efforts by Hungarian authoritie­s to address allegation­s of police violence.

But he said: “We remain very concerned about highly disturbing reports of serious incidents of ill-treatment and violence against people crossing the border into Hungary, including by state agents.

“These unacceptab­le practices must be brought to an end and I urge the Hungarian authoritie­s to further investigat­e any allegation of abuse and violence,” he added.

Meanwhile, new figures showed that the number of people applying for asylum in Germany has dropped steeply, a sign that a deal between the EU and Turkey to stem the flow of migrants is working.

The huge influx of migrants to Germany in the past two years has eroded the popularity of Chancellor Angela Merkel ahead of national elections in September and fueled the rise of the anti-immigrant Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD) party.

But the AfD has seen its support plunge in polls since the sharp slowdown in the flow of migrants after the deal between the EU and Ankara was reached a year ago.

Around 47,300 people arrived in Germany between January and March, mostly from Syria, Iraq and Afghanista­n, while 60,000 applied for asylum in that period, down two-thirds from the same period a year ago, the Interior Ministry said.

 ??  ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel talks with Aiman Mazyek, chairman of the Central Council of Muslims in Germany, on the sidelines of a recent meeting with representa­tives of refugee center organizati­ons in Berlin. (AFP)
German Chancellor Angela Merkel talks with Aiman Mazyek, chairman of the Central Council of Muslims in Germany, on the sidelines of a recent meeting with representa­tives of refugee center organizati­ons in Berlin. (AFP)

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