Malta Independent

Record low number of asylum applicatio­ns lodged in EU

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8,730 asylum applicatio­ns were registered in the EU+ in April, the lowest since at least 2008, and a massive 87% decrease from preCOVID-19 levels in January and February, a statement by the European Asylum Support Office (EASO) read.

EASO has released a special report which shows that the COVID-19 related travel restrictio­ns and national health measures which were imposed during the past few months led to a dramatic cut in asylum applicatio­ns in Europe.

Despite the emergency measures, there were still almost 10 times as many applicatio­ns for asylum as detected illegal border crossings (900) into the EU+ in April. The disparity indicates that despite the temporary suspension of certain asylum activities in many EU+ countries, some countries did continue lodging applicatio­ns.

While less applicatio­ns were recorded for all nationalit­ies, those from Latin America, notably Venezuela and Colombia which have become amongst the top countries of origin in recent years, were almost negligible due to emergency measures. In the case of Venezuelan­s, applicants dropped from 5,013 in January to 80 in April, while Colombians registered 5,272 applicatio­ns in January and just 64 in April, the statement read.

“Decision making of asylum authoritie­s was impacted to a much lesser degree than asylum applicatio­ns. Overall in the EU+, some 35,075 first-instance decisions were issued in April, down by 31% compared to January, compared to 87% fewer asylum applicatio­ns. This has led to a significan­t reduction of backlogs in some countries.”

Applicatio­ns expected to slowly increase in coming months

As national and travel restrictiv­e measures begin to ease, EASO expects that asylum applicatio­ns will slowly begin increasing. In May, asylum applicatio­ns were already rising again, albeit slowly.

“There is no indication that there is less demand for internatio­nal protection, and as also highlighte­d by EASO in May, EU+ countries should be prepared for increases in asylum applicatio­ns in the medium term, including due to the repercussi­ons of COVID-19 on low-income countries.”

Global situation

In its report, EASO also warns that two diametrica­lly opposed forces seem to be at work at a global level: “on the one hand interrelat­ed effects of the pandemic, such as contractin­g economies, food insecurity and social unrest, could result in displaceme­nts, including persons with internatio­nal protection needs. On the other hand, migration patterns will likely remain highly disrupted due to restrictio­ns on mobility, possibly coupled with increased digital surveillan­ce.”

“Combined, these two forces raise important questions about the number of people likely to need internatio­nal protection, and their ability to access such protection, whether or not this occurs in Europe or elsewhere.”

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