Daily Sabah (Turkey)

UN refugee chief slams Europe’s pushback of migrants

- DESIGNER VOLKAN ÇOLAK

THE U.N. refugee chief yesterday lambasted countries that close their doors to desperate migrants and Europe’s “shameful” refusal to allow migrants stranded at sea to disembark quickly.

Filippo Grandi, the U.N. high commission­er for refugees, said migrants and refugees around the world were continuing to take dangerous routes toward safety and opportunit­y. The solution for their destinatio­n countries, Grandi told the opening of the United Nations Refugee Agency’s (UNHCR) main annual meeting, “cannot be to close the door.” “We cannot allow xenophobic reactions, only meant to draw facile consensus and electoral votes, to shape responses to challenges that are complex but manageable.”

He warned of “the dangerous lines of thinking emerging in some of the world’s richest countries, ‘externaliz­ing’ asylum beyond a country’s borders, violate internatio­nal law, put the lives of the most vulnerable in jeopardy and constitute precedents which threaten asylum globally.”

In particular, he highlighte­d the case of 27 migrants stranded in the Mediterran­ean Sea for nearly 40 days on a Danish freighter before it was finally permitted to dock in Italy earlier this month. “States failed to live up to their responsibi­lities. As a European, I find it shameful that it took more than one month to disembark just 27 people.”

The Italian stressed that “people will continue to flee unless the root causes of their flight are solved.” “Reducing search and rescue capacity, or impeding those who engage to save others, or pushing back people without due process, will not stop people from moving; it will only lead to more deaths and the further erosion of refugee protection.”

In an address colored by the complexiti­es of the COVID-19 pandemic, Grandi also voiced “deep disappoint­ment” at the low numbers of refugees being resettled from precarious situations to third countries. “In 2019, fewer than 64,000 refugees were resettled, less than one-quarter of 1% of the world’s refugees, in a constantly declining trend,” he said.

The United States, which traditiona­lly has resettled the most refugees, has slashed those numbers under President Donald Trump, offering to take in a record low of just 15,000 refugees next year, down from more than 100,000 under Trump’s predecesso­r Barack Obama.

Grandi also warned of the deteriorat­ing situation in Africa’s Sahel. He said he had recently visited the region, which he described as “the theater of one of the most worrying situations – a political, security and humanitari­an crisis which has displaced millions.” “Few situations have shocked me as much, the violence, the brutality, including horrifying stories of gruesome murders of parents in front of their children.”

In the past year alone, more than 600,000 people have been forced to flee their homes in the region, thousands of schools have been destroyed and thousands of women raped, Grandi said. “We need to restore a sense of urgency in the Sahel response,” he insisted.

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