Syria and Iraq wars swell numbers of asylum seekers

Conflict pushes number of people requesting asylum in industrialised countries to a 22-year high, UN report says.

Syrian Refugees Seek Shelter In Turkish Camps
The statistics did not include some 3.9 million Syrian refugees taken in by Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq [Getty]

Wars in Syria and Iraq drove the number of people requesting asylum in industrialised countries to a 22-year high last year, the United Nations has said.

An estimated 866,000 asylum-seekers lodged claims in 2014, a 45 percent rise from the year before and the highest figure since the start of the war in Bosnia, when the all-time high of nearly 900,000 was recorded, the UN refugee agency said.

“Today, the surge in armed conflicts around the world presents us with similar challenges, in particular the dramatic situation in Syria. Our response has to be just as generous now as it was then,” said UN High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres.

Some 3.9 million Syrian refugees taken in by Lebanon, Turkey, Jordan and Iraq do not figure in the statistics in its “Asylum Trends 2014” report.

Syrians accounted for nearly 150,00 applications for asylum in 44 industrialised countries last year, one in every five claims, it said.

Iraqis placed second with 68,700 requests, almost doubling the 2013 figure, “a reflection of the calamity and the violence that is taking place in Iraq right now and over the past half year,” UNHCR spokeswoman Melissa Fleming told a news briefing.

Afghans formed the third largest group, followed by citizens of Serbia and Kosovo, and Eritreans, the agency said.

 

Germany tops applicant list

Germany topped the list as the industrialised country receiving the largest number of asylum applications, 173,000, with Syrians accounting for one-quarter of all claims, it said.

The United States came second, receiving an estimated 121,200 applications, mostly people fleeing drug gang violence in Mexico and Central America.

Turkey – host to 1.7 million Syrian refugees under a temporary protection regime – received 87,800 asylum requests last year, mainly Iraqis who fled after the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant forces seized large swaths of their homeland last June.

“Most Iraqis are fleeing to Turkey,” Fleming said. “If you just look at Syrians, it’s Germany and Sweden that are taking in most of the Syrian asylum-seekers in Europe.”

Italy, the destination of many boatloads of people from Africa and the Middle East crossing the Mediterranean, received 63,700 asylum applications, fifth highest worldwide.

“Most of the people who land don’t stay in Italy but make their way to other countries in Europe,” Fleming said.

Australia registered a 24 percent drop in requests, with fewer than 9,000 in 2014, the UNHCR said, noting its tougher immigration policies.

Australia immigration policy has been criticised by human rights groups, and the UN has said that its asylum seeker policies may breach the international Convention Against Torture – an agreement which Australia has signed.  

Source: Reuters