Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Migrants trudge through Balkans in 'dramatic' challenge to Europe

MARKO DJURICA

Long lines of migrants, many of them refugees from Syria, snaked through southern Serbia by foot on Monday before jumping on trains and buses north to Hungary and the last leg of an increasingly desperate journey to western Europe.

State authorities and aid agencies threw up tents and scrambled to supply food and water to thousands surging through the western Balkans, their numbers swelling since Greece began ferrying migrants from overwhelmed islands to the mainland.

Visiting the border between Greece and Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), Austrian Foreign Minister Sebastian Kurz said the situation in the Balkans was "dramatic".

"We urgently need coordinated action across Europe," he told ORF radio.

In Serbia, Red Cross official Ahmet Halimi said 8,000 migrants had registered in the southern town of Presevo over the past 24 hours.

Many had spent three desperate days on Greece's northern border after FYROM halted their passage saying it could take no more. But on Saturday, crowds braved batons and stun grenades to storm through police lines.

Helpless to stem the tide, FYROM rushed trains and buses to the border to carry them north, where they crossed into Serbia on foot.

More arrived on Monday, walking from the border crossing of Miratovac some 5 km (3 miles) to a reception centre in Presevo, where many received medical aid, food and papers legalizing their transit through the country.

Most carried their belongings in rucksacks. Men carried small children on their shoulders, hats shielding their heads from the August sun. After a chilly night, daytime temperatures were expected to near 30 degrees Celsius (86°F).

"I just want to cross to continue my journey," said Ahmed, from Syria, on the Serbian border. "My final destination is Germany, hopefully."

Not since the wars of Yugoslavia's collapse in the 1990s has the cash-strapped western Balkans seen such large movements of people, when many Bosnians, Croats, Albanians and Serbs displaced by fighting fled for the rich countries of Europe - the likes of Germany, Austria and Sweden.

The problem threatens to get worse as EU member Hungary, part of Europe's borderless Schengen zone, races to complete a fence along its 175-km border with Serbia to keep the migrants out, threatening to create a dangerous bottleneck.

The European Union, the migrants' only destination, has struggled to formulate and implement a common policy.

Kurz criticised the Greeks, whose borders form part of the EU's external frontier, for failing to process asylum requests on Greek soil as per EU rules. A record 50,000 migrants, many of them Syrians crossing by boat from Turkey, hit Greek shores in July, straining the resources of a country going through one of the worst economic crises of modern times.

On Monday, two people drowned and five were believed missing when a dinghy carrying migrants capsized off the Greek island of Lesbos, where aid groups say 1,500 have been arriving daily for the past week.

The Greek government has chartered a car ferry to collect them from the islands and bring them to the mainland on a daily basis. It carried 2,500 people, mainly Syrians, on Monday to Athens, where buses awaited to take them north.

"It is not just a case of Greece not processing those (asylum) claims, but they are actively doing their very best to get the refugees to move on to central Europe as soon as possible," Kurz said.

"The Western Balkan countries are overrun, overwhelmed and have been left to their own devices," Austria's APA news agency quoted Kurz as saying. "We have to help them."

Germany says it expects a record 750,000 asylum-seekers to arrive this year, in a crisis overwhelming authorities in Europe from the Greek islands to the French port of Calais.

Fleeing war and poverty in the Middle East, Africa and Asia, many have undertaken dangerous journeys across sea and land in search of safety and employment in the affluent nations of western and northern Europe.

The UNHCR urged the EU to do more. The problem, said UNHCR Europe Bureau Director Vincent Cochetel, "will not go away any time soon and affects all of Europe."

In the past two weeks, over 23,000 have entered Serbia, taking the total so far this year to some 90,000.

[Reuters]

Migrants trudge through Balkans in 'dramatic' challenge to Europe

| News | ekathimerini.com

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Why is EU struggling with migrants and asylum?

By Laurence Peter BBC News 19 August 2015 From the section Europe

Migrants waiting to disembark in near Siracusa, Sicily, 16 Apr 15 Italy has brought thousands of rescued migrants to Sicily

Migrant tragedy

Some 2,000 migrants have drowned in the Mediterranean this year, amid a surge in overcrowded boats heading for the coasts of Greece and Italy.

The flow of desperate migrants from Syria and North Africa hoping to reach Europe is already much higher than in the same period in 2014.

Germany, which receives by far the most asylum applications in the EU, is expecting 800,000 refugees to arrive this year.

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How big is the migration challenge affecting Europe now?

The number of migrants reaching Europe by boat has risen dramatically this year, compared with the same period in 2014. The number arriving in Greece, in particular, has soared.

The EU's border agency said that almost 50,000 migrants had arrived on the Greek islands in July alone, most of them Syrians.

The number of migrants reaching Greece by sea had reached 158,000 by mid-August, according to the UN, overtaking the 90,000 who arrived in Italy by sea.

The majority heading for Greece via the eastern Mediterranean route take the relatively short voyage from the Turkish mainland to the islands of Kos, Chios, Lesvos and Samos.

Migrants arrive in Kos (19 August) Fifty thousand people arrived on the shores of the Greek islands in July

The voyage from Libya to Italy is longer and more hazardous.

Migrant deaths at sea this year passed 2,000 in August, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) reported. And of those, 1,930 died trying to reach Italy.

A shipwreck off Italy's Lampedusa island on 19 April took an estimated 800 lives.

So, more migrants - Syrians especially - are trying to reach Greece now, instead of risking the Libya route.

Since the beginning of the year some 340,000 migrants have been detected at Europe's external borders, Frontex says.

That compares with 123,500 in the same period last year.

graphic

One of the biggest surges happened on 6-7 June, when nearly 6,000 people were plucked from the sea and taken to southern Italy, in a major international operation.

Survivors often report violence and abuse by people traffickers. Many migrants pay thousands of dollars each to the traffickers, and robbery of migrants is also common.

Record numbers have been arriving on Kos and Lesvos, packed on to flimsy rubber dinghies or small wooden boats, putting a huge strain on local resources.

graphic

Mainland Greece remains a major transit point - many migrants travel up through the Balkans, hoping to reach northern Europe.

Another pressure point is Hungary. In July alone, 34,000 migrants were detected trying to cross from Serbia into Hungary.

Faced with that influx, Hungary has urged its EU partners not to send back migrants who have travelled on from Hungary. And it plans to fence off the whole border with Serbia.

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Where do they come from?
map showing migration routes

The largest migrant group by nationality in 2015 is Syrians - followed by Afghans. Then come migrants from Eritrea, Nigeria and Somalia.

The vicious civil war in Syria has triggered a huge exodus. Afghans, Eritreans and other nationalities are also fleeing poverty and human rights abuses.

In Italy new migrants from Eritrea form the biggest group, followed by those from Nigeria.

But in Greece migrants from Syria are the biggest group, then Afghans, the IOM says.

Last year, some 219,000 refugees and other migrants crossed the Mediterranean, and at least 3,500 lives were lost, the UNHCR reports. In 2013 the total reaching Europe via the Mediterranean was much lower - about 60,000.

Back in 2011 the big challenge was thousands of Tunisians arriving on Lampedusa. Far fewer Tunisians are making the voyage now, but Lampedusa remains a migrant bottleneck.

Data from Frontex records detections of illegal entries - it does not include the many migrants who manage to get in undetected.

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What is the EU doing about it?

In November 2014 Italy ended its search-and-rescue mission, called Mare Nostrum. It was replaced by a cheaper and more limited EU operation called Triton, focused on patrolling within 30 nautical miles of the Italian coast.

Aid organisations say the scaling down of the rescue effort has put more migrants' lives at risk.

After much argument EU leaders agreed to triple funding for Triton, to some €120m (£86m) - taking it back to the spending levels of Italy's Mare Nostrum.

In April EU leaders pledged to beef up maritime patrols in the Mediterranean, disrupt people trafficking networks and capture and destroy boats before migrants board them.

However, any military action would have to conform with international law. The chaos in war-torn Libya remains a huge problem.

Championing the rights of poor migrants is difficult as the economic climate is still gloomy, many Europeans are unemployed and wary of foreign workers, and EU countries are divided over how to share the refugee burden.

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Why is Libya such a problem in the current crisis?
Militia fighting north of Tripoli in Libya, March 2015 Fighting continues to rage between militias in Libya

Two rival governments are battling for control of Libya, and so-called Islamic State militants have entered the country too.

The chaos has given people traffickers freedom to exploit migrants, with inadequate intervention from the authorities.

The EU and UN hope that a political agreement can be brokered to bring some stability to Libya, but so far there are few signs of progress.

There is great reluctance to send in any European military force.

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What has caused migrant numbers to rise?

The wars raging in Syria and Iraq are clearly big drivers of migration to Europe. Syria's Middle Eastern neighbours have taken in some three million refugees, while millions more are displaced inside Syria.

But many migrants also continue to make hazardous journeys from the Horn of Africa, often treated brutally by people traffickers and enduring desert heat and unrest in Libya, the main point of departure.

War has ravaged Somalia and Italian officials believe many of the migrants are genuine asylum seekers, fleeing persecution. In the case of Eritrea, it appears many are young men fleeing compulsory military service, which has been likened to slavery. Eritrea is blighted by political repression, human rights groups say.

Many Afghans continue to flee poverty and persecution in their country, as attacks by Taliban insurgents and criminal gangs remain widespread.

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Are EU countries sharing the burden?
Migrant camp at Rosarno, southern Italy Rosarno, southern Italy: One of many migrant camps set up to handle the emergency

For years the EU has been struggling to harmonise asylum policy. That is difficult with 28 member states, each with their own police force and judiciary.

More detailed joint rules have been brought in with the Common European Asylum System - but rules are one thing, putting them into practice EU-wide is another challenge.

The Dublin Regulation is a core principle for handling asylum claims in the EU. It says responsibility for examining the claim lies primarily with the member state which played the greatest part in the applicant's entry or residence in the EU. Often that is the first EU country that the migrant reached - but not always, as in many cases migrants want to be reunited with family members, for example in the UK or the Netherlands.

There are tensions in the EU over the Dublin Regulation - Greece complained that it was inundated with applications, as so many migrants arrived in Greece first. Finland and Germany are among several countries that have stopped sending migrants back to Greece.

EU governments argued over a proposal to spread the burden of housing migrants, under a quota system. Eventually they agreed to take 32,500 asylum seekers from Syria and Eritrea over the next two years - that is, genuine refugees. But the original target was 40,000.

Another 20,000 refugees currently in UNHCR camps would also be transferred to the EU, but the details have not been decided.

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What about EU migrants?

It is important to remember that huge numbers of EU citizens move from one EU country to another freely. They are also described as "migrants", but they are fully protected by EU law, unless they are fugitive criminals. Their status is quite different from that of non-EU migrants. In some EU countries, including the UK, they have become an issue because of pressure on social services and competition for jobs.

Most EU countries are in the Schengen zone, which has made it much easier to cross borders without having to show a passport or other papers.

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How do migrants get asylum status in the EU?

They have to satisfy the authorities that they are fleeing persecution and would face harm or even death if sent back to their country of origin.

The ban on mass "push-backs" - also known as "non-refoulement" - is an EU principle. In some cases it has not been respected, however. Greece, overburdened with asylum seekers, has been accused of refusing to let in some groups of migrants.

Under EU rules, an asylum seeker has the right to food, first aid and shelter in a reception centre. They should get an individual assessment of their needs. They may be granted asylum by the authorities at "first instance". If unsuccessful they can appeal against the decision in court, and may win.

Asylum seekers are supposed to be granted the right to a job within nine months of arrival.

Asylum applications in EU, 2014

The number of asylum claims in the EU rose to 626,065 in 2014, up from 435,190 in 2013, the European Commission reports. The 2014 figure is the highest since a peak in 1992, though back then the EU had fewer member states.

In 2014 the number of applicants from Syria more than doubled compared with 2013, reaching 123,000. That was 20% of the total, and far above the next biggest group - Afghans, who accounted for 7%.

Migrants from Kosovo were in third place, just above Eritreans. Poor, marginalised Roma account for many of the migrants from Kosovo.

In 2014 asylum was granted to 163,000 people in first instance decisions - that is, nearly 45% of such decisions. Germany granted the most - 41,000 - followed by Sweden (31,000) and Italy (21,000).

Why is EU struggling with migrants and asylum? - BBC News

Sunday, August 23, 2015

Europe migrant crisis: Macedonia allows all 1,500 refugees at border to enter from Greece; 2,200 rescued off Italy

 

More than 1,500 mostly Syrian refugees, trapped in no-man's land for three days, have entered Macedonia from Greece without any attempt by the police to stop them.

A migrant holds a child under the rain close to the border crossing between Greece and Macedonia Photo: The migrants had been trapped between the Greek-Macedonian border for three days. (Reuters: Alexandros Avramidis)

Related Story: Macedonian police fire tear gas, stun grenades after migrants rush border

Related Story: Italy moves to rescue 3,000 migrants from waters off Libyan coast

Related Story: France, Britain to set up crisis centre as migrant pressure mounts

Map: Macedonia, The Former Yugoslav Republic Of

Key points
  • More than 1,500 refugees entered Macedonia after being trapped between Greek-Macedonian border
  • Police said no more would be allowed to enter until current group moves north
  • Italy's coastguard rescued about 2,200 migrants in the Mediterranean

Macedonian police had earlier used stun grenades and batons in a bid to stop hundreds of refugees breaking through barbed wire fencing on its southern border with Greece, but on Saturday evening they allowed all the migrants into the country.

Police officers were seen guarding the frontier but not a single person remained in the strip of land between the Greek-Macedonian border where more than 2,000 people, including women and children, had been stuck since Thursday.

The migrants hope to cross into Serbia in the north and eventually start a new life in the European Union.

Macedonian police spokesman Ivo Kotevski said police did not want to use force to stop the migrants and refugees, but would continue to control the flow of new arrivals.

"We will continue with reinforced control of the border according to the state of emergency and we will [in future] allow only a limited number of people into the country in accordance with the capacities we have," Kotevski said.

He said no new people would be allowed to enter until the current group had moved on towards the north "or we will have a humanitarian crisis in Macedonia".

Thousands of refugees and migrants, mostly from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, are expected to arrive in the country in the coming days after being ferried to the Greek mainland from the islands.

Authorities deny being heavy-handed

On Thursday, Macedonia declared a state of emergency and sealed its border in a bid to stop the influx, after news several hundred would be let through every few hours reached those on the border and a crush formed after the first group streamed through.

Macedonians officers twice resorted to force to try to prevent people from entering the country and at least a dozen were hurt in the brief flare-up.

Amnesty International said it spoke to some refugees who gave accounts of police beatings and shots being fired in the air but authorities denied being heavy-handed.

Events on Thursday and Friday saw Macedonia become the latest flashpoint of a crisis that has dragged the conflicts of the Middle East — most notably Syria — to Europe's doorstep.

Macedonia said it had registered more than 40,000 migrants and refugees entering from Greece in the past two months.

Most move quickly through the country to Serbia and then walk into Hungary and on to the more affluent countries of western and northern Europe through the borderless Schengen Area.

Migrants gather at Gevgelija train station in Macedonia after crossing Greece's border into Macedonia Photo: No new refugees will be allowed to enter Macedonia until the current group has moved north. (Reuters: Ognen Teofilovski)

Another 2,200 migrants rescued off Italy

The Italian coastguard has coordinated the rescue of 2,200 migrants in the Mediterranean after receiving distress calls from more than 20 overcrowded vessels drifting in waters off Libya in one of the biggest single-day rescue operations to date.

The operation was ongoing as nightfall approached on Saturday, and it was unclear how many people remained in danger.

Initial estimates put the total number of people on board the stricken ships at up to 3,000.

This must a joke. We are using our own forces to do the people smugglers' business for them and ensure we are invaded.

Maurizio Gasparri, Forza Italia senator

Two navy ships, the Cigala Fulgosi and the Vega, picked up 507 and 432 migrants respectively from two wooden boats in danger of sinking just off Libya, the navy said.

The coastguard said its patrol boats had safely boarded just under 300 people from three different inflatable dinghies.

Another 1,003 rescued migrants and refugees were reported to be headed for Italian ports on other boats, as the wave of new arrivals triggered increasingly virulent attacks on Prime Minister Matteo Renzi's handling of the migration crisis.

"This must a joke. We are using our own forces to do the people smugglers' business for them and ensure we are invaded," said Maurizio Gasparri, a senator for Silvio Berlusconi's centre-right Forza Italia party.

Leader of the anti-immigration Northern League party Matteo Salvini called on the government to park the migrants on disused Italian oil rigs off Libya.

"Help them, rescue them and take care of them: but don't let them land here," he wrote on his Facebook page.

The rescued migrants included a batch of 311, including a newborn baby, who were on a boat belonging to humanitarian group Doctors Without Borders, which is expected to dock in Vibo Valentia in Calabria, port authorities said.

A further 370 had been picked up by the Italian customs police and were headed for Messina in Sicily while some 322, Italian media said, were on the Norwegian boat Siem Pilot, part of the European Union's Triton mission.

Migrants wait to disembark in the Sicilian harbour of Augusta, Italy, May 30, 2015. Photo: More than 104,000 migrants and refugees have landed in Italy this year after being rescued in the Mediterranean. (Reuters: Antonio Parrinello)

Passengers locked below deck on overcrowded vessel

More than 170,000 migrants and refugees from Africa, the Middle East and South Asia landed at Italy's southern ports in 2014 after being rescued in the Mediterranean, while the total for 2015 has already topped 104,000.

A further 135,000-plus have landed in Greece since January and more than 2,300 people have died at sea while trying to make it to Europe with the help of traffickers.

Police in Palermo, Sicily, announced on Saturday that they had arrested six Egyptian nationals on suspicion of people smuggling following the rescue of a stricken boat on August 19.

Testimony from the 432 migrants on board suggested the vessel had been packed with more than ten times the number of people it was designed for, with many of the passengers, including a number of women and children, locked below decks.

They had each paid the traffickers 2,000 euros ($AU3,100) for the passage from Egypt to Italy, according to statements given to police.

On board, the crew were reported to have demanded further payment to allow those locked in the hold to come up temporarily for air.

Humanitarian organisations said the surge in the numbers of people trying to reach European Union countries was the result of conflicts and repression in Africa and the Middle East.

They have called on European governments to shoulder more of the burden of absorbing the wave of asylum seekers and to help create safer routes for them to reach Europe.

AFP

Europe migrant crisis: Macedonia allows all 1,500 refugees at border to enter from Greece; 2,200 rescued off Italy - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Russian president Vladimir Putin dives in mini-sub to shipwreck off Crimea

ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Russian president Vladimir Putin submerges Photo: Russian president Vladimir Putin submerges on board a mini-submarine into the waters of the Black Sea to explore a shipwreck. (AFP: Ria Novosti/Alexei Nikolsky)

Related Story: Russia destroys hundreds of tonnes of Western food as embargo bites

Related Story: Ukraine clashes kill 10 as fears grow of broader fighting

Map: Russian Federation

Russian president Vladimir Putin has burnished his action-man image by diving in a mini-submarine to explore a shipwreck off the coast of the Crimea peninsula that Moscow seized from Ukraine last year.

Mr Putin plunged to a depth of 83 metres seated alongside the pilot in the glass-bubble cabin of the Dutch-made vessel.

"83 metres is a pretty substantial depth," Mr Putin said in televised comments after the dive. "It was interesting."

He went underwater to view the Byzantine-era wreckage in the Black Sea off Crimea that included a trove of 10th century pottery.

Video: Vladimir Putin takes a submarine ride in the Black Sea during Crimea trip (Storyful)

The remains were discovered off the coast of Sevastopol by Russian divers earlier this year.

"It is a galleon that was transporting civilian cargo through the bay of Balaclava," Mr Putin said.

"It is still to be investigated by experts. I have to say that there are not that many similar remains like this in the north of the Black Sea."

Mr Putin has become known for his eye-catching stunts during his fifteen years in charge of Russia, that have included flying with cranes, riding topless on horseback and darting an endangered tiger.

In 2009 he dove down around 1,400 metres to the bottom of the world's deepest lake, Lake Baikal, in another mini-submarine.

Mr Putin also hopped into another miniature submersible in 2013 to take in a 19th century naval frigate shipwreck on the bed of the Baltic Sea.

Russian president Vladimir Putin and prime minister Dmitry Medvedev Photo: Russian president Vladimir Putin (C) listens to prime minister Dmitry Medvedev (L) after submerging into the waters of the Black Sea inside a research bathyscaphe as part of an expedition near Sevastopol, Crimea, August 18, 2015. (Reuters: Kremlin/RIA Novosti/Alexei Nikolsky)

The carefully choreographed photo opportunities are designed to buff up the image of the judo black belt president among ordinary Russians.

Mr Putin's popularity has reached an all-time high in recent months of just under 90 per cent as Russia's slavish state-run media has gone into overdrive to promote him since the seizure of Crimea in February 2014.

Not all of Mr Putin's eye-catching adventures have, however, been unmitigated successes.

A stunt in 2011 that saw a wet suited Mr Putin apparently find two ancient amphorae during a dive off the Russian coast close to Crimea drew widespread derision after it turned out the urns had been deliberately placed there.

Mr Putin is in the middle of his third visit to Crimea since he ordered out thousands of special forces troops to take control of the peninsula in 2014.

Ukraine's president Petro Poroshenko on Monday lashed out over the trip saying it would "escalate" a 16-month separatist conflict in east Ukraine that Kiev accuses Moscow of masterminding.

Mr Putin, however, batted away the criticism over his visit and insisted the "blame" for a recent spike in violence in east Ukraine lay with the government forces.

During his visit to Crimea Mr Putin has held high-level meetings to discuss the region's abysmal economic record under Moscow rule, which even led the local governor to ask the Russian president to allow Ukrainians to work in the service industry.

The region is under tough Western sanctions that have seen its banking system hit and foreign firms pull out.

Tourism, a mainstay of the region's economy, has also plummeted.

Meanwhile, the leaders of France, Germany and Ukraine are to meet in Berlin on Monday in a bid to bring an end to a new wave of violence in Ukraine, French foreign minister Laurent Fabius said.

AFP

From other news sites:

Russian president Vladimir Putin dives in mini-sub to shipwreck off Crimea - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Europe migrant crisis: Number of migrants at EU borders in July triple last year's figure, Frontex says

ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) Wednesday 19 August 2015

Syrian refugees arrive on a dinghy at the Greek island of Kos Photo: Syrian refugees arrive on a dinghy at the Greek island of Kos after crossing a part of the Aegean sea from Turkey. (Reuters: Alkis Konstantinidis)

Related Story: At least 40 migrants suffocate in boat hold in Mediterranean

Related Story: Greece sends cruise liner, extra riot police to Kos as tensions mount over migrants

Related Story: UK announces new plans to deter illegal immigrants in response to Calais crisis

Map: European Union

More than three times as many migrants were tracked entering the European Union by irregular means in July compared to the same month last year, official data shows.

EU border agency Frontex said a record 107,500 migrants reached the EU's borders last month, as the 28-member bloc struggles to cope with a refugee crisis.

"The figure was the third consecutive monthly record, jumping well past the previous high of more than 70,000 reached in June," the Warsaw-based agency said in a statement.

The July figure comes days after EU migration commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos said the world faced its "worst refugee crisis since World War II".

This is an emergency situation for Europe.

Frontex director, Fabrice Leggeri

While the increase recorded by Frontex may be partly due to better monitoring, it highlighted the scale of a crisis that has led to more than 2,000 deaths this year as desperate migrants take to rickety boats.

The EU has approved 2.4 billion euros ($6.7 billion) of funding to help member states cope with the flood of migrants — many of them Syrians, Iraqis and Afghans fleeing instability at home.

The number of migrants reaching the borders was nearly 340,000 during the first seven months of the year, up from 123,500 during the same period in 2014, according to Frontex.

That was a 175 per cent rise on the same period last year and much more than the 280,000 registered arrivals in all of 2014.

"This has created an unprecedented pressure on border control authorities in Greece, Italy and Hungary," the agency said.

The July record figure includes 50,000 migrants detected in the Aegean Sea, more than 20,000 in Italy, and nearly 35,000 in the Western Balkans.

"This is an emergency situation for Europe that requires all EU member states to step in to support the national authorities who are taking on a massive number of migrants at its borders," Frontex director Fabrice Leggeri added in the statement.

"Frontex has called on member states to provide additional equipment and people to support our operations in Greece and in Hungary."

Migrants heading to Greece are rescued by Turkish authorities Photo: Migrants sit on a harbour after been rescued by Turkish coast guard from a sinking ship trying to reach Greece. (AFP: Bulent Kilic)

Eight suspected traffickers arrested

Meanwhile, Italian police said they had arrested eight suspected human traffickers they said had reportedly forced migrants to stay in the hold of a fishing boat in the Mediterranean as 49 of them suffocated on engine fumes.

Some of those traffickers were accused of kicking the heads of the migrants when they tried to climb out of the hold as the air became unbreathable, prosecutor Michelangelo Patane said.

The dead migrants were discovered last weekend, packed into a fishing boat also carrying 312 others trying to cross the Mediterranean to Italy from North Africa.

It was the third mass fatality in the Mediterranean this month. Last week, up to 50 migrants were unaccounted for when their rubber dinghy sank, a few days after some 200 were presumed dead when their boat capsized off Libya.

Greece appealed to its EU partners to come up with a comprehensive strategy to deal with what new data showed were 21,000 refugees landing on Greek shores last week alone.

A spokesman for the United Nations refugee agency UNHCR in Geneva said the EU should help Greece but that Athens, which is struggling with a debt crisis, also needed to show "much more leadership" on the issue.

Greek officials said they needed better coordination within the EU.

"This problem cannot be solved by imposing stringent legal processes in Greece, and, certainly, not by overturning the boats," government spokeswoman Olga Gerovassili said.

Afghan immigrants land at a beach on the Greek island of Kos Photo: Afghan immigrants land at a beach on the Greek island of Kos. (Reuters: Yannis Behrakis)

AFP/Reuters

From other news sites:

Europe migrant crisis: Number of migrants at EU borders in July triple last year's figure, Frontex says - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

10 truths about Europe’s migrant crisis

untitled1

Patrick Kingsley Tuesday 11 August 2015

British ministers including Theresa May and Philip Hammond have made hair-raising claims about the dangers of migrants entering the country. But do the facts bear them out?

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Migrants near Calais earlier this month. Photograph: Philippe Huguen

When you’re facing the world’s biggest refugee crisis since the second world war, it helps to have a sober debate about how to respond. But to do that, you need facts and data – two things that the British migration debate has lacked this summer. Theresa May got the ball rolling in May, when she claimed on Radio 4 that the vast majority of migrants to Europe are Africans travelling for economic reasons. The media has followed suit, one example being the Daily Mail’s unsubstantiated recent assertion that seven in 10 migrants at Calais will reach the UK.

Foreign secretary Philip Hammond this week not only repeated May’s claims about African economic migrants, but portrayed them as marauders who would soon hasten the collapse of European civilisation. Hammond, like many people, could do with some actual statistics about the migration crisis. Here are 10 of the key ones:

62%

Far from being propelled by economic migrants, this crisis is mostly about refugees. The assumption by the likes of Hammond, May and others is that the majority of those trying to reach Europe are fleeing poverty, which is not considered by the international community as a good enough reason to move to another country. Whereas in fact, by the end of July, 62% of those who had reached Europe by boat this year were from Syria, Eritrea and Afghanistan, according to figures compiled by the UN. These are countries torn apart by war, dictatorial oppression, and religious extremism – and, in Syria’s case, all three. Their citizens almost always have the legal right to refuge in Europe. And if you add to the mix those coming from Darfur, Iraq, Somalia, and some parts of Nigeria – then the total proportion of migrants likely to qualify for asylum rises to well over 70%.

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Migration crisis quiz: can you separate fact from fiction?

Europe is in the midst of a migrant crisis, but has your view been skewed by the rhetoric? Our quiz, sourced from common misconceptions from readers, will help you separate fact from fiction

Read more

1%

If you read the British press, you’d think that Calais was the major battleground of the European migrant crisis, and that Britain was the holy grail of its protagonists. In reality, the migrants at Calais account for as little as 1% of those who have arrived in Europe so far this year. Estimates suggest that between 2,000-5,000 migrants have reached Calais, which is between 1% and 2.5% of the more than 200,000 who have landed in Italy and Greece. Just as importantly, there is no evidence to suggest that as many as seven in 10 have reached Britain after arriving in Calais. The Daily Mail admitted this several paragraphs into its article.

0.027%

Hammond said that the migrants would speed the collapse of the European social order. In reality, the number of migrants to have arrived so far this year (200,000) is so minuscule that it constitutes just 0.027% of Europe’s total population of 740 million. The world’s wealthiest continent can easily handle such a comparatively small influx.

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A young Syrian refugee in the Greek island of Kos. Photograph: YANNIS BEHRAKIS/REUTERS

1.2 million

There are countries with social infrastructure at breaking point because of the refugee crisis – but they aren’t in Europe. The most obvious example is Lebanon, which houses 1.2 million Syrian refugees within a total population of roughly 4.5 million. To put that in context, a country that is more than 100 times smaller than the EU has already taken in more than 50 times as many refugees as the EU will even consider resettling in the future. Lebanon has a refugee crisis. Europe – and, in particular, Britain – does not.

£36.95

Many claim that Britain is a coveted destination for migrants because of its generous benefits system. Aside from the reality that most migrants have little prior knowledge of the exact nature of each European country’s asylum system, it is not true that the UK is particularly beneficent. Each asylum seeker in Britain gets a meagre £36.95 to live on (and they are not usually allowed to work to supplement this sum). In France, whose policies are supposedly driving up the numbers at Calais, migrants actually receive substantially more. According to the Asylum Information Database, asylum seekers in France receive up to £56.62 a week. Germany and Sweden – the two most popular migrant destinations – pay out £35.21 and £36.84 a week respectively, only fractionally less than Britain.

Swarms, floods and marauders: the toxic metaphors of the migration debate

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David Shariatmadari

We’re not being ‘overwhelmed’ by a ‘tidal wave’ of migrants. How can anyone justify this callous, misleading language?

Read more

50%

In the dog-whistle rhetoric of Hammond and Theresa May, the archetypal contemporary migrant in Europe is from Africa. But again, that’s not true. This year, according to UN figures, 50% alone are from two non-African countries: Syria (38%) and Afghanistan (12%). When migrants from Pakistan, Iraq and Iran are added into the equation, it becomes clear that the number of African migrants is significantly less than half. Even so, as discussed above, many of them – especially those from Eritrea, Darfur, and Somalia – have legitimate claims to refugee status.

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Royal Marines with migrants rescued off the Libyan coast in June. Photograph: Rowan Griffiths/Daily Mirror/PA

4%

Last autumn, the EU opted to suspend full-scale maritime rescue operations in the Mediterranean in the belief that their presence was encouraging more migrants to risk the sea journey from Libya to Europe. In reality, people kept on coming. In fact, there was a 4% year-on-year increase during the months that the rescue missions were on hiatus. Over 27,800 tried the journey in 2015, or died in the attempt, until operations were reinstated in May, according to figures from the International Organisation for Migration. Only 26,740 tried it in 2014. The disparity suggests that migrants were either unaware of the rescue operations in the first place, or simply unbothered by their suspension – a thesis borne out by my own interviews. “I don’t think that even if they decided to bomb migrant boats it would change peoples’ decision to go,” said Abu Jana, a Syrian I met as he was planning to make the sea voyage earlier this year.

25,870

Contrary to the perception of the UK as the high altar of immigration, it is not a particularly major magnet for refugees. In 2014, just 25,870 people sought asylum in the UK, and only 10,050 were accepted. Germany (97275), France (68500), Sweden (39,905) and Italy (35,180) were all far more affected. When the ratings are calculated as a proportion to population size, the UK slips even further down the table – behind Belgium, Holland and Austria. If the ratings were calculated on 2015 rates, then even impoverished Greece would rise above the UK in the table. Just as tellingly, the UK has welcomed just 187 Syrians through legal mechanisms at the last count. Turkey has around 1.6 million.

€11bn

Hammond and David Cameron argue that the solution to migration is to increase deportations. They believe this will save Britain money, as less cash will be spent on paying each asylum seeker £36.95 per week. However, this strategy ignores the cost of deportations – whose alleged financial cost could rival that of the asylum seekers’ benefits bill. According to a series of investigations by the website The Migrant Files, as many as €11bn have been spent on repatriating migrants to their countries of origin since 2000. A further billion has been blown on Europe-wide coordination efforts to secure European borders – money that could have been spent on integrating migrants into European society.

-76,439

Despite the hysteria, the number of refugees in the UK has actually fallen by 76,439 since 2011. That’s according to Britain’s Refugee Council, which crunched the numbers gleaned from UN data and found that the number of refugees in the UK fell from 193,600 to 117,161 in the past four years. By comparison, the proportion of refugees housed by developing countries in the past 10 years has risen, according to the UN, from 70% to 86%. Britain could be doing far more.

 

10 truths about Europe’s migrant crisis | UK news | The Guardian

Friday, August 7, 2015

Egyptian president Sisi unveils multi-billion dollar Suez Canal extension at lavish ceremony

 

Suez Canal new waterway Photo: Army planes perform as the new waterway at the Suez Canal is opened. (AFP: Khaled Desouki)

Related Story: Egypt's new Suez Canal aims to double trade on the key route

Map: Egypt

Egyptian president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has unveiled a major extension to the Suez Canal at a lavish ceremony, with the first ships passing through the waterway in what Egypt hopes will boost its economy and global standing.

Mr Sisi, dressed in a ceremonial military uniform, arrived aboard a historic yacht at the head of a naval flotilla as fighter planes and helicopters flew overhead.

The former army chief, who later changed into a business suit, formally opened the $US9 billion ($12 billion) waterway to the cheers of hundreds of guests, including foreign dignitaries.

"Egyptians exerted massive efforts to offer to the world a gift for the sake of humanity... in very difficult economic and security conditions," Mr Sisi said as the first cargo ships passed through.

He pledged to defeat militancy, which has bedevilled the country since he overthrew his Islamist predecessor, Mohamed Morsi, in 2013.

Mr Sisi said "terrorist groups are trying to harm Egypt and Egyptians ... Egypt's fight against terrorism is ongoing".

The event in the port city of Ismailiya attended by heads of state, including French president Francois Hollande, comes two years after Morsi's overthrow.

The first priority for shipowners and traders is to cut costs, not speed.

Shipbroker Ralph Leszczynski

The ouster unleashed a deadly crackdown on Islamists, and a jihadist insurgency has since killed hundreds of soldiers east of the Suez Canal.

Mr Sisi opened the ceremony by leading the flotilla aboard a refurbished yacht once owned by the former royal family, which carried French Empress Eugenie de Montijo at the canal's 1869 inauguration.

Mr Sisi, elected last year on a promise to strengthen security and revive a dilapidated economy, broke ground on the canal project last August.

Egypt sets ambitious targets for upgraded canal

Initial estimates suggested the new route would take up to three years to build, but Mr Sisi set an ambitious target of 12 months.

It has been touted as a landmark achievement, rivalling the digging of the original 192-kilometre canal, which opened in 1869 after almost a decade of work.

The new section, funded entirely by Egyptian investors, runs part of the way alongside the existing canal connecting the Red Sea and the Mediterranean.

It involved 37 kilometres of dry digging, creating what is effectively a "second lane", and widening and deepening another 35 kilometres of the existing canal.

It will cut the waiting period for vessels from 18 hours to 11.

By 2023, the number of ships using the canal will increase to 97 per day from 49 now, according to government projections.

Officials hope the new waterway will more than double Suez earnings from $US5.3 billion expected at the end of 2015 to $US13.2 billion in 2023.

Analysts were sceptical over the targets.

"The first priority for shipowners and traders is to cut costs, not speed," Ralph Leszczynski, research head at Italian shipbrokers Banchero Costa, said.

"The trend in recent years has been for ships to travel at lower-than-normal speeds just to... save on their fuel bills."

Thursday's guests included Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas, King Abdullah II of Jordan, Yemen's exiled president Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi and Kuwaiti Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah.

Newly acquired French Rafale warplanes participated in the fly-past.

Banners reading "New Suez Canal: Egypt's Gift to the World" and "The Egyptian Miracle", as well as hundreds of national flags, graced the streets of Cairo and Ismailiya.

AFP

From other news sites:

Egyptian president Sisi unveils multi-billion dollar Suez Canal extension at lavish ceremony - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

On Greek island, migrants find paradise quickly turns to purgatory

By Griff Witte August 4 2015

Migrants seeking a better life in the European Union are flooding the shores of Lesbos.

Aug. 2, 2015 A Greek man helps Syrian refugees out of the water after their boat’s motor failed. When the coast guard arrived, some jumped in the water out of fear. Eventually, the tide carried the rubber raft in, along with the remaining refugees. Alessandro Penso/For The Washington Post

NORTHEASTERN LESBOS, Greece — The heaving rubber raft, packed with 49 people, had motored more than halfway across the narrow strait that separates Turkey from Greece when it began to rapidly fill with water.

“Whoever can swim, get out or we will all die!” yelled an Iraqi woman near the front, her belly swollen with an unborn child conceived amid war and now facing mortal peril at sea.

Dutifully, four men jumped overboard into the wind-whipped waves as others blew whistles, flailed their arms and shouted prayers into the cloud-covered sky.

Minutes later, the raft careered into the rocky shoreline. It was followed soon after by the four men, who had been plucked from the water by a passing fishing boat.

“Union!” the refugees cheered as they set wobbly foot in this staggeringly beautiful new land.

Their crash landing on the Greek island of Lesbos, witnessed by a Washington Post reporter, had given the refugees from Iraq and Syria an all-important toehold in the European Union. With its aqua-green shoals, olive-tree-studded mountains and five-star resorts, it looks every bit the paradise they had dreamed Europe would be.

But within hours, paradise for the new arrivals turns into purgatory. For it is here on this enchanting island that two of the continent’s great crises converge — an unparalleled flow of migrants from the war-saturated regions that ring the continent, and the struggle of an E.U. member that can barely support its own citizens, much less tens of thousands of desperate foreigners.

[Thousands risk death on the ‘Black Route’ out of Syria. This is one family’s story.]

Having escaped failed states, the migrants find themselves in a failing one. Once they make their way off the beach, they are welcomed to Europe with a long, hot trek through the island’s mountainous interior followed by days and nights in fetid, crowded refugee camps that veteran international aid workers say are among the worst they have seen.

“We ran away from war. We ran away from violence. We came to Europe because we want to live like human beings,” Zahra Jafari, an almond-eyed 30-year-old Afghan, said as she prepared for a night’s sleep amid the sand fleas and pervasive whiffs of excrement that mark life in the camps. “But here it smells so bad. There’s no water here. There’s no food here.”

“This is the opposite of what we thought Europe would be,” she said. “It’s a disaster — just like my country.”

Local officials do not dispute that conditions in the camps are poor. They acknowledge being unprepared and overwhelmed by the scale of arrivals after years of managing much smaller flows.

As the migrant numbers have surged this spring and summer, the island’s mayor, Spyros Galinos, has fired off letter after letter to E.U. officials, the Greek government in Athens and international aid organizations seeking urgent assistance. Only the latter have come through with meaningful help, according to his spokesman.

“The minister of interior visited, said ‘Keep up the good work,’ and he left,” said the spokesman, Marios Andriotios.

But the Greek government, of course, is broke.

Pressure in the south

Europe’s absence has been more difficult for local officials and aid workers here to fathom. And yet it reflects the often dysfunctional and slow-footed way that the E.U. has responded to the migrant crisis, with many northern European governments reluctant to share a burden that has been felt disproportionately along the continent’s southern flank among countries that are already deeply in debt.

Until this year, Italy was the top destination for migrants seeking to enter Europe by sea. But now that dubious distinction is held by Greece — the E.U. country that can least afford the strain — with an increasing number of migrants forgoing the dangerous journey across the Mediterranean aboard rickety ships in favour of the quicker yet still perilous route through the Aegean in an overstuffed dinghy.

Nowhere has that shift been felt more acutely than here in Lesbos, where the number of arrivals in July alone was nearly three times the total from all of last year. Separated by just eight nautical miles from the Turkish coast, the island’s shores have become the landing spot for 20 or more rafts a day, each packed with dozens of men, women and children. The majority of the new arrivals are fleeing the war in Syria; Iraqis and Afghans make up most of the rest.

Lesbos has nothing to offer the migrants — a fact they know well. This is just the first stop in a far longer odyssey that they hope will take them to countries such as Germany, Sweden or Denmark, where they believe they will be able to receive asylum and find work. But first they must stay in the camps for up to a week to obtain the registration needed to travel through Greece legally.

For many, it is an unexpectedly grim welcome. The toilets — just five of them in one camp for a population of hundreds — are typically out of order. The men shower in the open for all to see. The women have no place to shower at all. With the tents often full, the only protection from the searing midday heat is thin mesh netting or the sparse shade of an olive tree.

“At least there’s no violence here. No bombs exploding. No kidnappings,” said Haydar Majid, a 32-year-old Iraqi who said he had worked as an interpreter for the U.S. Army. “But this place isn’t for humans. It’s for animals.”

Until several weeks ago, it was far worse. International aid groups such as the International Rescue Committee and Doctors Without Borders, which normally focus their work in the world’s poorest countries, have had to set up emergency operations in Lesbos because the conditions were so appalling and the E.U. was doing little to help.

“The camps here don’t reach the minimum standard,” said Elisabetta Faga, emergency field coordinator for Doctors Without Borders. “I’ve worked in camps in Congo, Mauritania, South Sudan. But here we are in Europe. I expect something better.”

Yet such is the level of desperation among the migrants that the camp conditions have hardly been a deterrent. The tens of thousands who have already landed on Lesbos this year are probably only the beginning, with an even bigger wave predicted before winter weather makes the crossing more arduous.

“Everyone’s expecting the numbers to increase radically in August, September and October,” said Andriotios. “We’re predicting mass arrivals.”

Short but harrowing journey

From Greek shores, the rafts first appear as black specks set against a monochromatic horizon: blue mountains, sky and sea.

As the boats draw nearer, there are flashes of orange when individuals come into focus, the lucky ones having been given life vests by the smugglers in whom the migrants have entrusted their fate.

Refugees brave the Aegean Sea for new lives(2:11)

Migrants from Iraq, Syria and other Middle Eastern nations are fleeing to Europe, a continent whose migrant camps are struggling to keep up with the growing numbers. Follow a group's difficult journey from Turkey to Greece with The Post's Griff Witte. (Jhaan Elker and Griff Witte/The Washington Post)

Three of those orange flashes one recent morning — aboard the raft that may have capsized had a pregnant Iraqi woman not ordered passengers to jump ship — belonged to Fayrouz Abdo and her two sons.

Abdo considered herself an unlikely refugee.

In the Syrian city of Aleppo, the dark-haired 60-year-old was a school teacher who drilled her young students in the basics of Arabic. Her husband — now deceased — had been a prominent lawyer. Funny, frank and admittedly vain, she inhabited a privileged spot on the Aleppo social circuit and enjoyed entertaining European friends with whom she shared shots of whiskey and arak, the anise-flavoured Levantine spirit.

That was before the war, of course. But even once it began, the conflict felt distant from the family’s comfortable, middle-class life in a Christian enclave of Aleppo.

“I watched refugees on the news,” she said.

She didn’t think she would ever become one.

And yet, as the echoes of bombs and gunfire drew closer in recent months, the family faced an ominous deadline: Abdo’s eldest son, 22-year-old Jamil, would soon graduate from his university. Conscription into President Bashar al-Assad’s army would inevitably follow. The family would no longer be able to stay on the sidelines of a sectarian conflict they wanted no part of.

Before they could be drawn in, they decided to leave. They sold their house and fled into Turkey. Once there, they sought out a smuggler willing to take their money — the equivalent of $1,100 per person — in exchange for the promise of a new life in Europe. With so many people looking for the same thing, and seemingly little being done by Turkish authorities to halt the flow, finding a willing smuggler is not difficult.

“We just went to his office,” Jamil said.

[Inside the remote city of smugglers where Africans are funnelled to Europe]

The smuggler promised that Abdo and her sons would be ferried to Greece in a 30-foot boat with no more than 35 passengers. But when they arrived at the water’s edge in Turkey, having trekked through deep forest to get there, they saw a far smaller boat and a much larger group — nearly 50 others.

The smugglers had originally planned for the boat to leave under cover of darkness. But with the coast guard patrolling close to shore, the migrants were forced to retreat back into the woods, where they spent the night bereft of food and water.

The next morning, the coast guard vessels had moved on but strong easterly winds had set the formerly placid seas to a boil. No matter: The smugglers ushered everyone into the boat, fired up the small outboard engine and gave one of the migrants, a young Syrian man, a minute-long tutorial in how to steer.

The journey to the Greek coast is a short one — it can last as little as an hour. But the peril is great. Lt. Cmdr. Antonios Sofiadelis, who leads coast guard operations in Lesbos, said his forces have been averaging four to five rescues a day this summer as overloaded boats capsize or stall out on the high seas.

Those are not the only dangers. In recent weeks, migrants in the Lesbos camps say they have been assaulted mid-crossing by mysterious “commandoes” who pull up in speedboats alongside the rafts. Their faces hidden by ski masks, the men threaten the migrants with whips and guns, then steal their cash and clothes and disable their boats.

“They cut our engine out with a knife and left us in the sea,” said Hassan, a 30-year-old Iraqi migrant who declined to give his last name.

[A global surge in refugees leaves Europe struggling to cope]

On Saturday, the Greek coast guard said it had arrested three men on suspicion of carrying out the raids. The suspects were dressed in coast guard uniforms.

Abdo’s boat faced no such challenge. But as it pitched and rolled amid the waves, it was clearly in trouble. Passengers on the vessel later described how water crashed over the low rubber walls as the raft’s belly filled.

The migrants called out to Allah for help. Abdo, a Christian, joined in.

When four men clambered overboard and into the churning water, the boat’s walls popped back up and the threat passed. Minutes later, the raft crashed into shore, and the migrants celebrated with hugs, kisses and selfies.

“Alhamdulillah,” they repeated again and again. “Praise God.”

But their journey had only begun. The smugglers had told them that the landing spot was within a short walk of the police station and that they could register there for legal permission to stay in Greece for a month. In fact, the boat had washed up in a remote corner of the island and the registration spot was 40 miles away over rough mountainous roads.

With no food, no water and little idea of where they were headed, they started to walk. Abdo slung a worn black backpack over her shoulder. Soaked with seawater, it contained some clothes, a German phrase book and an old film camera — all the possessions she could afford to carry from her old life to the new one.

Their path led them along a seashore straight from a travel magazine, where bikini-clad women splashed down in crystal-clear water. It took them up winding highways, where drivers sped by in Audis and BMWs without so much as a glance.

And ultimately, it would lead them to the camps, where they would spend their first night in the E.U. sleeping on flattened cardboard boxes amid piles of rotting trash.

But as Abdo started her trek from the sea that had nearly been her grave, all she could think of was her good fortune.

“The road is very long, but it’s okay,” she said. “Really, really, really — we are lucky. God loves us. We are safe.”

Karla Adam in London contributed to this report.

Read more:

Thousands risk death on the ‘Black Route’ out of Syria. This is one family’s story.

A smugglers’ haven in the Sahara

A global surge in refugees leaves Europe struggling to cope

Why the language we use to talk about refugees matters so much

Griff Witte is The Post’s London bureau chief. He previously served as the paper’s deputy foreign editor and as the bureau chief in Kabul, Islamabad and Jerusalem.

On Greek island, migrants find paradise quickly turns to purgatory - The Washington Post

Monday, August 3, 2015

Illegal immigrants face eviction without court order under plans to discourage migrants

Nicholas Watt Chief political correspondent Monday 3 August 2015

Landlords who fail to check tenants’ immigration status face five-year jail terms as part of government crackdown to reduce UK’s appeal as a migrant destination

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Asylum seekers at the Refugee Council in Brixton. The council expressed ‘grave concerns’ at Home Office plans to remove automatic benefits from families who do not win asylum. Photograph: David Levene for the Guardian

Immigrants living in Britain illegally will face abrupt eviction from rental properties under new laws designed to make Britain a tougher place to live in, the government will announce as it redoubles its response to the Calais migrant crisis.

In a dramatic illustration of the warning directed at migrants, by the home secretary, Theresa May, that Britain’s “streets are not paved with gold”, the government will change the law to allow landlords to evict such immigrants without a court order.

Rogue landlords who fail to check the immigration status of tenants could be fined or imprisoned for up to five years under a new criminal offence to be included in a new immigration bill.

Greg Clark, the communities secretary, will also announce that the legislation will create a blacklist of persistent rogue landlords and letting agents to allow councils to know where to concentrate their enforcement action. “We are determined to crack down on rogue landlords,” said Clark.

The announcement by Clark, who will also announce new measures to prevent rogue landlords renting out sub-standard properties, comes as May and foreign secretary, Philip Hammond, prepare to take it turns chairing meetings of the government’s emergency Cobra committee in response to the Calais crisis.

David Cameron, who remains in Britain this week on the first stage of his summer holiday, has said that the government will leave no stone unturned as it responds to what he described as the “swarm of people” from Calais. A new fence to protect the entrance to the Channel tunnel on the French side will be completed on Friday.

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‘Many see Europe, and particularly Britain, as somewhere that offers the prospect of financial gain. This is not the case – our streets are not paved with gold’ Photograph: Suzanne Plunkett/Reuters

The government was accused of acting in a “morally reprehensible” way after the Home Office confirmed it was planning to strip families of the automatic right to benefits if their asylum applications were rejected.

The Refugee Council expressed “grave concerns” as the Home Office minister James Brokenshire defended plans to remove automatic benefits from families who did not win asylum as a way of signalling that the UK was not “a land of milk and honey”.

The move is part of a government initiative to discourage migrants from leaving their countries of origin in the first place by showing that Britain is a cold place for those whose asylum applications are rejected. The home secretary joined forces with her French counterpart, Bernard Cazeneuve, to send a signal to would-be migrants that they will not necessarily face a warm welcome.

In a joint article for the Sunday Telegraph, the two ministers warned the world is facing a global migration crisis as they pledged to offer refuge to those fleeing conflict or persecution. But they said it is important to break the link between “crossing the Mediterranean and achieving settlement in Europe”.

May and Cazeneuve wrote: “Ultimately, the long-term answer to this problem lies in reducing the number of migrants who are crossing into Europe from Africa. Many see Europe, and particularly Britain, as somewhere that offers the prospect of financial gain. This is not the case – our streets are not paved with gold.”

Clark will intensify these warnings when he announces plans to make it easier to evict illegal immigrants from their homes. Under the forthcoming immigration bill, landlords will be expected to evict illegal immigrants soon after receiving a Home Office notice that their tenant no longer has the right to rent in the UK. In some circumstances landlords will be able to act without a court order.

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Migrants stand against a fence at the Eurotunnel terminal. Photograph: Philippe Huguen/AFP/Getty

A scheme in which landlords check the immigration status of tenants, which is currently being piloted in the West Midlands, will be extended across the country. Under the Right to Rent scheme, landlords will be obliged to see evidence of a person’s right to remain in the UK by examining their passport or biometric residence permit.

A new criminal offence will target unscrupulous landlords and letting agents who fail repeatedly to carry out the “Right to Rent” checks or fail to remove illegal immigrants from their properties. They could be fined, jailed for up to five years or face further sanctions under the Proceeds of Crime Act.

The government will also announce a new and tougher fit and proper person test for landlords of properties that have to be licensed to ensure they are safe for tenants, extending rent repayment orders to allow local authorities to claim back rent payments from landlords who abuse the housing benefit system by failing to maintain their property to a good standard and allowing councils to crack down on rogue landlords who rent out unsafe accommodation by allowing the sharing of tenancy deposit protection.

Clark said: “We are determined to crack down on rogue landlords who make money out of illegal immigration – exploiting vulnerable people and undermining our immigration system. In future, landlords will be required to ensure that the people they rent their properties to are legally entitled to be in the country. We will also require them to meet their basic responsibilities as landlords, cracking down on those who rent out dangerous, dirty and overcrowded properties.”

Illegal immigrants face eviction without court order under plans to discourage migrants | UK news | The Guardian