Migrants look towards Macedonia through the Greek-Macedonian border fence, near the Greek village of Idomenii March 1, 2016 © Marko Djurica / Reuters |
The UN refugee agency,
UNHCR, has warned EU leaders that the continent is facing a “self-induced
humanitarian crisis,” with over 24,000 people stuck on the Macedonian border,
and with as many arrivals in two months of 2016 as in the first six of last
year.
RT
report continues:
“UNHCR
is warning today that Europe is on the cusp of a largely self-induced
humanitarian crisis. This is in light of a rapid build-up of people in an
already struggling Greece, with governments not working together despite having
already reached agreements in a number of areas, and country after country
imposing new border restrictions,” UNHCR spokesman Adrian Edwards said during a
press briefing in Geneva on Tuesday afternoon.
The
UN says that Europe has to take responsibility for the newcomers, despite over
131,000 people arriving through the Mediterranean this year, almost as many as
the 147,000 that made the journey in the first half of 2015.
With
Greece unable or unwilling to control its borders or register and process the
vast majority of refugees, despite additional EU funding and support, but other
countries on the ‘Balkan route’ sealing themselves off, tens of thousands of
refugees are stuck in impromptu camps en-route to their desired destinations of
Germany and Scandinavia.
“As
of last Monday, the number of refugees and migrants in Greece and needing
accommodation had soared to 24,000. At least 1,500 had spent the previous night
in the open. The crowded conditions are leading to shortages of food, shelter,
water and sanitation. Tensions have been building, fueling violence and playing
into the hands of people-smugglers,” said Edwards, who mentioned that 55
percent of the arrivals have been women and children.
Edwards
accused EU leaders of shirking responsibilities, with plans to find homes
for only 1,500 refugees, which have resulted in a mere 325 relocations, meaning
that the rest of migrants have had to fend for themselves, and find their own
way across Europe.
"Greece
needs a safety valve… it is time for Europe to wake up, either we have a
massive orderly relocation from Greece or a repeat of what we saw last year,
more chaos and confusion," said Vincent Cochetel, UNHCR's Regional Refugee
Coordinator for the Refugee Crisis in Europe, during the same briefing. “There
is no plan B.”
UNHCR
spokesman Adrian Edwards © UN multimedia
|
The
UNHCR has called on Europe, which admitted more than 1 million migrants without
permits last year, not only to accommodate the existing flows, but to
facilitate the journeys of those unable to pay people smugglers.
“Increased
regular pathways for admission of refugees from countries neighboring Syria
will help in the overall management of this situation. More resettlement and
humanitarian admission, family reunification, private sponsorship, and
humanitarian and refugee student and work visas all serve to reduce demand for
people smuggling, onward movements, and dangerous boat journeys,” said Edwards.
At
a time when polls show growing resentment towards incomers, and skyrocketing
popularity for anti-immigrants parties, the UN’s pleas appear at loggerheads
with the policies of national governments.
Macedonia
has said that it will stop allowing any migrants through once Austria reaches
its own limit of 37,500 new refugees for the year. Vienna has said that about
12,000 asylum applications have been lodged in the past two months.
"Such
decisions are made between police authorities along the Balkan route. Whenever
a country to the north closes its borders, we follow suit. In times of crisis,
every country must find its own solutions," Macedonian President Gjorge
Ivanov told Spiegel Online on Tuesday.
Denmark, Sweden and the
Netherlands have stepped up border controls. Germany, which received the
majority of Europe’s asylum applications last year, is contemplating guarded
border checkpoints, and refugee quotas, but is hoping for an EU-wide solution.
European Council President Donald Tusk is in Vienna, as part of a five-country
tour, in which he hopes to hammer out a pan-European quota allocation system.
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