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Two Charts Showing that ‘Deterring’ Migrant Boats Is Failing

Friday, February 20, 2015 5:19
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(Before It's News)

Human Wrongs Watch

LONDON, 20 February 2015 (1) (IRIN)* – Late last year the Italian government scrapped its Mediterranean search and rescue operation the Mare Nostrum after funding shortages. The project was partially replaced by Operation Triton – but the service is far more restricted than its predecessor, both in geography (the patrols only go up to 30 miles off the Italian coast) and budget (roughly a third of Mare Nostrum). Critics have said it could leave tens of thousands of migrants at far greater risk.

**Photo: Alfredo D’Amato/UNHCR | Rescued migrants sleep after being plucked from a boat off the coast of Italy in summer 2014.

The most common argument for the shift was deterrence. Previously, proponents argued, the migrants in the boats and their smugglers could be fairly certain that they would be rescued by one of Mare Nostrum’s ships.

Baroness Anelay, British Foreign Office minister, argued at the time that such rescue missions only encouraged more people to make the treacherous journey.

Yet if the ending of Mare Nostrum was intended to be a deterrent, so far it has failed. There has been a spike in the numbers of migrants attempting to cross the Mediterranean; to around 7,000 so far in 2015 from 3,338 in the same period in 2014, according to the UN’s refugee agency UNHCR (see chart below).

http://cf.datawrapper.de/E6C5n/8/

And the number of people dying has spiked, too (see second chart, below). So far this year over 300 are believed to have drowned – the majority after four dinghies carrying West African migrants capsized. In the same period in 2014, the number was just 12.

There are also concerns about the capacity of the new operation’s smaller and less well-equipped boats. Twenty-nine migrants died of hypothermia after they were picked up by a Triton vessel.

Amnesty International’s Europe and Central Asia Programme Director John Dalhuisen said the deaths could suggest medical care on board is not adequate.

“It’s possible the Italian coast guards did what they could with the resources they had. They clearly were not enough. Unless EU member states commit to significantly increasing search and rescue capacity in the central Mediterranean, tragedies like these will only multiply,” he said in a statement.

http://cf.datawrapper.de/FMCc3/4/

UNHCR UK said the stats showed the “urgent need” to properly replace the Mare Nostrum.

Levels of desperation among would-be migrants and asylum seekers are at a historic high. In 2014, Syria, Iraq, Central African Republic and South Sudan were all classified as highest-level emergencies by the UN.

Syria alone has produced over 3 million refugees and is now the country of origin for the largest number of migrants arriving in Italy.

***Photo: Alfredo D’Amato/UNHCR | There are now fewer patrol boats searching for migrant ships in the Mediterranean.

In Libya, the country’s security vacuum has made it far easier for smugglers to operate. With safer, overland routes to Europe more tightly restricted and other countries such as Australia increasing their barriers, the treacherous journey is all that remains for many desperate residents.

(1) Update: UNHCR provided IRIN with the most recent data on February 20. The first chart has been adjusted accordingly.

*Source:  IRIN, a humanitarian news and analysis, a service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Go to Original.

**Photo: Alfredo D’Amato/UNHCR | Rescued migrants sleep after being plucked from a boat off the coast of Italy in summer 2014.

***Photo: Alfredo D’Amato/UNHCR | There are now fewer patrol boats searching for migrant ships in the Mediterranean.

Read also:

‘Save the Lives of Migrants; Stop Smugglers from Exploiting their Desperation’

‘Urgent European Action’ Needed to Protect Migrants at Sea’

On International Day, UN Urges Greater Attention to ‘Precarious’ Situation of World’s 232 MillionMigrants

Australia’s New Migration Bill Shifts Task to Security

Netherlands Politicians ‘trying to score political points at expense of homeless migrants’ – UN Rights Experts

Immigrants in Europe Struggle to Find Decent Work Amid Looming Economic Crises

Migrants’ Remittances Expected to Reach US$ 436 Billion in 2014 – How to Help Them Make the Most of Their Money

UN Concerned over Spain’s Bid to Legalize Push-backs of Migrants

Rescuing Migrants in the Sea — Tunisian Fishermen Unlikely Heroes

“Media Reporting on Migration Rarely Includes Voices of Migrants”

Two Main Routes of Smuggling of Migrants Generate $7 Billion a Year to Criminal Groups

Greece Must Improve Detention Conditions for Migrants – UN Experts

Tracing Dead Migrants in Europe

Rights Groups Condemn Australia’s Offshore ‘Processing’ of Migrants

2015 Human Wrongs Watch
Filed under: Africa, Asia, Market Lords, Middle East, Others-USA-Europe-etc., The Peoples, War Lords



Source: http://human-wrongs-watch.net/2015/02/20/two-charts-showing-that-deterring-migrant-boats-is-failing/

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