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Between the devil and the deep blue sea: mixed migration to Europe

News Stories, 5 October 2007

© UNHCR/A.Di Loreto
An Italian coastguard vessel rescues boat people near Lampedusa Island earlier this year.

LAMPEDUSA, Italy, October 5 (UNHCR) Vincenzo Mulé has seen a lot of drama on the high seas during his years with the Italian coastguard, including shipwrecks, massive storms and dramatic rescues. But one incident sticks out in his mind.

"It was about two years ago," he recalled during a recent interview on this island located midway between Sicily and North Africa. "There was a storm and we came with a helicopter to try and find a boat with migrants in distress. We located the boat, but before we could rescue the passengers, the boat sank. More than 200 people drowned in front of our eyes and we couldn't do anything. It was awful."

Despite the dangers, migrants seeking a better future and refugees fleeing war and persecution continue to board flimsy boats and set off across the Mediterranean and the Atlantic in a bid to reach European territories such as Lampedusa and Spain's Canary Islands. But some patterns are changing as governments react to this influx.

Information provided by Italy and Spain suggest that, for the first time in years, the number of boat people arriving on their shores from North Africa has decreased considerably. At the same time, in the eastern Mediterranean, the number of people crossing irregularly from Turkey into the Greek islands has increased dramatically.

Meanwhile, hundreds of migrants and refugees continue to drown or simply disappear while attempting the perilous crossings. "Rarely a week goes by without some news of an unseaworthy boat that has sunk with its passengers on board, dead bodies being washed ashore on the holiday beaches of southern Europe," said UNHCR's Assistant High Commissioner for Protection Erika Feller.

Smugglers use four main sea routes to bring people into Europe: West Africa to the Canaries; Morocco to Spain; Libya to Malta, Sicily and Lampedusa; and Turkey to Greek islands in the Aegean Sea. Less frequently-used sea routes run from Algeria to Sardinia and from the Black Sea coast of Turkey into Bulgaria and Romania.

Spain and Italy released figures in August which showed that arrivals since the start of the year had fallen substantially. In the Canary Islands, for example, some 7,000 people had arrived by sea, compared with almost 32,000 for the whole of last year.

In Italy, some 14,000 people have arrived this year, against some 22,000 for the whole of last year. Meanwhile, a total of 1,780 people arrived in Malta by boat in 2006, compared to about 1,500 so far this year. All these figures are not expected to rise much higher this year because the main summer sailing season is ending.

Spain's Ministry of Interior attributed the dramatic fall to stepped up patrolling and interception operations off the Canaries, better collaboration with the countries of departure, and information campaigns in the countries of origin, pointing out the risks of such voyages.

In contrast, the number of people arriving irregularly in Greece by sea from Turkey has increased dramatically this year. The average number of people arrested, intercepted or rescued by the Greek coastguard in the Aegean every year since 2002 has been around 3,000. But so far this year, police report close to 5,000 people arrested in the islands of Samos, Chios and Lesvos alone.

People risk their lives at sea for a variety of reasons. Some are seeking employment, many want to reunite with family members and still others are fleeing persecution, conflict or indiscriminate violence in their countries and have no choice but to head for safety along so-called mixed migration routes.

"In the Mediterranean, the Gulf of Aden and the Caribbean, along north-south frontiers and, increasingly, along south-south borders, in the midst of migrants in search of a better life there are people in need of protection refugees and asylum seekers, women and children victims of trafficking," High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres told members of UNHCR's governing body earlier this week. "The ability to detect them, assure them of physical access to asylum procedures and a fair consideration of their claims, is a key element of our mission."

It is very difficult to know the exact percentage of those in need of protection. Official statistics in most countries, for example, do not include information on how an asylum applicant arrived whether by sea, land or air.

The number of boat people applying for asylum varies widely. In Malta, roughly 70 percent of those arriving by sea apply for asylum and just under half of them are recognized to be in need of international protection. They receive either refugee status or another form of protection.

In the case of Italy, one third (6,000 people) of those arriving on Lampedusa last year applied for asylum. This amounted to roughly 60 percent of all asylum applications in Italy. On average, almost half of all asylum applicants in Italy are recognized as refugees or granted protection status. In contrast, only a small proportion of those arriving by boat in the Canaries most of them from West Africa apply for asylum.

Asylum seekers in Greece include an increasing number of Iraqis, as well as people from other countries in the Middle East, the Horn of Africa and South Asia. In the first six months of this year, some 3,500 Iraqis applied for asylum in Greece the second highest number in any industrialized country, after Sweden. The figure, however, includes Iraqis arriving by land and air as well as by sea.

Those arriving by irregular routes in Greece face major difficulties getting access to asylum procedures. But a guide to asylum procedures, published by the Ministry of Public Order with UNHCR help, is expected to help improve the situation.

While the numbers of people crossing to Italy and Spain seem to be on the decline, humanitarian organizations fear that people smugglers are taking longer and more dangerous routes and using smaller boats to avoid detection and interception. But people are still willing to take the risk and hand over large amounts of money to people "whose last concern is the welfare of their clients," said UNHCR's Feller.

"Boats are totally unseaworthy and crammed with 40 or 50 people. The helm is often given to people with no knowledge of sailing or navigation," added Laura Boldrini, the refugee agency's Rome-based regional spokeswoman. "There are areas of the Mediterranean that are becoming a sort of Wild West where human life has no value at all," she added.

The exact death toll will probably never be known as some flimsy vessels disappear without trace. Based on media and police reports, however, UNHCR estimates that more than 500 people have died during crossings in the Mediterranean this year. Non-governmental organizations believe the figure could be closer to 1,000.

The UNHCR figures include 93 dead and 226 missing in the Sicilian Channel, and a further 150 dead trying to reach the Canary Islands or the Spanish mainland from North Africa. In Greece, official figures report 44 boat people drowned and 54 missing between January and late September in the Aegean. This compares to nine people reported dead and 10 missing last year and 10 dead with 16 missing in 2005.

Given the complexity of the issues involved, protecting the rights of asylum seekers and refugees in the context of irregular migration movements in the Mediterranean and other seas around the world is a major challenge and a high priority for UNHCR.

In order to help governments, UNHCR has begun implementing a 10-point plan which sets out key areas in which action is required to address these issues in countries of origin, transit and destination.

While recognizing that border controls are essential for combatting international crime, including smuggling and trafficking, the plan stresses the need for practical protection safeguards to ensure that such measures are not applied in an indiscriminate or disproportionate manner and do not lead to refugees being returned to countries where their life or liberty would be at risk.

The plan identifies the need for training and clear instructions for border guards and immigration officials on how to respond to asylum applications, and how to meet the needs of separated children, victims of trafficking and other groups with special needs. It also calls for appropriate reception arrangements to be set up to ensure that the basic human needs of people involved in mixed movements are met.

By William Spindler in Lampedusa, Italy

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Refugee Protection and Mixed Migration: A 10-Point Plan of Action

A UNHCR strategy setting out key areas in which action is required to address the phenomenon of mixed and irregular movements of people. See also: Schematic representation of a profiling and referral mechanism in the context of addressing mixed migratory movements.

International Migration

The link between movements of refugees and broader migration attracts growing attention.

Mixed Migration

Migrants are different from refugees but the two sometimes travel alongside each other.

Asylum and Migration

Asylum and Migration

All in the same boat: The challenges of mixed migration around the world.

Sighted off Spain's Canary Islands

Despite considerable dangers, migrants seeking a better future and refugees fleeing war and persecution continue to board flimsy boats and set off across the high seas. One of the main routes into Europe runs from West Africa to Spain's Canary Islands.

Before 2006, most irregular migrants taking this route used small vessels called pateras, which can carry up to 20 people. They left mostly from Morocco and the Western Sahara on the half-day journey. The pateras have to a large extent been replaced by boats which carry up to 150 people and take three weeks to reach the Canaries from ports in West Africa.

Although only a small proportion of the almost 32,000 people who arrived in the Canary Islands in 2006 applied for asylum, the number has gone up. More than 500 people applied for asylum in 2007, compared with 359 the year before. This came at a time when the overall number of arrivals by sea went down by 75 percent during 2007.

Sighted off Spain's Canary Islands

Drifting Towards Italy

Every year, Europe's favourite summer playground - the Mediterranean Sea - turns into a graveyard as hundreds of men, women and children drown in a desperate bid to reach European Union (EU) countries.

The Italian island of Lampedusa is just 290 kilometres off the coast of Libya. In 2006, some 18,000 people crossed this perilous stretch of sea - mostly on inflatable dinghies fitted with an outboard engine. Some were seeking employment, others wanted to reunite with family members and still others were fleeing persecution, conflict or indiscriminate violence and had no choice but to leave through irregular routes in their search for safety.

Of those who made it to Lampedusa, some 6,000 claimed asylum. And nearly half of these were recognized as refugees or granted some form of protection by the Italian authorities.

In August 2007, the authorities in Lampedusa opened a new reception centre to ensure that people arriving by boat or rescued at sea are received in a dignified way and are provided with adequate accommodation and medical facilities.

Drifting Towards Italy

The makeshift camp at Patras

Thousands of irregular migrants, some of whom are asylum-seekers and refugees, have sought shelter in a squalid, makeshift camp close to the Greek port of Patras since it opened 13 years ago. The camp consisted of shelters constructed from cardboard and wood and housed hundreds of people when it was closed by the Greek government in July 2009. UNHCR had long maintained that it did not provide appropriate accommodation for asylum-seekers and refugees. The agency had been urging the government to find an alternative and put a stronger asylum system in place to provide appropriate asylum reception facilities for the stream of irregular migrants arriving in Greece each year.The government used bulldozers to clear the camp, which was destroyed by a fire shortly afterwards. All the camp residents had earlier been moved and there were no casualties. Photographer Zalmaï, a former refugee from Afghanistan, visited the camp earlier in the year.

The makeshift camp at Patras

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