Nearly 60% of refugees are living in cities today and there are
currently more Syrian refugees in Istanbul than in all the rest of
Europe, the head of the International Rescue Committee has said.
David Miliband told The Associated Press in an interview Monday that “the iconic image” of a refugee being someone in a camp has changed.
He said so many people are fleeing conflict and chaos that there’s no room for them in camps. Equally important, he said, is that most people don’t want to be in refugee camps and when they’re displaced for a long time, they want to earn a living — even if that means working in the black market.
Miliband gave the example of Istanbul, without citing any figures. The International Rescue Committee said there are currently more Syrian refugees in Istanbul – some 366,000 – than the rest of Europe put together.
Currently, there are 20 million refugees in the world, including 2 million in Turkey, and 40 million people uprooted and displaced in their own countries, which Miliband called “a grisly world record.”
The former British foreign minister said that as president of a leading humanitarian organisation helping refugees it is important to ask whether these numbers are “a trend or a blip.”
“Everything says to me it’s a trend, not least because the global situation is of more people on the move,” Miliband said, pointing to the additional 200 million people seeking “an economic better life as migrants or immigrants.”
Looking at the roots of what he calls the current “refugee and migration crisis,” Miliband cited “the tumultuous convulsions inside significant parts of the Islamic world.”
He also pointed to the 30 to 40 nations that can’t meet the basic needs of their citizens and contain ethnic, political and religious differences among their people, and “an international political system weaker and more divided than at any time since the end of the Cold War — and arguably weaker than during the Cold War itself.”
Francois Crepeau, the UN special investigator on migrant rights, said last Friday that two million refugees from the Middle East should be resettled in Europe over five years, which means 400,000 per year, divided by either the 28 European countries or the 32 countries in the global north.
Miliband said there’s no question that a continent with 500 million people can cope with 400,000 refugees a year, “but it has to be done in a competent way.”
The IRC recently interviewed more than 800 families in and around the Turkish city of Izmir, 80% of them from the war-torn countries of Syria and Iraq, and others fleeing conflict in Afghanistan and Pakistan. It said most were refugees, not economic migrants, hoping to go to Europe.
Miliband said a very large majority made it absolutely clear they were not going back and had sold homes and spent all their savings to pay smugglers to get to Turkey. The IRC said nearly 40% of those interviewed said they could not afford the approximately $3,500 needed to pay smugglers to reach Europe.
Miliband said the smuggler trade is being fuelled by the lack of legal routes to resettlement.
“I think there’s a very strong case for a processing centre in Turkey that would actually register people and process them and explain where they are in the queue and what chances they’ve got,” he said. “That’s the only way those people are not going to go into the hands of the smugglers. It’s clear the fences are not going to stop smugglers.”
David Miliband told The Associated Press in an interview Monday that “the iconic image” of a refugee being someone in a camp has changed.
He said so many people are fleeing conflict and chaos that there’s no room for them in camps. Equally important, he said, is that most people don’t want to be in refugee camps and when they’re displaced for a long time, they want to earn a living — even if that means working in the black market.
Miliband gave the example of Istanbul, without citing any figures. The International Rescue Committee said there are currently more Syrian refugees in Istanbul – some 366,000 – than the rest of Europe put together.
Currently, there are 20 million refugees in the world, including 2 million in Turkey, and 40 million people uprooted and displaced in their own countries, which Miliband called “a grisly world record.”
The former British foreign minister said that as president of a leading humanitarian organisation helping refugees it is important to ask whether these numbers are “a trend or a blip.”
“Everything says to me it’s a trend, not least because the global situation is of more people on the move,” Miliband said, pointing to the additional 200 million people seeking “an economic better life as migrants or immigrants.”
Looking at the roots of what he calls the current “refugee and migration crisis,” Miliband cited “the tumultuous convulsions inside significant parts of the Islamic world.”
He also pointed to the 30 to 40 nations that can’t meet the basic needs of their citizens and contain ethnic, political and religious differences among their people, and “an international political system weaker and more divided than at any time since the end of the Cold War — and arguably weaker than during the Cold War itself.”
Francois Crepeau, the UN special investigator on migrant rights, said last Friday that two million refugees from the Middle East should be resettled in Europe over five years, which means 400,000 per year, divided by either the 28 European countries or the 32 countries in the global north.
Miliband said there’s no question that a continent with 500 million people can cope with 400,000 refugees a year, “but it has to be done in a competent way.”
The IRC recently interviewed more than 800 families in and around the Turkish city of Izmir, 80% of them from the war-torn countries of Syria and Iraq, and others fleeing conflict in Afghanistan and Pakistan. It said most were refugees, not economic migrants, hoping to go to Europe.
Miliband said a very large majority made it absolutely clear they were not going back and had sold homes and spent all their savings to pay smugglers to get to Turkey. The IRC said nearly 40% of those interviewed said they could not afford the approximately $3,500 needed to pay smugglers to reach Europe.
Miliband said the smuggler trade is being fuelled by the lack of legal routes to resettlement.
“I think there’s a very strong case for a processing centre in Turkey that would actually register people and process them and explain where they are in the queue and what chances they’ve got,” he said. “That’s the only way those people are not going to go into the hands of the smugglers. It’s clear the fences are not going to stop smugglers.”
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