The
EU is struggling to respond to a surge of desperate migrants that has
resulted in more than 3,000 deaths — many perishing or missing in the
Mediterranean — since the beginning of the year.
The mass influx of migrants and refugees represents the largest movement of people that Europe has seen since 1945.
The migration has raised doubts about open borders, while sparking a dispute over sharing the burden.
The largest group of people reaching Europe through the Mediterranean
or the western Balkans are Syrians fleeing a civil war, but there are
also many from Eritrea and Afghanistan, as well as Kosovo and Nigeria.
The Financial Times examines the flows with charts.
‘Migrants’ versus ‘refugees’: there is a heated debate over
terminology, reflecting the politically charged arguments over the
growing crisis. Gideon Rachman, the FT’s chief foreign affairs
commentator, explains the difference.
The Syrian civil war is a big source of the crisis facing
Europe. The conflict has killed more than 250,000 people and displaced
more than 8m in over four years. Most of the refugees have fled to
neighbouring countries but are now, increasingly, desperate to reach
European shores. Here is some of the FT’s coverage of the Syrian refugee
crisis as well as of the plight of other migrants.
The mass influx has exposed a long-simmering east-west divide in
Europe and called into question the EU’s open-border arrangements. What
accounts for the contrasting reactions? Is the Schengen Area under
threat?
Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, has emerged as the defender of a
more generous policy towards refugees, taking the lead in speaking out
about Europe’s obligations. Germany expects to receive 800,000 asylum
seekers this year — more than the whole of the EU combined in 2014.
The mass influx of migrants and refugees represents the largest movement of people that Europe has seen since 1945.
The migration has raised doubts about open borders, while sparking a dispute over sharing the burden.
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια :
Δημοσίευση σχολίου