The refugee crisis in Europe is a crisis not because of the number of refugees, but because of Europe’s failure to respond to it in a coordinated fashion, the UN Refugee agency has said.
The UNHCR told Al Jazeera that more than 224,000 migrants and refugees had arrived in Europe in the first seven months of the 2015, exceeding the 219,000 that had made their way to the continent a year ago
“In our view, European countries need to work together rather than point fingers at each other. In order to deal with this situation, Europe should open more legal ways for refugees to come,” William Spindler, senior spokesperson of the UNHCR, told Al Jazeera.
“The UNHCR is urging European countries to provide more places for refugees through resettlement programmes, family reunification, humanitarian admission, private sponsorship schemes, and work and education visas.”
The UN’s comments come after a boat carrying hundreds of migrants capsized off the coast of Libya on Wednesday. At least 25 people were confirmed dead out of an estimated 600 people on board.
Karl Stagno-Navarra, a journalist based in Valletta, Malta, told Al Jazeera that an Irish navy vessel, the LE Niamh, confirmed that the boat capsized when those on board rushed to one side when navy ship got close to the fishing boat.
The UNHCR said that even before Wednesday’s incident, more than 2,100 persons are reported to have died or gone missing in the Mediterranean Sea this year alone.
The ongoing crisis off Europe’s shores have prompted a wave of debate across Europe over migration, with each government deferring responsibility for each passing crisis.
Elsewhere in Europe, some 2,500 refugees are still stranded outside the French town of Calais, trying to get to the United Kingdom through the tunnel under the English Channel. Charities operating in the vicinity describe conditions as woeful.
“They left conditions in the country that were a situation of life and death … they risk their lives many times, and they arrive here … and they have difficulty understanding they are in France, living in a jungle with living conditions that are below international refugee camp standards,” Maya Konforti of L’Auberge des Migrants, a local migrant charity, told Al Jazeera.
Konforti added that European laws need to change and that each country needed to agree on immigration laws that would be fair to each based on wealth and population.
“We also need to stop being afraid of what is happening. This is not an invasion,” she said.
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