The world needs to act together on the refugee crisis gripping Europe, and not leave the continent to battle the problem alone, European Council President Donald Tusk said yesterday.
Speaking on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Japan, Tusk said European nations needed help in dealing with the tide of people fleeing conflict in the Middle East and Africa.
“We are aware that it is because of geography that the most responsibility is, and will continue to be, placed on Europe,” Tusk told reporters at Ise-Shima, 300km southwest of Tokyo. “However, we would also like the global community to show solidarity and recognize that this is a global crisis.”
Photo: AP
Last year, about 1.3 million refugees, coming mostly from the conflict-ridden countries of Syria and Iraq asked for asylum in the EU — more than a third of them in Germany.
So far this year, the International Organization for Migration says about 190,000 migrants and refugees have entered Europe by sea, arriving in Italy, Greece, Cyprus and Spain. More than 1,300 are known to have died en route.
The EU has put in place a program aimed at redistributing a first group of 140,000 people throughout the 28 member states.
“The world has been confronted with the highest number of refugees, asylum seekers and internally displaced persons since the Second World War,” Tusk said. “Those who criticize Europe should rather think how to increase their assistance, because what Europe provides is already massive.”
Tusk, who is at the G7 with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, said he would be asking leaders to get behind a worldwide solution.
First, he said, the world needed “to commit to increasing global assistance so that immediate and long-term needs of refugees and host communities are met.
“The international community should acknowledge that when Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan assist refugees, they are in fact providing a global public route,” he said.
Second, he said, the G7 should encourage international financial institutions and other donors to boost their contributions.
“In this regard, the EU fund for Syria, Africa and Turkey along with the work of the European investment bank serves as a role model for all of us,” he said.
“Third, that the G7 encourages the establishment of resettlement schemes and other legal forms of migration all around the world.”
In related developments, food aid has reached nearly half the civilians trapped in besieged areas of Syria, but much more remains to be done to help the 13.5 million in need across the war-torn nation, a UN report issued on Wednesday said.
The monthly report to the Security Council said food assistance has reached more than 200,000 people, or 41.9 percent, of those living in besieged areas, nearly double the 21 percent reached in March.
The report said that of the 35 relief convoys planned for this month and intended to reach 904,750 people in hard-to-reach areas, the Syrian government had only granted full approval for 14 as of May 4, and had conditionally approved eight more.
Additional reporting by AP
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