Refugee children are being failed by EU, says Lords committee report

“Children face suspicion upon arrival”, the report states. Meanwhile, German Chancellor Angela Merkel has defended her policies on refugees in the wake of recent terror attacks

Evangelical Focus

BBC, EurActiv · LONDON · 28 JULY 2016 · 15:20 CET

Nearly 90,000 unaccompanied  minors sought refuge in the EU in 2015 / Reuters,
Nearly 90,000 unaccompanied minors sought refuge in the EU in 2015 / Reuters

The European Union is ‘systematically’ failing unaccompanied child refugees, a UK parliamentary report warns.

The House of Lords EU Committee report, published this week, says that more than 10,000 migrant children are believed to have disappeared after arriving in Europe over the past two years.

As Whitney Gerdes (IAFR) told Evangelical Focus, these children “are incredibly hopeful, they are deeply resilient”, but “this is their first go-through in life, they are dealing with incredibly heavy, heavy things.

 

“CHILDREN FACE SUSPICION”

Nearly 90,000 unaccompanied minors sought refuge in the EU in 2015 - a sharp increase compared with just over 23,000 in the previous year.

Committee chairwoman Baroness Prashar said the current refugee crisis was the greatest humanitarian challenge the EU had faced in its lifetime, but member countries were failing to shoulder their "fair share of the burden.”

"We found that these children face suspicion on arrival. They are seen as 'somebody else's problem', and the conditions they live in were described to us as deplorable and squalid."

Such treatment forced children into the hands of people smugglers and traffickers, the report said. In 2015 88,245 unaccompanied kids applied for asylum in the EU.

 

Children face suspicion on arrival.

 

A PRIORITY FOR THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION

“The protection of vulnerable migrants, including unaccompanied minors, is a top priority for the European Commission. EU legislation on asylum, immigration and trafficking in human beings includes specific provisions on the protection of the interests of unaccompanied minors”, a European Commission spokesperson told EurActiv

On 13 July this year the Commission proposed an overhaul of EU asylum law.

“Under the new rules, the responsible authorities will be obliged to appoint a guardian as soon as possible and no later than five working days from the moment an unaccompanied minor makes an application for asylum”, the spokesperson added.

 

MERKEL DEFENDS HER REFUGEE POLICIES

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has defended her policies on refugees in the wake of recent terror attacks. She said those fleeing persecution and war had a right to be protected.

Mrs Merkel proposed new measures on information sharing, deciphering web chatter, tackling arms sales on the internet and improving security responses to attacks. She affirmed Germany would "stick to our principles."

 

German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

The attacks in Germany, along with those recently in Nice and Rouen in France, were intended to "spread fear and hatred between cultures and between religions", Mrs Merkel said.

 

“NEW THREATS”

Speaking in Berlin, Merkel warned that "besides organised terrorist attacks, there will be new threats from perpetrators not known to security personnel".

The Chancellor added: "We need an early alert system so that authorities can see during the asylum request proceedings where there are problems."

"We will take the necessary measures and ensure security for our citizens. We will take the challenge of integration very seriously", Merkel concluded.

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