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EU plans to admit more refugees EU plans to admit more refugees
(about 4 hours later)
The European Commission is set to unveil plans to allow more refugees from conflict zones and poor nations into European countries. The European Commission has unveiled plans to allow more refugees from conflict zones and poor nations into European countries.
The scheme is aimed at discouraging immigrants - mainly from Africa - from attempting to reach Europe illegally.The scheme is aimed at discouraging immigrants - mainly from Africa - from attempting to reach Europe illegally.
Many risk their lives as they try to enter the EU, often relying on human traffickers. Many risk their lives as they try to enter the EU, often on rickety boats, relying on human traffickers.
Of all the refugees resettled around the world last year, only 7% were accepted by EU countries. The UN says 65,596 refugees were resettled worldwide last year, but the EU accepted just 4,378, or 6.7%.
The Commission - the EU's executive arm - wants to help people who have fled humanitarian crises like the one in Iraq. The Commission says this "contrasts sharply with the numbers taken in by many other countries in the industrialised world, particularly the US, Canada and Australia".
Two million Iraqis are now leading a precarious life in Syria, Jordan and elsewhere in the Middle East. The Commission's new "Joint EU Resettlement Programme" concerns only the resettlement of refugees currently living outside the EU.
It is separate from proposals aimed at easing transfers of refugees from one EU member state to another - known as "burden-sharing".
States free to decide
Several Mediterranean countries, including Italy and Malta, have experienced a large influx of asylum seekers in recent years and want other EU states to help by taking in larger numbers.
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The Commission's statement on Wednesday said EU member states would "remain free to decide whether they want to resettle at all, and if so, how many refugees they wish to resettle".
Under the new scheme EU nations would decide together every year which refugee groups should be given priority for resettlement, and receive more money from a joint fund to give them a new home.Under the new scheme EU nations would decide together every year which refugee groups should be given priority for resettlement, and receive more money from a joint fund to give them a new home.
The EU is also trying to improve its image on the world stage. Last year, the 27-nation bloc accepted fewer than 6,000 people, compared to more than 60,000 resettled in the US. By the end of 2008, developing countries were hosting 8.4 million refugees, 80% of the global refugee population, with Pakistan alone hosting 1.8 million, the Commission says.
A spokesman for the UN refugee agency (UNHCR), Gilles van Moortel, said: "It is true that at the moment 10 out of 27 member states have resettlement programmes, so we hope that with the EU joint resettlement scheme and with the resettlement of the Iraqi refugees things will change". One of the biggest humanitarian crises has followed the conflict in Iraq. Two million Iraqis are now leading a precarious life in Syria, Jordan and elsewhere in the Middle East.
Belgium is one of the EU countries opening its doors to vulnerable Iraqi refugees for the first time. Thirty-six are arriving on Wednesday from Syria and Jordan, with 11 more to come later this month, including a 16-year-old girl who worked as an interpreter for the American troops. For them, it is a new start in Europe, but for so many others, the future remains uncertain. The scheme calls on the EU to set annual priorities - for example, focusing on Iraqi or Somali refugees - in coordination with the UN refugee agency, the UNHCR. An EU-wide Resettlement Expert Group will be set up to do that.
Member states which resettle will receive an extra 4,000 euros (£3,523) per resettled person from the European Refugee Fund.
Different priorities
Currently 10 EU member states operate annual national resettlement programmes, including the UK, France, the Netherlands and Sweden.
Some other member states, including Italy and Germany, resettle refugees on an ad hoc basis.
Germany, Luxembourg, Italy and Belgium have made specific commitments to resettle Iraqi refugees from Syria and Jordan, following discussions in November 2008, the Commission says.
In such cases, the resettlement procedure is "fundamentally different" from the regular asylum procedure, the Commission says.
"For a resettled refugee, the legal determination that the person in question is a refugee, that he/she deserves protection and that he/she qualifies for resettlement, takes place before the refugee is effectively transferred.
"In contrast, the normal procedure for determining refugee status commences with the request of the asylum seeker, after the arrival of the asylum seeker in an EU member state," the Commission says.