Pew Research Center on tehnyt data-analyysia vuoden 2015 matuvirrasta Eurooppaan, joka oli 1,3 miljoonaa tulijaa EU-maihin, Norjaan ja Sveitsiin. Edellinen ennätys on vuodelta 1992, jolloin päästiin lukuun 700,000. Data on kerätty Eurostatista.
A record 1.3 million migrants applied for asylum in the 28 member states of the European Union, Norway and Switzerland in 2015 – nearly double the previous high water mark of roughly 700,000 that was set in 1992 after the fall of the Iron Curtain and the collapse of the Soviet Union, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of data from Eurostat, the European Union’s statistical agency.
Tulijoiden TOP-alkuperämaa: Kosovo, Albania, Syyria, Afganistan, Irak.
Today, Eastern European countries like Kosovo and Albania still contribute to the overall flow of asylum seekers into the EU, Norway and Switzerland, but about half of refugees in 2015 trace their origins to just three countries: Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq. Conflicts, both fresh and long-standing, in each of these states have led to the displacement of hundreds of thousands of people. Some have been displaced within their homelands; others have sought refuge in neighboring countries; and still others have made the often perilous journey to Europe (and elsewhere) to seek asylum.
TOP-vastaanottajamaat: Saksa, Unkari, Ruotsi. Ranska ja Britit ottivat hakemuksia vastaan samoja määriä kuin ennen matutulvaa.
Since 2012, Germany has been the primary destination country for asylum seekers in Europe, receiving 442,000 asylum applications in 2015 alone. Following Germany, Hungary (174,000 applications) and Sweden (156,000) received the highest number of asylum applications in 2015. Meanwhile, France (71,000) and the UK (39,000) received roughly the same number of applications in 2015 as in years just prior to the refugee surge in 2015.
Erittäin lukemisen arvoinen 10-sivuinen data-analyysi mikä löytyy kokonaisuudessaan
täältä.Number of Refugees to Europe Increases to Record 1.3 Million
The number of people who left their homes and applied for asylum in Europe surged to a record 1.3 million in 2015, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of 1985-2015 Eurostat data.
Last year, Europe saw more asylum applicants than in the previous peak years of 1992 and 2002 combined. Last year's number amounts to about one-tenth of all applications received in the past 30 years in the European Union, Norway and Switzerland. About half of the 1.3 million come from only three countries: Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria – nations that have been devastated by war and conflict.
The new report also found that a majority of citizens in all EU countries disapprove of how the bloc is dealing with the refugee crisis.
“The highest disapproval is in some of the places with the largest number of refugees,” Phillip Connor, research associate with the Pew Research Center, told ABC News.
Countries such as Sweden and Hungary, recipients of large numbers of refugees, had some of the highest disapproval rates, the report shows.
The flow of refugees has also impacted European countries’ population makeup. In several countries, such as Sweden, Hungary, Norway and Austria, the share of the foreign-born increased by 1 percent or more in 2015 alone.
“That’s a significant population shift in one year,” Connor said. “It might not seem much, but in the U.S. it took a decade from 2005 to 2015 to increase the foreign-born by 1 percent of the total population.”
Since 2012, Germany has been the primary destination country for asylum seekers in Europe, receiving 442,000 asylum applications in just 2015. Measured per capita, Hungary, followed by Sweden and Austria, received the highest numbers of asylum seekers in 2015. In comparison, France and the UK received roughly the same number of applications in 2015 as in years prior to last year’s refugee surge.
The number of children reaching Europe alone with no parents or guardians increased in 2015 to about 7 percent of all asylum applicants.
Linkki:
http://abcnewsradioonline.com/world-news/number-of-refugees-to-europe-increases-to-record-13-million.html?