April 16, 2014 9:55 AM by Agence France-Presse
GENEVA, April 15, 2014 (AFP) –
The United Nation’s refugee agency
said yesterday it was partially lifting a call to stop returning asylum
seekers to Bulgaria because conditions there had improved.
Under current rules, European countries must return asylum seekers to
the first country on the continent they arrive in.
But in January, the
UN urged European nations to suspend all returns to Bulgaria, citing
“systematic deficiencies in reception conditions and asylum procedures”
after the country was swamped with refugees from war-ravaged Syria.
Yesterday the agency said the situation had improved, but the advice
still stood for vulnerable people such as children or people suffering
trauma or injuries.
“Since there have been significant improvements, we are relaxing our
directive, but only partially,”
UNHCR spokeswoman Melissa Fleming told
reporters in Geneva.
“People, such as children, women or people who are
traumatised or injured or who have particular vulnerabilities, we are
urging states: ‘Please don’t send them back to Bulgaria.’”
Last year, 7,144 people arrived in Bulgaria – the poorest country in
the 28-nation EU – to request asylum, up from an annual average of 1,000
over the past decade, according to UNHCR numbers.
Bulgaria has repeatedly appealed to other countries to share the
burden. But Fleming said there had been “significant improvements” in
the conditions asylum seekers are hosted in.
At the Harmanli centre, not far from the Turkish border, asylum
seekers had for instance been living in flimsy tents in the dead of
winter four months ago.
Today though, residents at that centre were
housed in renovated buildings with heating and had access to daily hot
meals and health care, she said.
Concerns remained however about two centres in the capital that
jointly host more than 800 people, mainly Syrians. Sanitary facilities
at those centres were “very limited,” the UNHCR said in a report
Tuesday, citing a shortage of toilets and blocked sewage systems.
Bulgaria is currently hosting around 5,500 asylum seekers – about 2,000 are from Afghanistan and most of the others from Syria.
However, the UN agency said restricted access to Bulgarian territory
along the Turkish border had “resulted in a marked decrease in the
number of arrivals since December 2013″.
Fleming said there were also reports of Syrians and Palestinians
based in the war-torn country, as well as Afghans and Sudanese
nationals, being forcibly returned from Bulgaria without being able to
apply for international protection, in some cases resulting in family
separations.
http://www.aquila-style.com/focus-points/un-allows-europe-to-return-asylum-seekers-to-bulgaria/63450
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