Stories
like that of Aylan Kurdi, the Syrian boy whose body washed up on a Turkish
shore after drowning on the journey to Greece, and Osama Abdul Muhsen, the
Syrian refugee father who was kicked and tripped on camera by a Hungarian
journalist, have shown how the Syrian refugee crisis is experienced on a human
level. But the severity of the crisis becomes much clearer when you zoom out
and see how it unfolds on a continental scale:
One of the first things you'll notice in
this map is that the largest population of Syrian refugees isn't in Europe -
it's in the Middle East, in Syria's neighboring countries, often in vast and
underfunded UN-run refugee camps. That is an important part of why so many
refugees are traveling to Europe: Many see little hope of returning home to
Syria anytime soon, and see little future for themselves and their families in
the camps in Turkey, Lebanon, and Jordan.
Another story this map helps to tell is the
number of routes into the European Union, and particularly toward the more
northern EU states that are often more likely to accept refugees. Syrian
refugees in Turkey or Lebanon frequently go across the eastern Mediterranean to
Greece from Turkey, but some also travel to Egypt and take the
trans-Mediterranean route there. Some go across land entirely, crossing from
Turkey into Bulgaria.
These routes are dangerous. Refugees
crossing the Mediterranean often travel in poorly constructed dinghies that
make even the short trip from Turkey to Greece dangerous. Around 2,700 people
(that's a total, not just Syrians) have died so far trying to cross the
Mediterranean, including roughly 200 in one desperate late-August boat trip.
And even when you get to land, you're not
safe: 71 migrants crammed into a truck suffocated to death in a truck in
Austria, also in late August. So those arrows on the map, big and small, by no
means indicate secure travel routes - rather, they point to roads and seaways
born out of desperation.
Once on the European continent, Syrian
refugees often go to the Balkans to enter the EU at Hungary or Croatia. But
even once in the EU, refugees must confront a number of European countries that
are working to keep them out, or keep them from moving freely across Europe.
The border controls between Hungary and its neighbors, for example, or between
Austria and Germany are a major and at times perilous impediment to refugees.
Such border controls are also, many argue,
against the spirit of the EU, among which the Schengen Area countries (marked
in purple) are supposed to allow free movement across one another's borders. As
you can see on the map, Hungary has built a fence on its border to keep out
refugees. Greece, already reeling from its own financial crisis, has been
unable to process the thousands of migrants - forcing refugees in places like
Lesbos to set up impromptu tent cities near the port. Most displaced Syrian,
though, are still in Syria: about 8 million. In total, there are about 12 million
Syrians who've been forced to flee their homes. It's a disaster.
Πηγή:
vox.com
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