Record 1.3 Million Applied for Asylum in Europe Last Year
Tara John @tarajohn
Aug. 2, 2016
A
dinghy with Syrian refugees arrives at a beach on the Greek island of
Kos after crossing a part of the Aegean sea from Turkey to Greece on
August 15, 2015 in Kos, Greece.
Milos Bicanski—Getty Images A dinghy
with Syrian refugees arrives at a beach on the Greek island of Kos on
Aug. 15, 2015, after crossing a part of the Aegean Sea from Turkey
Double the previous record set in 1992, according to Pew figures
The
E.U. nations, Switzerland and Norway saw a record 1.3 million migrants
apply for asylum in 2015, accounting for about one-tenth of all
applications (11.6 million) received by those countries in the past 30
years.
According to the Pew Research Center, which analyzed data
from the E.U.’s statistical agency Eurostat, last year’s 1.3 million
applications is close to double the last record, set in 1992, of 697,000
asylum applications. That surge was caused by the fall of the Iron
Curtain after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
In 2015, Germany
was the primary destination for asylum seekers. The country received
442,000 applications, the highest annual number recorded by a European
country for the past three decades. Hungary received the second largest
number of applications in 2015 with 174,000, followed by Sweden, which
received 156,000.
Per capita, Hungary received the highest number
of first-time requests for asylum in 2015, some 1,770 applications per
100,000 people. The number is well above the total European rate of 250
applicants per 100,000. Sweden came second to Hungary with 1,600
first-time asylum applications per 100,000 people, followed by Austria
(1,000 per 100,000 people) and Norway (590 per 100,000).
More than
half of all asylum applicants in 2015 came from Syria, Afghanistan and
Iraq. East European regions like Ukraine, Albania, Russia and Kosovo
contributed to 17% of all asylum applications in the E.U., Switzerland
and Norway.
Wednesday, August 3, 2016
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