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Red Cross societies plea for safer passage to EU

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Red-CrossOn 6 November, a month after the Lampedusa tragedy, where hundreds of migrants on-route to Europe lost their lives, the Red Cross EU Office and Cecilia Wikström MEP are holding a conference at the European Parliament to advance discussions on creating legal avenues to access international protection in the EU. The event will provide an opportunity to examine the humanitarian consequences of externalisation, a process that sees the responsibility for migration management shifted towards migrant’s countries of origin and transit. Participants will also identify ways for the EU to overcome some of these challenges, particularly in face of the pressing demand for international protection resulting from continued conflict in Syria.

"As the drivers of forced migration become more complex, increasing numbers of people are driven to flee conflict, political upheaval, violence, disasters, climate change and development projects,” said Roger Zetter, editor of the 2012 World Disasters Report and professor at Oxford University, "we Europeans need to be more proactive both within Europe and in the main host countries in promoting the protection of fundamental human rights for forcibly displaced persons and developing sustainable solutions to displacement'”. National Red Cross Societies are scrutinizing the numerous humanitarian outcomes of Externalization both within and outside the EU, and have identified policy recommendations in their position paper Legal Avenues to Access International Protection in the EU for moving the debate forward. They have long-standing practical experience in working with and for vulnerable migrants; be it providing lifesaving humanitarian assistance, psychological or administrative support to those seeking safety in Europe. "On a daily basis, Red Cross staff and volunteers all over Europe and abroad are witnessing how the scarcity of options to enter the EU legally, coupled with the tightening of border controls, pushes migrants and asylum seekers to resort to riskier routes”, underlines Alexandra Segenstedt of the Swedish Red Cross, "this in turn reinforces migrants’ vulnerabilities and leaves them at risk of smuggling and exploitation”.

The conference 'Shifting EU Borders and the access to international protection' will be composed of two panel discussions with time set aside for questions and answers in order to foster debate among panellists and participants. A first panel, focusing on the protection of migrants in the context of shifting EU borders, will include speakers from Oxford University, Swedish Red Cross and the Council of Europe, who will expose the key vulnerabilities triggered by Externalisation. A representative from Frontex will also present how the Agency streamlines Fundamental Rights into its activities. A second panel, focused on the policy tools used for ensuring access to protection in the EU, will see representatives from the Lithuanian Presidency, European Commission and European Parliament present how recent and on-going policy initiatives aim to address these challenges. "We must show humanity and our solidarity with the persecuted. The Mediterranean sea cannot become a graveyard of migrants that hoped to reach safety in Europe. We cannot solely rely on third countries to implement our human rights values and we must uphold the standards that we have set ourselves. The process of externalisation of EU borders puts the EU's commitments at risk, including the right to international protection and the principle of non-refoulement”, stresses Cecilia Wikström MEP ahead of the Conference.

In view of this conference, Leon Prop, Director of the Red Cross EU Office emphasises that the debate on protected entry in the EU must be advanced as a matter of urgency. "For instance, legal avenues like promoting the issuing of humanitarian and protection visas, and resettling higher numbers of refugees, should be further explored by the EU and its Members States.”, said Leon Prop Director. "The EU needs to ensure that international refugee law, and the norms, principles and standards of protection are respected at its borders and beyond. Illegal entry for the purpose of seeking international protection cannot penalised”.

The process of externalisation is the focus of the new Red Cross EU Office publication Shifting borders – externalising migrant vulnerabilities and rights?, which will be launched during this conference. Echoing the 2012 edition of the IFRC flagship publication, the World Disasters Report, which highlights the increasing number of people that are forcibly displaced, this new publication focuses on the acute vulnerabilities of forced migrants within the specific context of the EU migration and border control policy.

About the Red Cross EU Office

The Red Cross EU Office represents Red Cross National Societies in the European Union, as well as Norway, and the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), before the institutions of the European Union. It works to increase the influence of the Red Cross on European Union policies that have an impact on the interests of vulnerable people. The Red Cross EU Office provides support to its members by sharing information, building partnerships and facilitating access to EU funding.
For more information, visit www.redcross.eu.

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