Tag: Syria

  • European Decisions on Mediterranean Refugee Crisis

    European Decisions on Mediterranean Refugee Crisis

    An Amnesty International report shows that out of 23 refugees trying to cross the Mediterranean into the EU, one dies because of the poor state of the boats used by smugglers



    As the migration issue grows into an acute EU problem, European leaders held an emergency meeting in Brussels to find solutions. The special summit was convened after the week before a boat carrying hundreds of people, mostly illegal migrants from Libya and Syria, sank off the Libyan coast. Over 800 deaths thus added to the 900 ones reported since the beginning of the year during attempts to reach the EU by sea. This is not a new problem, but data indicate that the wave of illegal migrants has considerably increased since last year. Refugee centres in Italy and Greece are overcrowded, and Germany received 173 thousand asylum applications last year.



    Facing a growing number of immigrants, Italy, which has received 25 thousand refugees this year alone, has lately called for a military intervention against Libyan people smugglers. PM Matteo Renzi has requested the agreement of the EU for destroying the boats used by traffickers before these cross the Mediterranean. The suggestion was backed by France, whose Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius stressed that those boats did not appear just out of nowhere.



    There are criminals and even terrorists who make profits from the desperation of people. The head of the European Council, Donald Tusk, emphasised that this was a European problem, and not only a problem of the countries in the south of the continent. We have a shared responsibility, he added, and called on all member countries to join efforts to reduce the refugee death toll.



    In his address, the Romanian president Klaus Iohannis focused on the need for solidarity with the countries that bear the brunt of receiving these migrants. In the medium and long run, we need to address the roots of this phenomenon, Iohannis said, namely the poverty in the North African areas that these refugees are trying to leave. The President also said Romania is willing to send experts to the area.



    The participants in the summit agreed to triple the funding for Mediterranean search and rescue, with operation Triton set to benefit from 120 million euro per year, as against 36 million at present. The EU will also look at ways to capture and destroy the boats used by smugglers, will step up efforts to prevent prospective sub-Saharan African migrants from reaching Libya and will simplify visa and asylum procedures. Moreover, EU and African countries will hold a special summit this year, focusing on the challenges presented by the illegal migration from Africa to Europe.


  • International Coalition against Terrorism

    International Coalition against Terrorism

    The US and the nations that have joined the fight against terrorism Tuesday launched air strikes against 20 sites controlled by the Islamic State group in Syria. News agencies report that Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates supported the military action. The US notified Damascus of the strikes launched on its territory, and explained they would not target the Syrian state.



    The action was initiated against the background of the severe worsening of the situation in Iraq and Syria, where the ultra-radical group carries on a brutal campaign of murders, rapes and hostage taking, and asks Muslims to kill the citizens of countries making up the coalition that fights against it, particularly American and French. The US and France already launched air strikes in Iraq, after the IS declared a caliphate in Syria and Iraq on July the 1st.



    A Pentagon official said Tuesday’s raids targeted IS camps in Raqqa, the main Jihadist stronghold in Syria. The group also controls much of the country’s eastern part, particularly the oil-producing Deir Ezzor and much of the Turkish border. Syrian Kurdish fighters announced having halted the IS advance towards the town of Kobani, on the Turkish border, the stage of violent clashes that have prompted massive groups of civilians to seek refuge in Turkey. The US Secretary of State John Kerry called for an international coalition of European and Arab countries to join the US in destroying this terrorist group in Iraq and Syria.



    In Bucharest, PM Victor Ponta announced that Romania supported the plan and would contribute to these international efforts. A recent poll indicates that most Romanians are concerned with the situation in Ukraine, and 44% of them are worried about the armed offensive of the Islamic State.