Mediterranean Sea alone did cost over 22,000 migrants' lives since 2000
It sounds like almost 4 thousand faceless and nameless fellow human-beings had lost their lives unnecessarily every year since 2000 while trying to escape - persecution, killing, or poverty. They were somebody's sisters brothers daughters or sons and now they are just statistics. Unfortunately, thanks to the the rise of anti-migrant right wing parties all over the industrialized world, the death toll of migrants seems to rise even more in the coming years. Every country which tightens its borders and does everything to prevent immigrants from entering its "sovereign land", is a complicit to this human tragedy unfolding everyday from Australia, to the US; from South Africa to Italy; from Saudi-Arabia to Libya.
Geneva - IOM today (29/9/2014) released “Fatal Journeys: Tracking Lives Lost During Migration,” the world’s most comprehensive tally to date of migrant fatalities across land and sea.
With a count surpassing 40,000 victims since 2000, IOM calls on all the
world’s governments to address what it describes as “an epidemic of
crime and victimization.”
“Our message is blunt: migrants are dying who need not,” said IOM
Director General William Lacy Swing, “It is time to do more than count
the number of victims. It is time to
engage the world to stop this violence against desperate migrants.”
engage the world to stop this violence against desperate migrants.”
The research behind “Fatal Journeys,” which runs to over 200
pages, began with the October 2013 tragedy when over 400 migrants died
in two shipwrecks near the Italian island of Lampedusa.
The study, compiled under IOM’s Missing Migrants Project,
reveals Europe as the world’s most dangerous destination for “irregular”
migration, costing the lives of over 22,000 migrants since 2000, mainly
on treacherous routes across the Mediterranean Sea.
Besides counting fatalities, the Missing Migrants Project is part of a broader effort to use social media to engage communities around the world.
With this month’s Malta shipwreck tragedy, IOM offices worldwide
received calls and emails from family members across Europe and the
Middle East seeking news about their missing relatives, many of whom are
now feared dead.
Going forward, the Missing Migrants Project will lend a powerful voice of deterrence to keep future victims from embarking on these dangerous journeys.
“People are already looking for information about missing migrants on
Facebook. We know as well that people are trafficked around the world
using Facebook and other social media,” says IOM spokesperson Leonard
Doyle.
“We want to turn #MissingMigrants into a powerful voice to
warn future migrants against taking these high risk journeys. It is not
doing it with a poster or a radio spot, but with the most persuasive
means out there – the voices of survivors and the family members of
missing migrants,” he adds.
“Fatal Journeys’” data reveals Europe’s death toll is now at nearly 4,000 fatalities since the start of 2013, and over 22,000 since 2000.
IOM’s research records that since 2000 nearly 6,000 more migrant deaths
occurred along the US-Mexico border and another 3,000 deaths from such
diverse migration routes as Africa’s Sahara Desert and the waters of the
Indian Ocean.
The true number of fatalities is likely to be considerably higher. “Fatal Journeys”
uses statistical data compiled by governments and other agencies, but
collecting data on migrant deaths has never been a priority for most
governments around the world.
“Although vast sums of money are spent collecting migration and border
control data, very few agencies collect and publish data on migrant
deaths,” says IOM Head of Research Frank Laczko.
Many deaths occur in remote regions of the world and are never
recorded. No organization at the global level is currently responsible
for systematically monitoring the number of deaths which occur.
According to Laczko, data tends to be scattered, with a range of
organizations involved in tracking fatalities. Some experts now believe
that for every dead body discovered, there are at least two others that
are never recovered.
IOM believes the publication of “Fatal Journeys” will begin to
provide some clarity to what many consider to be a growing epidemic of
crime against migrants. It represents an initial step towards an
accurate accounting of what is happening to the victims and a wake-up
call for governments.
“The paradox is that at a time when one in seven people around the
world are migrants, we are seeing an extraordinarily harsh response to
migration in the developed world,” says IOM Director General Swing.
“Limited opportunities for safe and regular migration drive would-be
migrants into the hands of smugglers, feeding an unscrupulous trade that
threatens the lives of desperate people. We need to put an end to this
cycle. Undocumented migrants are not criminals. They are human beings in
need of protection and assistance, and deserving respect,” he adds.
For a copy of the report, please go to: http://www.iom.int/files/live/sites/iom/files/pbn/docs/Fatal-Journeys-Tracking-Lives-Lost-during-Migration-2014.pdf
Source: IOM
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