(Reuters) - Wars
in Syria and Iraq, and instability in other hotspots are driving ever
more people to seek asylum in wealthy nations, with requests on track to
hit a 20-year high in 2014, the United Nations refugee agency said on Friday. Some 330,700 people
sought refugee status in 44 industrialized countries in the first half
of the year, an almost 24 per cent rise on the same period in 2013, it
said. If the trend
continues, the number of new asylum claims could reach 700,000 in 2014,
"the highest total for industrialized countries in 20 years and a level
not seen since the 1990s conflict in former Yugoslavia," it said in a
report. "The international
community needs to prepare their populations for the reality that in
the absence of solutions to conflict more and more people are going to
need refuge and care in the coming months and years," said U.N. High
Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres, a former prime minister of Portugal. More than two-thirds of all asylum claims in the first six months of this year were lodged in just six countries, in order: Germany, the United States, France, Sweden, Turkey and Italy, according to the UNHCR. And more than one in seven claims - 48,400 - were from Syrians, twice as many as in the same period last year. For the first time since 1999, Germany
received the largest number of new asylum claims among industrialized
countries, 65,700, mainly due to a rise in applications by Syrians. The
figure was up by 50 percent from the same period in 2013. The
28 member states of the European Union (EU) registered 216,300 claims, a
23 percent rise compared to the same six-month period last year, it
said. POPULAR DESTINATIONS The Nordic region led by Sweden remained a popular destination in Europe, with 38,900 applications, the UNHCR said. Italy,
whose shores are sought by many desperate families fleeing conflicts in
the Middle East and Africa, recorded 24,500 claims during the period,
almost as many as all of last year. Many
failed to reach safety, with the death toll so far this year from
shipwrecks in the Mediterranean nearing 3,000 would-be migrants and
asylum-seekers, aid agencies say. The
United States and Canada registered 52,800 and 5,800 asylum claims,
respectively, with Chinese nationals forming the largest group in both
North American countries, the UNHCR said. Asylum seekers from Mexico,
El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, many of them fleeing violence
generated by gangs, organized crime and drug cartels, also helped
account for a 27 percent rise in U.S. asylum claims during the period,
it said. Australia
- whose tough immigration policies have been criticized by UNHCR -
registered nearly 4,600 claims, a drop of 20 percent from the
corresponding period a year before. A third of applicants were from
China or India, it said. After
Syrians, Iraqis (21,300) and Afghans (19,300) were the second and third
largest groups of asylum seekers in the West, with Turkey remaining the main destination country for each. The
number of Eritrean asylum-seekers reached "unprecedented levels" among
the 44 industrialized countries, 18,500 or more than three times those
registered in the period in 2013. "The
highest relative increase was recorded for Ukrainians, whose asylum
claims increased from 700 to 4,100, reflecting the outbreak of
conflict," UNHCR said adding that they mainly lodged requests in Poland,
the United States and Italy.
Syrian, Iraqi and other asylum seekers on rise in West: UNHCR

Reuters
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