New Zealand not taking a fair share of refugees
PRESS RELEASE
4 October 2016
Global Report: New Zealand and other
rich nations not taking their fair share of
refugees
New Zealand and other wealthy countries have shown a complete lack of leadership and responsibility, leaving the world’s low and middle income countries to shoulder the vast majority of the world’s refugees, said Amnesty International in a comprehensive assessment of the refugee crisis published today.
The report ‘Tackling the global refugee
crisis: From shirking to sharing responsibility’,
highlights that just 10 countries, which account for less
than 2.5% of world GDP, currently host 56% of the world’s
refugees. New Zealand, Ireland and Jordan all have
populations of approximately 4.5 million people. The report
shows that New Zealand, a much larger and richer country
than Lebanon, hosts just 250 Syrian refugees. Meanwhile
Ireland, with a similar economy but smaller land mass than
New Zealand, hosts 758 Syrian refugees.
In stark
contrast, Lebanon, a far smaller and poorer country than New
Zealand, hosts around 1.1 million Syrian refugees.
“The numbers speak for themselves. In too many cases, th few countries surrounding conflict zones are forced to do far too much, simply because of their location,” said Grant Bayldon, Amnesty International New Zealand’s Executive Director. “Fairness is a Kiwi value, we pride ourselves on it. But when it comes to refugees, we’re simply not doing our fair share.”
Of the world’s 21 million
refugees, the UN Refugee ageny (UNHCR) has identified 1.2
million of them who are highly vulnerable and in urgent need
of resettlement. Amnesty International has used three
relevant, objective criteria – national wealth, population
size and unemployment rate – to determine what a fair
share of responsibility for resettling these most vulnerable
refugees would be.
“For New Zealand’s to do our
fair share, we should resettle approximately 3400 refugees
as an immediate, one-off emergency intake, to be processed
over the next two years. This should be in addition to our
annual refugee quota,” said Bayldon. “There are 1.2
million people right now – human beings just like you and
me – who are suffering and dying to try to find a place
where they can raise their families, work and contribute to
society. It is patently unfair to expect a small handful of
poor countries to provide for them.”
The report
underlines the urgent need for governments to increase
significantly the number of refugees they take in by
highlighting some of the issues that people face after
being forced to flee their homes, including the danger of
being sent back to conflict zones,living in appalling
conditions such as Australia’s offshore detention centres,
and taking incredibly dangerous journeys that too often end
in tragedy.
“If we don’t act people will die,
from drowning, from preventabl diseases in wretched camps or
detention centres, or from being forced back into the
conflict zones they are fleeing, said Salil Shetty, Amnesty
International Secretary General. “If every one of the
wealthiest countries in the world were to take in refugees
in proportion to their size, wealth and unemployment rate,
finding a home for more of the world’s refugees would be
an eminently solvable challenge. All that is missing is
cooperation and political will,” said Shetty.
The situation faced by the world’s 21 million
refugees is precarious. While many in Greece, Iraq, on the
island of Nauru, or at the border of Syria and Jordan are in
dire need of a home, others in Kenya and Pakistan are facing
growing harassment from governments. These 21 million
refugees make up just 0.3% of the world’s population.
“Last month at the UN, world leaders failed to protect the world’s refugees. But we can welcome them, and we can do it fairly. The challenge is there for the New Zealand Government to live up to,” said Bayldon.
ENDS/