2024 REPORT

Refugees in Spain and Europe

Refugees in 2023

The 22nd Annual Report of CEAR analyzes the situation of refugees in Spain and Europe in a year that saw a record of 110 million people forcibly displaced worldwide.

In this report, we analyze, among other things, the situation of the main countries of origin of refugees and displaced persons and the main obstacles they must overcome in their migratory journey.

© Federico Rios / New York Times / ContactoPhoto

1. GLOBAL EXODUS

Forced Displacement Figures Worldwide

Main Host and Origin Countries

By mid-2023, 87% of refugees came from ten countries: Syria, Afghanistan, Ukraine, Venezuela, South Sudan, Myanmar, Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Somalia and the Central African Republic. Compared to 2022, there was a significant increase in Afghan and Ukrainian refugees. Additionally, the ten countries with the highest number of internal displacements were Colombia, Syria, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ukraine, Yemen, Somalia, Nigeria, Afghanistan, Sudan and Ethiopia. 83% of new internal forced displacements in the first half of 2023 were recorded in sub-Saharan Africa, mainly in Sudan.

Most displaced people followed the trend of seeking refuge in neighboring countries, with 75% residing in the poorest countries. Among the top five host countries, only one is European: Iran, Turkey, Germany, Colombia, Pakistan and Uganda. For the first time, Iran is on this list, hosting—along with Pakistan—90% of those fleeing the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.

Environmental Displacement

Climate change, environmental degradation, and natural disasters caused almost as many internal displacements in 2023 as conflicts and violence: 26.4 million people had to flee for environmental reasons in 2023. These factors further exacerbate the vulnerability of refugees and displaced persons, 76% of whom are hosted in countries most exposed to the adverse effects of climate change.

Many people displaced by conflicts, violence, or human rights violations also face droughts, floods, extreme temperatures, or natural disasters during their migratory journeys, such as the earthquake that shook Morocco in September or the floods in Libya that same month. In countries like the Democratic Republic of Congo or Colombia, extractive activities and environmental degradation worsened violence, forcing thousands of people to flee.

Although progress has been made in the international recognition of environmental displacement, in terms of climate justice,fundamental challenges remain, such as the lack of consensus on terminology and the legal protection of environmentally displaced people, requiring an urgent global response.

Major Conflicts

© Viacheslav Ratynskyi / Reuters / ContactoPhoto

2. Refugees in the European Union

Migratory routes to the EU

At least 292,985 migrants arrived irregularly in the EU in 2023, a 54,5% increase from the previous year. 91% of them arrived by sea, with Italy, Spain and Greece as the main destination countries.

The Mediterranean and Atlantic routes continued to be the most dangerous in the world, with over 4,000 deaths and disappearances, the highest figure since 2017. The deadliest border crossing was once again the central Mediterranean sea, accounting for 60% of these deaths.

Irregular sea arrivals to the EU
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Irregular land arrivals to the EU
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People dead or missing while attempting to reach the EU
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Asylum Figures

A total of 1 129 800 people applied for international protection in the Union Europewhich represented an increase of 17% increase from 2022. Once again, Germany, France, Spain and Italy were themain recipient countries, concentrating two-thirds of the total number of applications. Syria, Afghanistan, Turkey, Venezuela and Colombia were the main countries of origin. Notably, in 2023, there was an increase in asylum applications submitted by unaccompanied children: 41,495.

Asylum applications in the EU
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Average EU recognition rate of protection
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Pending asylum applications in the EU
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European Pact on Migration and Asylum

The European Pact on Migration and Asylum, adopted in 2024, poses significant protection risks, deepensa border externalisation approach and threatens respect for the rights of migrants, asylum seekers and refugees. The Pact strengthens border controls and focuses on preventing people from arriving by all means and on returning them as quickly as possible.. It, al so fails to provide for the necessary expansion of safe and legal pathways to protection,, forcing thousandsof people to risk their livesevery year.. The implementation phase in Spain over the next two years is crucial to ensuring the maximum protection and well-being of those seeking refuge.

© Antonio Sempere / Europa Press / ContactoPhoto

3. Access to the right of asylum in Spain

More Than Numbers

In 2023, Spain experienced an unparalleled increase in applications for international protection, reaching a total of 163,220, an increase of 37.3% compared to 2022. It was the third-largest recipient of international protection applications in the European Union. Seven out of the top ten nationalities of asylum seekers in Spain came from Latin America: Venezuela and Colombia were the main countries of origin, followed by Peru, Honduras, Cuba, Morocco, Nicaragua, Senegal, Russia and El Salvador.

The rate of recognition of international protection in Spain fell to 12% in 2023four points lower than the previous year, which leaves Spain at the bottom of the European Union, and well below the European average of 42%. Four out of ten applications were denied.

In total, 88,042 files of different types of protection were resolved,a slight increase compared to 2022, consolidating the increasing trend in the number of resolutions since 2019.

However, the number of pending applications increased by 56% compared to the previous year, with 191,095 people awaiting a decision on which their lives depend.

Asylum Appointments
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Average EU recognition rate of protection
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Pending applications
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Obstacles to access the asylum procedure

© A. Pérez Meca / Europa Press / ContactoPhoto

Asylum Appointments

Barriers and obstacles to accessing the asylum procedure persisted, mainly to access the territory. The shortage of previous appointments fueled an irregular market for the purchase and sale of appointments, making protection needs invisible and leaving thousands of people defenseless for periods of up to nine months.

© Jesús Mérida / Zuma Press / ContactoPhoto

Border Procedure

At Adolfo Suárez Madrid-Barajas Airportthere was exponential increase in asylum applications, mainly from people from Kenya and Somalia.Hundreds of asylum seekerswerein unacceptable and unacceptable conditions of overcrowding and unhealthy conditions, with delays of up to 30 days for the formalization of their asylum applications.

© Carlos de Saá

4. Southern Border

© CEAR

5. Reception and inclusion

The reception and inclusion system in Spain faced various challenges in 2023. Some were persistent, such as the difficulties faced by migrants and refugees in accessing economic, social and cultural rights, while others were new, such as the challenges arising from the implementation of the new management model for the reception system based on concerted action, to improve the care for persons seeking international protection.

© CEAR

Transition of the Reception Model

For the first time the new management model for the reception system was implemented allowing for a stable and planned response to structural needs and adapting the reception, system to the context and profile of asylum applicants.

© CEAR

Barrier-Free with Rights

Bureaucratic procedures, ethnic and racial discrimination, the digital divide, and barriers to registering in the census or opening bank accounts hinder migrants and refugees access to housing, employment, healthcare, or education, leaving them in a state of vulnerability and social exclusion.

© CEAR

6. Proposals

Proposals

© Mohammed Zaanoun

Materials

OTHER DOCUMENTS

The European Pact on Migration and Asylum. Challenges and Threats to Human Rights

Europe will have a new European Pact on Migration and Asylum with catastrophic consequences for the human rights and lives of migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers arriving in the European Union.

CEAR Recommendations for the Spanish Presidency of the Council of the European Union 2023

The new legislative cycle after the 2023 European elections is an opportunity for the European Union to promote and adopt political and legislative measures from a human rights guarantee perspective for migrants and refugees.

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