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A map of the European migrant crisis in 2015

This is a timeline of the European migrant crisis of 2015 and 2016.

Against the backdrop of four years of Syrian civil war and political instability in other Middle Eastern countries,[1] there was a record number of 1.3 million people who lodged asylum applications to the European Union's 28 member nations, Norway and Switzerland in 2015, compared to 600,000 applications filed in 2014.[2][3]: 8 [4]: 4 

In 2015, the European destinations for most of the migrants were Germany, Sweden and Austria.[4]: 4  Syria was the country of origin of most displaced persons that year, but many economic refugees also fled Kosovo as their country faced financial hardship in the aftermath of the 1998-1999 Kosovo war. Whereas migrants from Syria, Afghanistan, and Iraq were considered to be genuine refugees with 85% of their applications granted, the latter's were almost always rejected, resulting in fewer asylum applications from the Balkans, including Kosovo, Albania, and Serbia in 2016 onwards.[4]: 4 

The surge in numbers in 2015 was accompanied by a significant change in irregular migratory movements as large numbers of migrants, displaced persons, and asylum seekers attempted to enter Europe by both land and sea, bypassing regular migration.[3]: 2  Previously most irregular migration consisted of migrants from the African continent crossing the Mediterranean to Italy and onward to other European countries.[3]: 2 

In 2016, the number was only slightly less—with 1.2 million asylum applications filed.[5] From Syria alone, millions of people were dislocated in the "humanitarian catastrophe" that affected many Middle Eastern and European nations and beyond.[4]: 4 

In 2017, the number of applications decreased dramatically to a total of 706,913 to these destination countries, 40% of which were granted.[6] In 2017, Germany, Italy, and Greece received the most first-time asylum applications.[7] Deutsche Welle (DW) said that some of the likely causes of this decrease included the November 2015 deal made between Turkey and the EU to stem the flow of Syrian refugees into Europe, the closure of the easiest and safest route—the Balkan inland route, as well as intensified efforts by Italy to stop migrants attempting to make the shorter sea crossing from northern Africa to Italy.[7]

In 2022, the number of first-time applicants rose to approximately 996,000—the highest since the Syrian war-related 2015 and 2016 peak numbers.[8] As of August 2023 Syrians continued to attempt to escape their home country through the Eastern Mediterranean route, through Libya and then by boat to Europe.[9] According to the Agence France-Presse (AFP) service, the repression of peaceful pro-democracy protests in 2013 in Syria resulted in the ongoing conflict, millions of displaced persons, and hundred of thousands of deaths by 2022.[9]

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) reported in March 2023 that the world's largest refugee crisis continues to be Syria.[1]

Overview

A 2016 International Monetary Fund (IMF) report described how Europe's "unprecedented surge in asylum applications" peaked in 2015 as the Middle-East was plagued by civil war and political instability.[4]: 4  In 2015, the main destination countries were Germany, Sweden and Austria, and the top countries from which the migrants originated were Syria, Kosovo, Afghanistan, Albania, Iraq, Eritrea, Serbia, and Pakistan. Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Eritrea continued to experience conflicts in 2015.[4]

Of the asylum applications to European nations from January to September in 2015, 222,000 were Syrians, 103,000 were from Afghanistan, and 69,000 were from Iraq, the three countries with the highest likelihood of being accepted as genuine refugees and therefore more likely to be granted asylum status in Europe.[3]: 8  Most Balkan asylum seekers were rejected and the number of applicants decreased in 2016. Those from Syria, Iraq were accepted at a rate of 85%.[4]

The EEA and Switzerland received 2.3 million applications for asylum from 2009 to September 2015.[3]: 2 [10] There is often a time lag between the number of asylum applications lodged and the number of asylum seekers in a host country.[4]: 7 

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) reported in March 2023 that the world's largest refugee crisis continues to be Syria because of the ongoing conflicts since 2011.[1] Of the 14 million displaced, 6.8 million Syrians continued to be internally displaced with many still needing assistance.[1] As of 2023, Germany with 850,000 Syrian refugees, was the EU nation with the largest number, while Türkiye, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq and Egypt also hosted 5.5 million.[1] Syrian refugees lodged asylum applications in more than 130 nations.[1]

According to the UNHCR, As of November 2015 from the beginning of the 2011 Syrian conflict, there were more than 4 million Syrian refugees mainly living in Turkey, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon and Egypt.[3]: 19 

2011

October 2011

The Greek government began the construction of a fence on the 125 mile Greece–Turkey land border which was completed in December 2012.[11] Prior to its construction the northern Greece border along the Evros River provided the shortest and safest route for migrants to enter Europe.[11]

2014

Most migrants from the African countries crossed the Mediterranean Sea by boat to reach Italy and then moved onward to other European countries, according to the European Commission's European Migration Network (EMN).[3]: 2 

2015

Migrants crossing the Mediterranean from North Africa

The Europol Monitoring Team (EPTM) reported that there were 354,618 arrivals by sea to Europe from 1 January to 28 August in 2015 and 272, 070 during the same time frame in 2016, based on data from the International Organization for Migration.[15]

InfoMigrants reported the number of migrants by the main land and sea routes in 2015, which included the Central Mediterranean from North Africa (153,900), Eastern Mediterranean (885,400), Western Balkan (764,000), Western Mediterranean (7,000), and the Eastern Land Border (1,900).[16] The same report said that the Central Mediterranean route had been the "most popular migration route to Europe" since 2015.[16]

January 2015

February 2015

March 2015

April 2015

Irish Naval personnel from the LÉ Eithne rescuing migrants in the Mediterranean, June 2015

May 2015

June 2015

The 'Calais Jungle' migrant camp

July 2015

August 2015

September 2015

Migrants protesting outside Keleti railway station, Budapest, 3 September 2015
Migrants walking along the motorway from Hungary to Austria, 4 September 2015

By September 2015, 901,000 asylum applications had been lodged in the European Economic Area (EEA) representing a significant increase over the same time period in 2013, in which there were 451,000 applications.[3]: 2  From January to September 2015, an estimated 380,000 Syrian migrants arrived in the EU with over sixty per cent taking the Eastern Mediterranean route to Greece. By a large majority, most did not lodge asylum applications in Greece, but continued to Germany, Hungary, or Sweden.[3]: 22 

Migrants at Wien Westbahnhof railway station, Austria, on their way to Germany
Migrants at the Austria-Germany border

October 2015

Arrival of migrants in Dobova, Slovenia, 22 October 2015

November 2015

Slovenian soldiers building the barrier on the Croatian border, November 2015

December 2015

2016

Migrants crossing the Aegean Sea from Turkey to the Greek island of Lesbos, January 2016

Migrant smugglers' primary route into the EU was still the Central Mediterranean Sea.[15] In 2016, 1.2 million asylum applications filed for entrance into EU nations, Norway, and Switzerland.[5] The EPTM reported that there were 272, 070 arrivals by sea to Europe from 1 January to 28 August in 2016, based on IOM data.[15]

January 2016

February 2016

March 2016

April 2016

The Brenner Pass, on the Italy–Austria border

May 2016

September 2016

November 2016

Aftermath

In 2017 forty per cent of the 706,913 asylum applications to Europe were granted.[6]

March 2017

June 2017

July 2017

September 2017

December 2017

2018

January 2018

April 2018

June 2018

July 2018

January 2019

In 2019 the main land and sea border crossings used by migrants included the Central Mediterranean from North Africa (22,900), Eastern Mediterranean (52,000), Western Balkan (5,200), Western Mediterranean (52,400), and the Eastern Land Border (1,000), according to InfoMigrants.[16]

2021

For several year there was a steady decrease in human smuggling activities in Europe but in 2021 there was a sharp increase in all of EU's main land and sea entrance points.[170]: 5 

2022

February 2022

October 2022

The number of first-time asylum applicants to the EU increased to approximately 996,000. This represented the highest peak since the Syrian war-related 2015 and 2016 exodus.[8]

2023

January 2023

June 2023

July 2023

See also

References

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