Asylum is still a relevant issue in post-boom Ireland

Wed, Jun 20, 2012, 01:00

   

OPINION: On World Refugee Day, the UNHCR urges Ireland to update an asylum procedure that was adopted as a temporary measure six years ago

EACH YEAR on World Refugee Day, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees shines a light on the courage and perseverance of refugees around the world. Tragically, 2011 was a record year for forced displacement across borders, with more people becoming refugees than at any time since 2000.

A major humanitarian crisis in late 2010 in Ivory Coast was quickly followed by others in Libya, Somalia, Sudan and elsewhere. Worldwide, more than 42 million people ended 2011 as refugees, internally displaced or in the process of seeking asylum. Afghanistan remains the largest producer of refugees, followed by Iraq, Somalia, Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

About four-fifths of the world’s refugees flee to neighbouring countries, and only a small proportion travel to Europe in search of protection.

The number of asylum seekers arriving in Ireland has fallen dramatically over recent years. In the first quarter of this year, 243 asylum applications were made. Should this trend continue to the end of the year, the number of new applications in 2012 may be the lowest since 1996.

The declining numbers may give the impression that asylum issues are no longer of great relevance in Ireland. However, there remains a substantial number of asylum seekers in Ireland who require the attention of the authorities.

An estimated 6,000 asylum seekers in Ireland are waiting for their protection claims to be assessed. Most have been waiting for upwards of three years. Many have been waiting for four years or substantially longer.

The wait takes a heavy toll. Asylum seekers cannot work or access third-level education. They live in accommodation centres where meals and basic needs are provided for. Efforts are undertaken to provide good reception arrangements. However, the system was designed for stays of six months or so. At a certain point, not being able to cook for one’s children or sharing a bedroom with growing children become real problems.

The bar to accessing employment or advanced studies is grinding. Asylum seekers without an answer to their case cannot return home if they fear persecution or if home is a war zone. So they are stuck, waiting for an answer, and the State must bear the cost of accommodating them for prolonged periods.

The long delays for this group are due to an administrative procedure adopted in Ireland as a temporary measure six years ago. Since then, attempts to introduce new legislation to fix the procedure have not come to pass.

The Minister for Justice and Equality recently announced that a fourth edition of the Immigration, Residence and Protection Bill will be published, and he has expressed the hope that the Bill will considered by the Oireachtas this year.