Cyprus: The twisted reality behind the
statistics
Date:
13 Jan 2005 | UNHCR News Stories ![]()
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An asylum seeker in Nicosia showing the documents he received in Cyprus
after submitting an asylum application. © UNHCR/M.Lysandrou
In
the second story in our occasional series on asylum issues in new EU states,
UNHCR looks at why the number of asylum claims has skyrocketed in Cyprus
despite an overall downward trend in Europe, and what is being done to plug the
island's migration loophole.
NICOSIA,
Cyprus, Jan. 13 (UNHCR) – The headlines on asylum statistics have been
consistent for the past couple of years: "Asylum applications drop in
industrialised countries" (May 2003); "Industrialised countries hit
lowest asylum numbers since 1987, says UNHCR" (August 2004).
Industrialized countries have seen the numbers of new asylum seekers more than
halve since its peak in 1992, a trend mirrored within the European Union.
However,
a closer look at UNHCR's exhaustive quarterly industrialized country asylum
tables reveals a very discordant element: Cyprus.
An
annual total that leapt 363 percent between 2002 and 2003, when during the same
period the total in Europe as a whole fell by 20 percent. A 499 percent
increase when the first nine months of 2004 are compared with the same period
in 2003. A staggering 563 percent increase in the last quarter of 2003, when
the surge began.
Cyprus
is the third smallest of the 25 EU states, with a total population of 731,000
in the part of the country controlled by the recognized government. The number
of new asylum seekers making applications in the government-controlled part of
Cyprus in 2004 (with December still to be counted) was 7,375. On a per capita
basis, this would be the equivalent of 600,000 new applications in the United
Kingdom or more than 800,000 in Germany. While such theoretical comparisons
have obvious limitations (at the end of the day there is still a huge
difference between 7,000 and 800,000), they do nevertheless highlight the
starkly different trend that Cyprus has been experiencing compared to most of
its fellow EU member states.
So
where are all these asylum seekers coming from? Is this the proverbial
"invasion" beloved by right-wing politicians and tabloid newspapers?
Are they really refugees? Why Cyprus? And how is it coping?
The
answer is that the phenomenon is more the result of a strange migration quirk
than a wave of new arrivals. Most of the asylum seekers in Cyprus are indeed
misusing the system – but in a way that is more misguided than nefarious. Most
of them were already in the country legally – at least initially – before they
made their asylum claims and helped create a whole swathe of statistics that
could very easily be misinterpreted.
Although
Cyprus's asylum seekers come from around 40 different countries, since late
2003 half of them have come from just two: Bangladesh and Pakistan. Most are
students, who came to Cyprus on legitimate student visas or legitimate work
visas.
In
2002, just 71 Pakistanis and not a single Bangladeshi claimed asylum. Then
towards the end of 2003, something changed. By the end of the year, 2,077
Bangladeshis and 480 Pakistanis had claimed asylum – the overwhelming majority
of them in the last three months of the year.
A
number of factors seem to be involved – first and foremost the fact that asylum
seekers are allowed to work, and people on student visas are not.
"I
feel sorry for them," said Andreas Agrotis, an eligibility officer with
Cypriot Asylum Service. "They are very poor, and they spend all their
savings in order to come to Cyprus. I dealt with many cases where asylum
seekers arrived in Cyprus on student visas and after a while they dropped their
studies as they could no longer afford to pay their tuition fees. When asked
why they applied for asylum, the usual answers were that there was no other way
to legalize their stay in Cyprus, or that they gave all their money to the
agent that brought them to Cyprus, and as such they could not go back to their
countries, because they came from poor families that could not support
them."
This
version of events is supported by Tuhin, a 24-year-old Bangladeshi who has
spent the last four years in a private college in Cyprus. Tuhin says he knows
lots of people from his country who have applied for asylum, and puts most of
the blame on the agents operating in Bangladesh. "It's the agents who give
the wrong information to all those boys: they tell them to come to Cyprus and
then lead them to believe that parallel to their studies they will be able to
work."
According
to Tuhin, some of the students' parents have gone so far as to sell their land
or shop in order to pay the US$3,000-7,000 demanded by the agents. Part of this
sum goes to the agent and the rest to the college in Cyprus, where their
children are enrolled. They do this in the belief – carefully nourished by the
agents – that this is the best way to provide their children with a better
future.
Naveed,
a 24-year-old Pakistani student, has been through precisely the sort of process
of misinformation, expectation and disillusionment described by Tuhin.
"Agents back in my country give out the wrong information," he says.
"They tell people that Cyprus is like America and Canada, where they will
be able to earn money and send it back to their families."
Naveed
wanted to come to Cyprus – a country well known for its tourism industry – to
study hotel management. "I have no problems in my country and my intention
was to go back after I finished my studies and open a restaurant."
Like
so many others, he says he was cheated by his agent. "When I came here
last August, I found that he never paid the college with my money. Broke, I
started asking around what to do. They told me to apply for asylum. So I did in
October, without knowing why a person applies for asylum."
The
Cypriot authorities only assumed responsibility for assessing asylum claims in
January 2002 – prior to that, UNHCR decided which asylum seekers were genuine
refugees. As in some other new EU states in Central Europe, the system is
young. After some initial teething troubles, additional first-instance staff
had been hired and trained by the summer of 2003, and the system was starting
to function well. A few months later the numbers soared as Bangladeshis and
Pakistanis on student or expired work visas suddenly discovered what appeared
to be the magic solution to their woes.
To
their credit, the Ministry of Interior and its staff, overburdened as they have
been with the sudden surge in asylum applications, have made a great effort to
continue dealing with applications in a protection-minded spirit.
"Our
priority is to protect those in real need," says Makis Polydorou, Director
of the Cypriot Asylum Service. "At the same time however, we have to
combat abuse, without infringing the rights of asylum seekers and
refugees."
Sotos
Ktoris, an administrative officer in the Asylum Service, says the service is
currently focusing on the groups presenting large numbers of manifestly
unfounded claims. "But that leaves no time to deal with cases that could
well be genuine. Thus we are delaying the processing of the few cases from, for
example, Ivory Coast, Congo, Sudan."
Cyprus's
overall recognition rate between January 1 and November 30, 2004, was 3.6
percent. If the number of cases closed through withdrawals or failure to turn
up to interviews is included, the rate falls to around 1.5 percent. Similarly
extraordinarily low recognition rates in Slovakia and Greece have aroused
repeated expressions of concern by UNHCR, given that the asylum seekers being
rejected include large numbers from countries and regions that have been
producing a relatively high proportion of genuine refugees, such as Saddam
Hussein's Iraq (in the case of Greece) and Chechnya (in the case of Slovakia).
But
Cyprus's extremely low recognition rate is not challenged by UNHCR. "We
believe it to be fair," said Betsy Greve, the outgoing head of UNHCR's
office in Nicosia. "The huge majority of cases are simply not refugees,
but students or economic migrants who have been misled to believe that they
should apply for asylum in order to prolong their stay in Cyprus."
Cyprus's
unfortunate migration loophole is in the process of being closed. In October,
the Cypriot authorities – with the full backing of UNHCR – introduced a
fast-track procedure for the big backlog of cases believed to be manifestly
unfounded. During the first two months, 1,788 asylum seekers had their cases
decided, mostly Bangladeshis and Pakistanis. Of these, 352 were rejected, 20
were given refugee or humanitarian status (12 Iranians and 8 Palestinians) and
1,416 had their cases closed – mostly because they withdrew their request or
because they did not show up for their interviews.
In
another new development, during the last few months a number of students whose
asylum claims were rejected have been immediately deported back to their home
countries without being able to finish their studies – thereby sending a strong
message that the ruse of falsely claiming asylum is actually now
counter-productive.
In
addition, since the beginning of 2004, the authorities have introduced much
tighter controls on the issuance of student visas, with migration officers sent
out to countries of origin to check applications more thoroughly. Reports
suggest that around 90 percent of student visa applications are now being
rejected for reasons such as fraudulent documents or because the candidate does
not speak English – without which they could not possibly carry out their
studies in Cyprus.
The
role played by some colleges in this affair has also been an issue of somewhat
heated debate between the government and the colleges.
Perhaps
most important of all, the government is also planning a major change to the
aliens and immigration law which will include an element giving foreign
students the right to work on a part-time basis.
Possibly
partly as a result of word starting to go round that the asylum game was up,
the number of applications by Bangladeshis and Pakistanis fell by 24 percent
and 20 percent respectively in November, 2004 – although some Chinese students
and Sri Lankan workers on expired visas appeared to be belatedly trying to jump
on the same bandwagon.
Naveed,
the Pakistani student who along with so many others applied for asylum for the
wrong reason, has withdrawn his request. "After a while," he says,
"I realized that this application does not help me in any way. I came here
to study and I have no problems in my country. So I decided to withdraw my
application, as it was clear to me that I did not do the right thing. Luckily
for me, my family can pay for my ticket back to Pakistan. I'll join my father's
business. As for my plans for opening a restaurant, this will have to
wait."
It
is to be hoped that in the future, as Cyprus tightens its student programmes,
and a more accurate message about its asylum system is relayed back to
countries such as Pakistan and Bangladesh, that fewer people like Naveed are
lured into a sad and untenable predicament. Then the Cypriot statistics will
give a more accurate reflection of asylum realities.
By
Emilia Strovolidou in Nicosia,
Rupert Colville in Geneva
First story in this series: Hunger strike reveals strains in Polish
asylum system.