Around 3,300 Syrians have arrived in Italy by boat over recent weeks, many fleeing troubled Egypt where they had first found a haven from war, the UN refugee agency said Friday.
UNHCR spokesman Adrian Edwards said that the bulk of the refugees were families that had arrived over the past 40 days, mostly in Sicily. Some 670 refugees landed in the past week.
UNHCR estimates that 4,600 Syrians have arrived by sea in Italy since 2013 began, a massive increase from last year’s total of 369. “The majority have come from Egypt,” Edwards told reporters.
“Fundamentally, the outflow is a symptom of the conflict inside Syria on the one hand and the strains on asylum in the surrounding region,” Edwards said.
“In Egypt we have seen changes in the environment over the last month or so, including the tightened visa regulations, and that has resulted in some Syrians moving on elsewhere,” he added.
UNHCR has repeatedly expressed fears for Syrian war exiles in crisis-hit Egypt since Islamist president Mohamed Morsi was ousted in July, amid arbitrary arrests of refugees and rising anti-Syrian rhetoric.
A vocal backer of Syria’s opposition, Morsi had cut diplomatic ties with the regime of President Bashar al-Assad.
Morsi’s opponents claimed that anti-Assad refugees were involved in violent pro-Morsi protests.
Egypt’s new military-backed rulers have faced UNHCR criticism for slapping visa and security clearance rules on Syrians, making it harder for them to flee their homeland.
There are around 80,000 registered Syrian refugees in Egypt, but informal estimates put the real figure at almost a quarter of a million, according to UNHCR.
Over two million people have fled Syria since the war broke out there in 2011, mostly to neighbouring Lebanon, Turkey, Jordan and Iraq.
“Almost 98 percent of the Syrian refugee population are in the surrounding region. Very small numbers have so far sought resettlement or moved elsewhere. That has to be remembered,” said Edwards.
Almost 21,000 Syrians have claimed asylum in Europe so far this year, up from 24,000 in 2012, according to UNHCR.
Crossing the Mediterranean in what are often small, rickety boats can be extremely hazardous. “When they’re desperate, they have to resort to desperate measures,” said Edwards.
Last week a nurse from Damascus died while crossing with her husband and children, Edwards said. Her husband allowed her liver and kidneys to be used for three transplant patients in Italy.
Source : Ahram