Immigrants
packed into a tiny vessel travel under cover of darkness…
Landed at
Lampedusa before going to a reception centre in Palermo…
The sea crossing
is so fraught that Italian newspapers have described the stretch of water
between Africa and Sicily as a huge underwater graveyard.
Sound
familiar? Ten years ago!
In
the same piece, also:
George
Alagiah, BBC News Presenter: ‘If water is a force of nature, then migration is
a force of history. The challenge is not to try to stop it but how to manage
it.’
Kofi
Annan, UN Secretary General: ‘For millions of refugees and displaced people around
the world, ‘home’ is a place they have fled from in fear of their lives, in a
desperate attempt to find safety.’
Angelina
Jolie, UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador: ‘Statistics tell only part of the story –
behind the figures are families struggling to survive… all those lives in suspension
for years and years.’
Then,
the UN estimated there were more than 17 million asylum seekers and refugees
worldwide. And that was before the appalling fighting and displacement in the
Middle East and North Africa in the last few years, and the rise of the
medieval so-called IS.
The
writing was on the wall ten years ago. And what has happened? It’s now much worse.
Until
the continent of Africa is deemed safe from terror, the ‘great escape’ will
continue.
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