Its government has been criticised for failing to provide enough shelter to thousands of people seeking asylum.
Its government has been criticised for failing to provide enough shelter to thousands of people seeking asylum.
The Belgian government has imposed a ban on providing shelter for single men seeking asylum, arguing its insufficient reception capacity should be freed for families, women and children first.
Belgium has long come under criticism for failing to provide enough shelter to the thousands of people who are seeking protection from persecution in their home countries. Long lines of tents along streets outside the main processing centre in Brussels have become a stain on Belgium’s reputation.
On Wednesday, Asylum State Secretary Nicole de Moor said increasing pressure on asylum housing was expected over the coming months and she “absolutely wants to avoid” children ending up on the streets this winter. Instead, single men will have to fend for themselves.
The move was met with scathing criticism from human rights organisations.
“We thought we’d seen it all, but no. The Belgian government isn’t just sitting on human rights. It’s burying them by ‘suspending’ the reception of single male asylum seekers,” said Philippe Hensmans, director of Amnesty International Belgium.
De Moor said an influx of asylum seekers over the past two years in the nation of 11.5 million people had filled the shelter centres to near capacity of 33,500.
Last year, Belgium had nearly 37,000 applications for protection, said Fedasil, the federal agency responsible for receiving asylum seekers.
On top of the asylum seekers, Belgium is also providing help to about 62,000 Ukrainian refugees.
Last year alone, labour courts convicted Fedasil more than 5,000 times for failing to provide proper shelter.
Still, de Moor said, “our country has already done more than its share for a long time,” and she called on other EU nations to increase their efforts instead.
In December, Europe’s top human rights body urged Belgian authorities to provide better assistance to asylum seekers after hundreds of people slept on Brussels streets in freezing temperatures.
The Council of Europe’s commissioner for human rights said a lack of available spots in reception facilities was damaging asylum seekers’ rights to health and other basic needs.
That's how you make people hate women, you know - by constantly treating them better just because they are women.
I get prioritising children, so I'm all for providing for families with children first. But a single man, single woman or a couple without children? All equal in my eyes.
Edit: Also lol at flexing 62,000 Ukrainian refugees. We have some 320,000 with a slightly smaller population than Belgium.
You didn’t support your point. The one case this summer is devastating, but not indicative that they contribute generally to more crime. There’s a real problem with trying to collect that information, because you run into the same problem the US has. Black people have more criminal charges against them than white people, at large. That’s because police target them. I don’t know about Norway, but given that you specified “non-European,” I’ll assume that there’s a discrimination aspect.
Male asylum seekers are a real problem and are over represented in crime. Just this summer a 13 year old girl was gang raped by five (5) non European asylum seekers in our little town.
If the point you're trying to make is that they are over-represented in crime statistics then it would have been better to cite those statistics instead of one singular incident.
Agreed, Male asylum seekers are more prone to commiting crimes. For example the new year's incident in Germany a couple of years ago. There are many more cases, feel free to look it up.
Yeah, the new year's incidents in Germany completely made up by the media. Those incidents are a regular occurence every year for decades and never actually linked to immigration. But you can of course ignore 95% of them and instead create weeks of creative storytelling out of one incident that isn't linked to immigrants either but at least happened in an area with a high share of immigrant residents to make up a nice fairy tale. Feel free to look it up.
If you are not afraid of autotranslating (DeepL nowadays is next to perfect (at least for German - English that I can assess myself)) here's a good break down of the media manipulation in Germany, with the stories then getting picked up internationally...
@Perkele
Nope. See above... You might remember the news. We remember the actual reality.
I remember that very well, it was all over the news here in Norway. Seems like this is a common problem all over Europe, but people don't dare speaking about it because speaking about it makes you a target for being canceled.