• Nearly 17 child migrants a day vanished in Europe since 2018

    Investigation finds one in six were solo and under 15, as experts say cross-border cooperation ‘nonexistent’.

    At least 18,000 unaccompanied child migrants have disappeared after arriving in European countries including Greece, Italy and Germany.

    An investigation by the Guardian and the cross-border journalism collective Lost in Europe found that 18,292 unaccompanied child migrants went missing in Europe between January 2018 and December 2020 – equivalent to nearly 17 children a day.

    In 2020 alone, 5,768 children disappeared in 13 European countries.

    Most of the children who have gone missing over the past three years came to Europe from Morocco, but Algeria, Eritrea, Guinea and Afghanistan were also among the top countries of origin. According to the data available, 90% were boys and about one in six were younger than 15.

    The investigation, which collated data on missing unaccompanied minors from all 27 EU countries, as well as Norway, Moldova, Switzerland and the UK, found the information provided was often inconsistent or incomplete, meaning the true numbers of missing children could be much higher.

    Spain, Belgium and Finland provided figures only up to the end of 2019. Denmark, France and the UK provided no data at all on unaccompanied missing children.

    The findings of the investigation raise serious questions about the extent European countries are able or willing to protect unaccompanied child migrants.

    Federica Toscano, head of advocacy and migration at Missing Children Europe, a non-profit organisation that connects grassroots agencies across Europe, said the data was “extremely important” for understanding the scale of the problem in Europe. “The high number of missing children is a symptom of a child-protection system that doesn’t work,” she said.

    She said unaccompanied children were among the migrants most vulnerable to violence, exploitation and trafficking. “Criminal organisations are increasingly targeting migrant children,” said Toscano, “especially unaccompanied ones and many of them become victims of labour and sexual exploitation, forced begging and trafficking.”

    In March 2019, the Guardian and Lost in Europe found that at least 60 Vietnamese children had disappeared from Dutch shelters. Dutch authorities suspected they had been trafficked into Britain to work on cannabis farms and in nail salons.

    Herman Bolhaar, the Dutch national rapporteur on human trafficking, said the investigation showed the urgent need for cooperation at the European level to address why thousands of unaccompanied migrant children have disappeared without a trace. “We cannot lose sight of these children,” he said. “They deserve our protection.”

    While almost all of the countries in the investigation have detailed procedures in place intended to deal with the disappearance of unaccompanied minors, they do not always work well in practice, according to a 2020 report from the European Migration Network, part of the European Union. Problems include failure to follow up when children are reported missing and insufficient cooperation between police and asylum or child protection authorities.

    “Very little is recorded in a file of a missing migrant child,” said Toscano, “and too often it is assumed that a migrant child is somewhere safe in another country, although cross-border collaboration on these cases is practically nonexistent.”

    There are multiple reasons why children go missing, she said, including “the lengthy and burdensome procedures to obtain international protection or to be reunited with their family”. Many were also held in inadequate facilities, often with no access to education, she added.

    A spokesperson for the European commission said there was “deep concern about children going missing”, adding that member states needed “to take action to prevent and respond to the disappearances of children in migration … by improving data collection and cross-border collaboration.”

    https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2021/apr/21/nearly-17-child-migrants-a-day-vanished-in-europe-since-2018

    #MNA #mineurs_non_accompagnés #asile #migrations #disparition #Europe #réfugiés #disparitions #enfants #enfance #réfugiés

    –-

    ajouté au fil de discussion autour des #statistiques de la « disparition » de MNA :

    https://seenthis.net/messages/714320
    #chiffres

    • Kako izbjeglička djeca nestaju u Evropi

      U posljednje tri godine nestalo je više od osamnaest hiljada izbjegličke djece koja su se domogla Evrope, pokazuje novo istraživanje. Državne institucije nemaju pojma gdje su djeca, ali su vjerovatno u velikoj opasnosti.

      Policijska kontrola na granici Njemačke i Poljske. Zaustavljen je automobil – vozač je Poljak, četvoro putnika su Vijetnamci bez isprava. Među njima je i djevojčica od petnaest godina. Kako je maloletna, a niko od saputnika joj nije rod, djevojčica završava u jednom državnom smještaju za djecu u njemačkoj pokrajini Brandenburg.

      Za taj slučaj su reporteri javnog servisa rbb doznali iz dokumentacije berlinskog Državnog tužilaštva. Jer djevojčica je nestala nedugo pošto je smještena u dom. Jedan od zaposlenih u domu prijavio je nestanak, i to je bilo to. Vijetnamska djevojčica je postala broj u statistici.

      Koliko ima djece sa sličnom sudbinom? To sada otkriva analiza novinarske grupe „Lost in Europe" („Izgubljeni u Evropi") u kojoj sarađuju reporteri londonskog Gardijana, holandskog servisa VPRO, njemačkog rbb i drugi. Prema istraživanju, od 2018. do 2020. je u Evropi nestalo 18.292 djece koja su stigla kao „maloljetne izbjeglice bez pratnje“ i za koju su bile nadležne institucije evropskih država.

      Ali, moguće je da je i više djece nestalo jer pojedine države vode manjkavu statistiku. Recimo, Francuska, Danska i Rumunija ne prikupljaju ove podatke. Bugarska ne pravi razliku između maloljetnika koji dođu sa starateljima i onih koji dođu sami.

      Evropska komisija zna za ove probleme. Ilva Johanson, komesarka za unutrašnje poslove, kaže da je Brisel već pozivao članice EU da „moraju da preduzmu više protiv nestanaka izbjegle djece, između ostalog boljim prikupljanjem podataka“.

      Prinuđena da trguje drogom

      Verena Kek iz međunarodne organizacije za dječija prava ECPAT vjeruje da je pravi broj djece kojima se u Evropi gubi trag zapravo mnogo viši. Kritikuje što se EU ne bavi ovim problemom zajednički, niti postoji centralni registar nestalih. „Za djecu i omladinu ovo može da ima fatalne posledice jer mogu dopasti u situaciju u kojoj su izrabljivani. A ako niko ne zna da su nestali, niko ih i ne traži.“

      Vijetnamska djevojčica sa početka priče nađena je poslije nekoliko mjeseci – slučajno. Policija je pronašla tokom racije u jednom stanu u Berlinu. Dijete je živjelo sa vijetnamskim parom koji je ilegalno prodavao drogu i cigarete. Ispostavilo se da je djevojčica bila primorana da radi u studiju za manikir za tri stotine eura mjesečno, da prodaje cigarete i isporučuje narkotike.

      U Njemačkoj je u posljednje tri godine prijavljeno 7.806 ovakvih nestanaka, ali se djeca uglavnom ponovo pronađu. Međutim, 724 njih nikada nije otkriveno. Najčešće nestaju djeca porijeklom iz Avganistana, zatim iz Maroka i Alžira.

      Pa i ovdje je statistika upitna. Savezni ured za kriminalistiku (BKA) koji je zadužen za registar nestalih priznaje da je to kod izbjegličke djece veoma teško jer nemaju papire. Neki bivaju registrovani više puta kao nestali, neki budu sasvim izostavljeni.

      To je skandal, grmi Holger Hofman iz organizacije Njemačka pomoć djeci. „Koliko znamo, nema pouzdanih podataka, čak ni približno. Takve rupe u znanju širom otvaraju vrata kriminalnim mrežama.“

      Evropski problem

      Europol je još 2016. upozoravao na kriminalne mreže koje iskorištavaju djecu koja sama izbjegnu u Evropu. U januaru ove godine je i BKA saopštio da se zna za vijetnamske bande koje trguju ljudima.

      Koliko je problem evropski, tragično je dokazao primjer iz oktobra 2019. godine. Tada je u kamionu-hladnjači nadomak Londona nađeno 39 mrtvih Vijetnamaca. Kamion je doputovao iz Belgije. Među žrtvama su bila dva dječaka koji su desetak dana ranije pobjegli iz jednog doma u Holandiji.

      Tamo ih je prethodno dovela holandska policija koja ih je pronašla u jednom drugom kamionu – koji je krenuo iz Kelna.

      https://www.dw.com/bs/kako-izbjegli%C4%8Dka-djeca-nestaju-u-evropi/a-57243605