Refugees rescued off the coast of Greece.
EPA/Kay Nietfeld
How EU leaders have sidestepped the UN Refugee Convention to make a very difficult problem disappear.
Andreas Fusser
Deported as soon as they become legal adults, young refugees wander the globe in search of safety.
Welcome Culture comes to Calais.
EPA/LAURENT DUBRULE
French efforts to dismantle the Jungle migrant camp are leaving crucial volunteer services at risk.
EU leaders are to send refugees back to Turkey.
EPA/Yannis Kolesidis
If this cruel proposal is all EU leaders can produce in response to mass human suffering, perhaps it’s not a union worth saving.
A Syrian child sleeps on the street in Kos.
EPA/Yannis Kolesidis
In-depth research with refugees and migrants reveals that deterrent measures will not solve the crisis.
A Macedonian armed vehicle patrols the fence along the border with Greece.
EPA/Georgi Licovski
Tear gas on refugees isn’t good PR for a country that wants to join the European Union. But then other countries in the EU aren’t coming off too well either.
EPA/Orestis Panagiotou
Old grudges and European aspirations are driving this narrative – never mind how many people die in the process.
Asylum seekers are held at the Macedonian border.
EPA/Georgi Licovski
As the philosopher once described, states obsessed with the health of their own people often create the conditions for others to die.
They’re out there somewhere.
Reuters/Yannis Behrakis
NATO has announced a new mission to monitor people-smugglers in the Aegean – but something smells fishy.
Hope for the future?
Reuters/Pascal Rossignol
Conditions are getting worse at the migrant camps in France, which is leading to protest.
New arrivals will be searched and told to give up items of value.
EPA/Claus Hansen
For many, it evokes memories of the Holocaust. So how can the government justify it?
News Oresund
People crossing the famous bridge from Denmark can expect to have their papers checked in a landmark change to border policy.
Humanitarian aid arrives.
IHH Humanitarian Relief Foundation
The sheer volume of major humanitarian disasters is stopping us from making genuine changes to the way we respond.
A migrant is processed upon arrival in Sicily.
Reuters/Antonio Parrinello
Simon McMahon travelled to Sicily, where arrivals are being ordered to leave without understanding why.
Alessandro Di Meo
The Malta summit between the EU and Africa solves the symptoms of migration but fails to tackle the causes.
A problem shared is a problem divided into 50 small parts?
EPA/Lino Arrigo Azzopardi
A €1.8bn trust fund is on offer if only African countries will take the problem away.
Fresnel/www.shutterstock.com
Young asylum seekers need stability… or the consequences can be longlasting
Motorised dinghies arrive on the beach near Efthalou in the north of Lesvos.
Heaven Crawley
Refugees are still flocking to Lesvos in their thousands – and as long as the water offers more hope than the land, people will continue to die.
Eight migrants enter Europe – depending on who is counting.
Reuters/Dado Ruvic
Border agency Frontex recently reported that an unprecedented 710,000 migrants had entered the EU this year. Something didn’t ring true for Nando Sigona.
By focusing on people traffickers, leaders are spinning a dangerous narrative about this crisis.