Seeking
asylum

What is asylum?
Asylum seekers are people seeking a safe place where they can live
in peace, and as such are refugees.
Many are fleeing from war or
persecution on the basis of their race, ethnicity, nationality,
social group, religion, or political views. This definition is
sometimes expanded to include people fleeing war, armed conflict
and also environmental disasters.
Asylum seekers are protected
by international law - a UN Convention on Refugees was signed
by many countries including Britain and the USA in 1951, which
requires them to offer refuge to anyone with a well-grounded fear
of persecution. 
Why seek asylum?
To leave your home and country and take what is often a long and
dangerous journey to a ‘safe’ country is not an easy
decision to take.
Yet this is rarely taken into account by politicians
and the media in their portrayal of asylum seekers.
At present,
the majority of asylum seekers in Europe come from countries
such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia, Bosnia and Zimbabwe. In many
cases,
such as those from Afghanistan, they are fleeing from the effects
of repressive regimes as well as the destruction and disorder
caused by the devastating effects of war. 
Finding a safe haven
Internationally, the first ‘safe’ country that asylum
seekers arrive in is the country in which they should apply for asylum.
But many asylum seekers instead choose to go to other countries
because they want to be near relatives or an established community
of fellow
countrymen and women.
This helps fuel hostility towards asylum
seekers, as they are accused of trying to reach countries with
generous welfare
schemes, such as Britain and Australia. This in turn leads to
diplomatic disputes between countries, such as that between Britain
and France
in regard to the Sangatte Refugee Camp. 
Increasing hostility
Recent events have increased the hostility many feel to asylum seekers,
arguing that some may be terrorists, who are seeking easy access
to western countries.
Yet this is unlikely and unproven, since
it is far easier to enter a country legally on a tourist visa
than as a refugee.
Another cause of antipathy in the west is a fear
that asylum seekers are benefiting at the expanse of native
inhabitants in areas such as housing and employment, but this is
also untrue.
In reality, the vast majority of asylum seekers are actually
in
Africa and Asia, not Europe.
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