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Young migrants face abuse on way to Europe — UN

Greece Refugees’ Desperation

Insaf Haddad, 25 years-old, speaks during an interview with the Associated Press at a camp in Idomeni, northern Greece, on the border with Macedonia, Thursday, March 3, 2016. Insaf Haddad said her family decided to head for Germany to rebuild their lives but they have been living in a tent near the railway tracks for two days and many others have been there for at least two weeks, and they are beginning to despair. The fields on the outskirts of the small Greek village of Idomeni have become the flashpoint in Europe's massive refugee crisis, the size of which the continent has not seen since World War II. AP

Brussels, Belgium — More than three-quarters of children and young adults trying to migrate to Europe via the Mediterranean are victims of abuse on the dangerous journey, UN agencies said in a report published Tuesday.

Children’s rights agency UNICEF and the International Organization for Migration said young migrants coming from sub-Saharan Africa were particularly at risk from abuse, likely due to racism.

The UN agencies surveyed 22,000 migrants and refugees including 11,000 children and young people.

“The stark reality is that it is now standard practice that children moving through the Mediterranean are abused, trafficked, beaten and discriminated against,” Afshan Khan, UNICEF Europe regional director, said in a statement.

The report said 77 percent of children and young people trying to cross the Mediterranean to Europe had suffered “direct experiences of abuse, exploitation and practices which may amount to human trafficking.”

“Those originating from sub-Saharan Africa are far more likely to experience exploitation and trafficking than those from other parts of the world” it said.

“Racism is likely a major underlying factor behind this discrepancy.”

The main migration route from Libya is particularly dangerous due to lawlessness, militias and criminality, it said.

Young migrants pay between $1,000-5,000 (800-4000 euros) for the journey only to arrive in Europe in debt and facing new risks.

The UN accused the EU last week of turning a “blind eye” to the brutality faced by migrants held in Libya and urged urgent action to help them.

Europe continues to struggle with the biggest migration crisis in its history, fed initially by refugees in Syria but now with the central Mediterranean route from Africa coming back into play.

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