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Highest number of first-time asylum applicants relative to the population in Cyprus

14/03/2019 17:00

The highest number of registered first-time asylum applicants in 2018 relative to the population of each Member State was recorded in Cyprus (8 805 first-time applicants per million population), ahead of Greece (6 051), Malta (4 276) and Luxembourg (3 694), according to data released today by Eurostat, the statistical service of the EU. In contrast, the lowest numbers were recorded in Slovakia (28 applicants per million population), Poland (63), Hungary (65), Estonia (68) and Latvia (91). In 2018, in the EU as a whole, there were 1 133 first-time asylum applicants per million population.

More specifically in Cyprus there were  4 475 first time applications in 2017, a number that incresed to 7 610 in 2018 (a +70% increase). That corresponds to 1.3% of the total of first time applications in the EU.

In Greece 56 940 first time applications were received in 2017 a number that increased to 64 975 applications in 2018 (+14% increase). This corresponds to 11.2% of the EU total and to 6 051 applications per million of population.

According to Eurostat, inn 2018, 580 800 first-time asylum seekers applied for international protection in the Member States of the European Union (EU), down by 11% compared with 2017 (654 600) and less than half of the number recorded in the peak year 2015 when 1 256 600 first-time asylum applicants were registered. The number of asylum applicants in 2018 is comparable to the level recorded in 2014, before the peaks of 2015 and 2016.

Eurostat states that Syrian (80 900 first-time applicants), Afghan (41 000) and Iraqi (39 600) continued to be the main citizenships of people seeking international protection in the EU Member States in 2018, together accounting for almost 30% of all first-time applicants.

With 161 900 first-time applicants registered in 2018, Germany accounted for 28% of all first-time applicants in the EU Member States. It was followed by France (110 500, or 19%), Greece (65 000, or 11%), Spain (52 700, or 9%), Italy (49 200, or 8%) and the United Kingdom (37 300, or 6%). Among Member States with more than 5 000 first-time asylum seekers in 2018, the number of first time applicants, rose most compared with the previous year in Cyprus (+70%, or 3 100 more first-time asylum seekers in 2018 than in 2017) and Spain (+60%, or 19 700 more), ahead of Belgium (+29%, or 4 100 more), the Netherlands (+27%, or 4 400 more), France (+20%, or 18 500 more) and Greece (+14%, or 8 000 more). In contrast, the largest relative decreases were recorded in Italy (-61%, or 77 400 fewer), Austria (-49%, or 11 100 fewer), Sweden (-19%, or 4 100 fewer) and Germany (-18%, or 36 400 fewer).

Syrian (14% of the total number of first-time applicants) was the main citizenship of asylum seekers in the EU Member States in 2018, a position it has held each year since 2013. Of the 80 900 Syrians who applied for asylum for the first-time in the EU in 2018, more than half were registered in Germany (44 200, or 55%). Syrian was the main citizenship of asylum seekers in eight EU Member States.

With 41 000 first-time applicants (or 7% of the EU total) in 2018, Afghan was the second main citizenship of asylum seekers in the EU Member States. Almost 29% of Afghans applied in Greece (11 800). Afghan was the main citizenship of asylum seekers in five EU Member States.

Iraqi (7% of the total number of first-time applicants) was the third main citizenship of asylum seekers in the EU Member States in 2018. Of the 39 600 Iraqis seeking asylum protection for the first-time in the EU in 2018, more than 41% applied in Germany (16 300). Iraqi was the main citizenship of asylum seekers in two EU Member States.

Pending applications for international protection are applications that have been made at any time and are still under consideration by the national authorities at the end of the reference period. In other words, they refer to the “stock” of applications for which decisions are still pending. This statistic is intended to measure the workload of the national authorities.
At the end of 2018, 878 600 applications for international protection in the EU Member States were still under consideration by the national authorities (excluding Finland, as data not available). At the end of 2017, this figure was slightly higher (927 000). Germany had the largest share of applications pending in the EU at the end of 2018 (384 800, or 44% of the EU total), ahead of Italy (103 000, or 12%), Spain (78 700, or 9%) and Greece (76 300, or 9%).