Gedetailleerde cijfers over aantallen asielaanvragen in de EU in 2011 (en)

Met dank overgenomen van Eurostat (ESTAT) i, gepubliceerd op vrijdag 23 maart 2012.

In 2011, there were 301 000 asylum applicants1 registered in the EU27. It is estimated that around 90% of these were new applicants and around 10% were repeat applicants2. In 2010, there were 259 000 asylum applicants.

In 2011, the main countries of citizenship of these applicants were Afghanistan (28 000 or 9% of the total number of applicants), Russia (18 200 or 6%), Pakistan (15 700 or 5%), Iraq (15 200 or 5%) and Serbia (13 900 or 5%).

These data3 on asylum applicants in the EU27 are issued by Eurostat i, the statistical office of the European Union.

Highest number of applicants recorded in France, Germany and Italy

In 2011, the highest number of applicants was registered in France (56 300 applicants), followed by Germany

(53 300), Italy (34 100), Belgium (31 900), Sweden (29 700), the United Kingdom (26 400), the Netherlands

(14 600), Austria (14 400), Greece (9 300) and Poland (6 900). These ten Member States accounted for more than 90% of applicants registered in the EU27 in 2011.

When compared with the population of each Member State, the highest rates of applicants registered were recorded in Malta (4 500 applicants per million inhabitants), Luxembourg (4 200), Sweden (3 200), Belgium

(2 900) and Cyprus (2 200).

In some Member States, a large proportion of the applicants came from a single country. The Member States with the highest concentrations were Poland (63% of the applicants came from Russia), Latvia (52% from Georgia), Luxembourg (44% from Serbia), Lithuania (43% from Georgia), Bulgaria (39% from Iraq) and Hungary (38% from Afghanistan).

Three quarters of first instance decisions were rejections

In 2011 in the EU27, 237 400 first instance decisions4 were made on asylum applications. There were 177 900 rejections (75% of decisions), 29 000 applicants (12%) were granted refugee status, 21 400 (9%) subsidiary protection and 9 100 (4%) authorisation to stay for humanitarian reasons. It should be noted that first instance decisions made in 2011 may refer to applications registered in previous years.

If the proportion of positive decisions varies considerably among Member States, it should be kept in mind that the country of origin of applicants also differs greatly between Member States.

Asylum applicants, 2011

 
 

Applicants

Citizenships of main groups of asylum applicants

2011

Per million inh.

First group

#

%

Second group

#

%

Third group

#

%

EU27

301 375

600

Afghanistan

28 005

9

Russia

18 245

6

Pakistan

15 700

5

Belgium

31 915

2 925

Afghanistan

3 195

10

Russia

2 680

8

Guinea

2 425

8

Bulgaria

890

120

Iraq

345

39

Afghanistan

90

10

Syria

85

10

Czech Republic

750

70

Ukraine

150

20

Belarus

70

9

Russia

45

6

Denmark

3 945

710

Afghanistan

910

23

Iran

505

13

Syria

470

12

Germany

53 260

650

Afghanistan

7 955

15

Serbia

6 990

13

Iraq

6 210

12

Estonia

65

50

Dem. Rep. of the Congo

10

16

Afghanistan

10

12

Armenia

5

10

Ireland

1 290

290

Nigeria

180

14

Pakistan

175

14

China

140

11

Greece

9 310

820

Pakistan

2 310

25

Georgia

1 120

12

Afghanistan

635

7

Spain

3 420

75

Ivory Coast

550

16

Cuba

445

13

Nigeria

260

8

France

56 250

865

Russia

4 390

8

Armenia

4 190

7

Bangladesh

4 120

7

Italy

34 115

565

Nigeria

6 210

18

Tunisia

4 560

13

Ghana

3 130

9

Cyprus

1 770

2 200

Vietnam

210

12

Syria

185

11

Egypt

185

10

Latvia

340

150

Georgia

175

52

Dem. Rep. of the Congo

40

11

Russia

20

6

Lithuania

525

160

Georgia

230

43

Russia

110

21

Afghanistan

55

10

Luxembourg

2 150

4 200

Serbia

950

44

FYR of Macedonia

450

21

Kosovo*

140

6

Hungary

1 700

170

Afghanistan

655

38

Kosovo*

210

12

Pakistan

120

7

Malta

1 890

4 525

Somalia

455

24

Eritrea

315

17

Nigeria

250

13

Netherlands

14 600

875

Afghanistan

2 395

16

Iraq

2 005

14

Somalia

1 985

14

Austria

14 420

1 715

Afghanistan

3 630

25

Russia

2 325

16

Pakistan

950

7

Poland

6 900

180

Russia

4 320

63

Georgia

1 740

25

Armenia

215

3

Portugal

275

25

Guinea

45

17

Somalia

25

9

Nigeria

20

8

Romania

1 720

80

Algeria

460

27

Tunisia

215

13

Morocco

215

13

Slovenia

360

175

Afghanistan

65

19

Turkey

50

14

Pakistan

30

8

Slovakia

490

90

Somalia

80

16

Afghanistan

75

15

Georgia

65

13

Finland

2 915

540

Iraq

580

20

Somalia

340

12

Russia

290

10

Sweden

29 670

3 150

Afghanistan

4 130

14

Somalia

4 045

14

Serbia

2 645

9

United Kingdom

26 430

425

Pakistan

4 035

15

Iran

3 155

12

Sri Lanka

2 170

8

Liechtenstein

75

2075

Kosovo*

20

27

Russia

15

19

Serbia

10

15

Norway

8 995

1 830

Somalia

2 215

25

Eritrea

1 255

14

Afghanistan

980

11

Switzerland

23 625

3 005

Eritrea

3 450

15

Nigeria

1 980

8

Tunisia

1 665

7

  • Kosovo under UN Security Council Resolution 1244

Data are rounded to the nearest 5.

First instance decisions, 2011

 
 

Total decisions

Positive decisions

Of which:

Refugee status

Subsidiary protection

Humanitarian reasons

Rejections

EU27

237 365

59 465

28 995

21 400

9 070

177 900

Belgium

19 825

5 075

3 810

1 265

-

14 750

Bulgaria

605

190

10

180

-

410

Czech Republic

685

320

105

200

10

365

Denmark

3 570

1 315

735

385

190

2 255

Germany

40 295

9 675

7 100

665

1 910

30 620

Estonia

65

15

10

5

5

50

Ireland

1 365

75

60

15

-

1 295

Greece

8 670

180

45

85

45

8 490

Spain

3 395

990

335

630

20

2 410

France

42 190

4 580

3 340

1 240

-

37 605

Italy

24 150

7 155

1 805

2 265

3 085

16 995

Cyprus

2 630

70

55

*

15

2 560

Latvia

90

20

5

15

-

70

Lithuania

305

25

5

15

-

285

Luxembourg

1 015

35

30

5

-

980

Hungary

895

155

45

100

10

740

Malta

1 605

885

70

690

125

720

Netherlands

15 790

6 830

710

4 065

2 050

8 965

Austria

13 245

4 085

2 480

1 605

-

9 160

Poland

3 215

475

155

155

170

2 740

Portugal

100

50

20

30

-

50

Romania

1 075

75

70

10

0

1 000

Slovenia

215

20

15

5

-

190

Slovakia

215

115

5

80

35

100

Finland

2 595

1 065

160

715

190

1 535

Sweden

26 720

8 805

2 335

5 390

1 075

17 915

United Kingdom

22 835

7 190

5 480

1 590

120

15 645

Liechtenstein

45

15

*

10

0

30

Norway

9 545

4 015

2 810

765

435

5 535

Switzerland

15 990

6 445

3 675

975

1 790

9 545

  • Not applicable
  • One or two first instance decisions

Data are rounded to the nearest 5.

  • Asylum applicant means a person having submitted an application for international protection or having been included in such application as a family member during the reference period. For reasons of simplicity, the term "applicant" has been used in this Release, because the data counts individuals rather than applications, which include in some cases several persons.

'Application for international protection' means an application for international protection as defined in Art. 2(g) of Council Directive 2004/83/EC, i.e. including requests for refugee status or for subsidiary protection status, irrespective of whether the application was lodged on arrival at border, or from inside the country, and irrespective of whether the person entered the territory legally (e.g. as a tourist) or illegally.

Within the same month every person being a subject of asylum application is counted only once, therefore repeat applications are not recorded if the first application has been lodged in the same month. However, such a repeat application will be recorded if lodged in a different reference month. It means that the annual figures, which are based on an aggregation of monthly data, may overestimate the number of persons applying for international protection.

  • This proportion has been estimated on the basis of the share of repeat applicants available in 21 of the 27 Member States (Belgium, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, Estonia, Ireland, Spain, France, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Portugal, Romania, Slovenia, Slovakia, Sweden and the United Kingdom). These Member States covered 91% of all asylum applicants registered in the EU27 in 2011.
  • The data used for this publication are provided to Eurostat by the Ministries of Interior, Justice or immigration agencies of the Member States. Apart from statistics on new asylum applicants, these data are supplied by Member States according to the provisions of Article 4 of the Regulation (EC) 862/2007 of 11 July 2007 on Community statistics on migration and international protection.
  • First instance decision means a decision made in response to an asylum application at the first instance level of the asylum procedure. The number of asylum applicants and the number of first instance decisions during the same reference period differs. This is due to the time lag between the date of the asylum application and the date of the decision on the asylum application. The duration of this time lag may vary considerably depending on the national asylum procedure and the administrative workload. An asylum application lodged in one reference period may therefore result in a decision in a later period, while some asylum decisions reported for that period may relate to applications lodged in previous reference periods.

Rejected applicant means a person covered by first instance decision rejecting application for international protection, such as, inter alia, decisions considering applications as inadmissible or as unfounded and decisions under priority and accelerated procedures, taken by administrative or judicial bodies during the reference period. Rejected applicants have the possibility to appeal against refusal. The outcomes of the appeals may overturn the results of the first instance decisions and may vary greatly between countries.

Person granted refugee status at first instance means a person covered by first instance decision granting refugee status, taken by administrative or judicial bodies during the reference period. Refugee status means status as defined in Art.2(d) of Directive 2004/83/EC within the meaning of Art.1 of the Geneva Convention relating to the Status of Refugees of 28 July 1951, as amended by the New York Protocol of 31 January 1967. According to the Art.2(c) of that Directive refugee means a third country national who, owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership of a particular social group, is outside the country of nationality and is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself or herself of the protection of that country, or a stateless person, who, being outside of the country of former habitual residence for the same reasons as mentioned above, is unable or, owing to such fear, unwilling to return to it.

Person granted subsidiary protection status at first instance means a person covered by first instance decision granting subsidiary protection status, taken by administrative or judicial bodies during the reference period. Subsidiary protection status means status as defined in Art.2(f) of Directive 2004/83/EC. According to the Art.2(e) of that Directive person eligible for subsidiary protection means a third country national or a stateless person who does not qualify as a refugee but in respect of whom substantial grounds have been shown for believing that the person concerned, if returned to his or her country of origin, or in the case of a stateless person, to his or her country of former habitual residence, would face a real risk of suffering serious harm and is unable, or, owing to such risk, unwilling to avail himself or herself of the protection of that country.

Person granted authorisation to stay for humanitarian reasons at first instance means a person covered by other first instance decision granting authorisation to stay for humanitarian reasons under national law concerning international protection, taken by administrative or judicial bodies during the reference period. It includes persons who are not eligible for international protection as currently defined in the first stage legal instruments, but are nonetheless protected against removal under the obligations that are imposed on all Member States by international refugee or human rights instruments or on the basis of principles flowing from such instruments. Examples of such categories include persons who are not removable on ill health grounds and unaccompanied minors.

 

Issued by: Eurostat Press Office

Louise CORSELLI-NORDBLAD

Tel: +352-4301-33 444

eurostat-pressoffice@ec.europa.eu

For further information on the data:

Piotr JUCHNO

Tel: +352-4301-36 240

piotr.juchno@ec.europa.eu

Eurostat News Releases on the internet: http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat