Belgium

Belgium granted temporary protection to over 60,000 Ukrainian refugees: Immigration office

The Immigration Office of Belgium has made an announcement that the Belgian State has granted up to 60,000 Ukrainian refugees temporary protection since Russian troops invaded their homeland, but their housing remains a persisting issue.
The European Union has made a decision to activate the EU temporary protection mechanism, granting those fleeing Russia’s war in Ukraine an automatic legal status in EU nations for one year, which could be extended if required.
Since then, Belgium has granted protection to 59,143 people, of whom 57,767 are Ukrainian citizens. This includes the record number of 26,507 people that received protection in April.
Upon arrival, refugees from Ukraine are first housed at the Ariane transit centre in Brussels, which is run by the Flemish Red Cross on behalf of Belgium’s Federal asylum agency Fedasil.
Ukrainian refugees upon arrival are first housed at the Ariane transit centre in Brussels, which is run by the Flemish Red Cross on behalf of Belgium’s Federal asylum agency Fedasil.
However, as their stay in the Ariane centre is only meant to be temporary, the difficulty then becomes how to continue housing those seeking permanent accommodation.
“Approximately a third of the refugees (35%) have been there for more than a month and 25% of them for more than four months,” said Joachim Deman, a spokesperson for the transit centre.
He further added that, predictably, the centre has nearly reached its maximum capacity and that, since it plans to receive refugees from other countries as well, there would soon be no room for all Ukrainians. As a result, Fedasil has asked Ukrainians to find their own housing or, at the very least, for the distribution of refugees to become more fluid between Flanders, Brussels and Wallonia.
However, with Fedasil facing an ever-worsening reception crisis and now having to find out how to shelter the enormous flux of Ukrainian refugees seemingly entirely on their own, worries are that reception of refugees in Belgium may soon hit a breaking point.
Gabriel Peters

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