At least 32,000 migrants globally, including 1,600 children, have died on dangerous journeys in search of better lives since 2014 says U.N.
By Lin Taylor
LONDON, June 28 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - A migrant child died almost every day over the past four years while trying to reach safety, the United Nations said on Friday, as a photo of a man and his young daughter who drowned while trying to enter the United States sparked global outcry.
The U.N. migration agency said on Friday that at least 32,000 migrants globally, including 1,600 children, have died on dangerous journeys in search of better lives since it began compiling data on migrant deaths and disappearances in 2014.
"Children are dying in all regions of the world. Those children are unaware what's going on and they face terrible risks," said Frank Laczko, head of the International Organization for Migration's (IOM) data analysis centre.
The harrowing picture of Oscar Alberto Martinez, 25, and his 24-month-old child Angie Valeria spotlighted the plight of the world's 70 million forcibly displaced people - the majority children, according to U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR) figures.
The pair had travelled from El Salvador to Mexico and were crossing the Rio Grande to seek asylum in the United States.
U.S. Border Patrol reported 283 migrant fatalities on the border in 2018. Activists say the number is higher as the many migrants who die in rugged stretches of wilderness along the 1,950-mile (3,138-km) long border are never found.
UNHCR has compared the picture with the iconic photograph of three-year-old Syrian refugee, Alan Kurdi, whose body washed up on a Mediterranean beach in 2015.
Kurdi was part of a Syrian refugee wave that caused panic in Europe, prompting Turkey to effectively shut down the migrant route through Greece at the European Union's behest.
Since then, Mediterranean sea crossings have slowed, contributing to global migrant deaths falling to 4,734 in 2018, down from 6,280 in 2017, the IOM said.
"The most graphic image which caught the world's attention was the death of Alan Kurdi. We thought that that would wake up the world and lead to major action to address this problem," IOM's Laczko told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
"But we've seen relatively little action taken from a humanitarian perspective to help the families who have been affected by these tragedies. Countries obviously prioritise the defence of their borders."
Many countries have erected barriers to deter migrants, and the EU and the United States have pressured their neighbours to cut the numbers of people trying to make the journey.
(Reporting by Lin Taylor @linnytayls, Editing by Katy Migiro. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's and LGBT+ rights, human trafficking and slavery, property rights, social innovation, resilience and climate change. Visit http://news.trust.org to see more stories.)
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