• Thursday, April 25, 2024

Comment

What worries the UK in 2017? Not immigration

HOME: Britain gives safe refuge to those fleeing war

By: JurmoloyaRava

TURKEY and Italy, the frontline states of Europe’s migrant crisis, are most worried about immigration, a global survey said last Thursday (14), while Britain has become less concerned.

Nearly three in five Turks and Ital­ians surveyed said immigration had a negative impact on their country, with an even higher percentage saying their country has too many immigrants.

Thirty-nine per cent of respondents in the 25 countries surveyed wanted their borders closed to refugees.

“The study shows very clearly that immigration remains a major global concern,” Bobby Duffy, managing di­rector of Ipsos MORI, which carried out the survey, said in a statement.

“People are twice as likely to think that immigration is bad for their country than think it is good.”

Britain was one of the most bullish about immigration in 2017’s What Worries the World survey, with 40 percent of respondents saying it had a positive impact on their country – up from 19 percent in 2011.

This contrasts with 2016, when Britain was the country with the greatest fears about immigration, with 42 percent of UK respondents concerned about it.

Britain triggered the formal process to leave the EU in March after 52 percent of Britons voted last year to leave the bloc amid concerns about immi­gration, deteriorating public services, competition for jobs and a general economic malaise.

“This mirrors what we’ve seen in other national surveys in Britain, where attitudes have become more positive,” said Duffy.

Those who support Britain’s exit from Europe could be feeling reas­sured, while those who favour immi­gration might be keener to express their views, he said.

Turkey has taken in some three mil­lion Syrian migrants since the start of civil war in 2011, making it home to the world’s largest refugee population.

Fewer migrants are going through Turkey to reach Europe since it signed a deal with the European Un­ion (EU) last year.

Italy has become the main Mediter­ranean country through which mi­grants, largely fleeing violence and poverty in Africa, are reaching Europe.

Ipsos MORI carried out its survey of adults under 65 in Argentina, Austral­ia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Britain, Germany, Hungary, India, Italy, Japan, Mexico, New Zea­land, Peru, Poland, Russia, Serbia, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Swe­den, Turkey and the United States.

Just under 18,000 people were in­terviewed in an online poll conduct­ed between late June and early July. (Thomson Reuters Foundation)

[TheChamp-Sharing]

Related Stories