Migrants refugees Europe
European countries should launch a land version of Italy's Mare Nostrum operation instead of setting up physical barriers, the UN refugee agency has said Reuters/Bernadett Szabo

Europe has the means to manage the unprecedented influx of refugees and migrants and should combine resources to bump up a land version of its sea rescue operations rather than spending chunks of its budget on border fences, the United Nation's refugee agency has declared.

The UNHCR's remarks come as three Bulgarians were arrested on Friday (28 August) after it was reported that a baby girl was among 71 refugees whose decomposing bodies were found inside a lorry not far from the Hungarian border.

"In the past, Europe has successfully dealt with even larger refugee crises, such as those from the Balkans when hundreds of thousands of Kosovars and Bosnians fled to European countries and they were successfully received and helped," William Spindler, of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) told IBTimes UK.

Migrants refugees Europe
MOAS, a privately-funded humanitarian initiative, began operating at the end of August and has assisted in the rescue of some 2,200 migrants crossing from Libyan shores into Europe Reuters

He added: "So, it's not beyond the means of Europe to do this, but it requires a collaborative and coordinated European approach." An estimated 3,000 asylum-seekers are expected to cross the Mediterranean daily.

Spindler explained the numbers are "unmanageable" at region or country level, but believes "if you take the whole of the European Union, with a combined population of 500 million inhabitants and the richest and most developed economies in the world, it should be possible to manage the situation".

Land version of Mare Nostrum

One of the approaches the UNHCR has been championing has been funding and rolling out a land version of Mare Nostrum, a year-long naval and air operation set up by Italy in 2013 to tackle the increased immigration to Europe. 150,000 migrants were rescued during the operation.

"Now we have a coordinated response by Europe to rescue people at sea and it has successfully saved most of the people that landed in Italy. That is a success story and a way that shows that Europe can act together but as a mayor of an Italian town told me: "We need a Mare Nostrum for land too," Spindler said.

The refugee agency is also advocating that European countries have a "more equal share of the responsibility" when it comes to receiving and accommodating migrants and refugees.

"At the moment, some countries are receiving very large numbers of refugees and migrants, while others are receiving very few. We would like more to be done, otherwise it creates situations where people or countries feel that they are being unfairly treated or not helped enough," Spindler added.

Migrants refugees Europe
Migrants walk on a railway track after crossing the Hungarian-Serbian border Reuters/ Bernadett Szabo

The UNHCR has condemned the "it's not my problem, it's my neighbour's" attitude, shared by a number of countries across Europe, including Hungary's decision to build a 4 metre-high fence along its 110-mile border with Serbia to deter migrants on the Balkan land route.

The fence, topped with razor wire barring refugees and migrants' entry to the European Union is expected to be fully erected by the end of this week.

"Trying to block [migrants and refugees] by creating walls and physical barriers simply means that people take different routes and the problem shifts elsewhere. They are not really dealing with the problem when they create barriers or try to isolate themselves - which is impossible because people always find ways to get across."

The European Commission announced it would make €8m (£6m, $9m) available for emergency assistance in the Western Balkans and Turkey, while €90,000 in humanitarian aid will go to Macedonia. However, Spindler urges urgent support should also be provided to countries now shouldering most of the responsibility, such as Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan.

European Union countries' response: who is doing what?

European Union flag
Reuters

Overall for this year, emergency funding has doubled to €50m, the Commission says. So far this year, Spindler said, countries within the European Union have been "active" in dealing with the issue.

Home Secretary Theresa May and her French counterpart Bernard Cazeneuve met in Calais on 20 August with the view to signing a new deal, and announced a raft of measures to step up security in Calais, including a joint command centre for both British and French police in the town.

To complement these plans UK said it would spend £5m each year over the next two years to manage the what the French Interior Ministry and the Home Office in a statement described as, "a migratory phenomenon without precedent".

The plans include concerted efforts to speed up asylum claims for refugees, placing vulnerable migrants in accommodation and encouraging inhabitants in Calais where possible to return to their countries of origin.

While Germany expects a record 800,000 asylum requests in 2015 - nearly four times the number of asylum applications received last year - interior minister Thomas de Maiziere last week called on Britain to take more migrants despite it not being part of the Schengen zone - whose members do not have border or passport controls between each another.

Italy, one of the most heavily affected countries, is laying out new emergency measures to deal with the country's overflowing reception centres and human smugglers expected to make a final push before autumn begins.

As a result, the country is readying disused jails and barracks to accommodate waves of migrants arriving on its shores, with the government awaiting about 20,000 new arrivals before the end of next month.

Hungary, like Italy, has also witnessed record arrivals and both countries have called for help from other EU members.