Media CenterCRS Ramps Up Refugee Response in Europe

Photo by Elie Gardner for CRS

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT:
Nikki Gamer
Catholic Relief Services
[email protected]
(443) 955- 7125

 

CRS Turns to Longer-term Solutions to Meet the Projected Needs of
300,000 Transiting Refugees and Economic Migrants Across Europe

Please feel free to post this video on your website. See below for how to obtain the video.

 

BALTIMORE, MD, December 17, 2015 – Catholic Relief Services (CRS) will expand its response to the European refugee crisis in the coming months to meet the needs of hundreds of thousands of transiting refugees and economic migrants. Given the onset of winter and the frequently changing dynamics of the crisis, CRS will focus on providing shelter, warm clothing and other emergency relief items, and information and translation services. 

Upwards of 750,000 refugees and economic migrants have reached Europe within the last year, driven from their homes by a combination of war, political instability and poverty. The steady flow of people entering Europe continues unabated since the summer, with about 6,500 new arrivals each day. More than half of these new arrivals are fleeing the war in Syria. The second largest group is from Afghanistan.

“The start of winter and plummeting temperatures, especially in the waters of the Mediterranean, does not seem to have reduced this flow much, and the increasing cold is only exacerbating people’s dire situations,” explains Marc D’Silva, CRS country representative for Bosnia and Herzegovina, who oversees the refugee response in Greece and the Balkans.

CRS has already committed over $6 million to this crisis since it began and plans to raise an additional $4.3 million over the winter. To date CRS has assisted over 70,000 refugees and economic migrants in Greece, Macedonia, Serbia and Croatia.

Bill O’Keefe, vice president of advocacy and government relations for CRS, recently returned from a visit to the Balkans, and warns that the European refugee crisis will not cease until there is an end to the Syrian conflict.

“We have to find a way to help our government take a leadership role in ending the war in Syria,” he says. “As long as there is the conflict, then people are going to be forced to flee.”

Catholic Relief Services response to date has included:

  • Food, clothing and living supplies
  • Temporary shelter, sanitation facilities and hygiene supplies
  • Medical care
  • Information and translation services

In coming winter months, we will expand our services to assist more than 300,000 refugees and migrants in Greece and the Balkans, including shelter and the provision of warm clothing.

Sharing the Video:

Feel free to share the above Holy Family in Midst of Refugee Crisis video, by any of the following means:

  • YouTube link:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kqXY39xBBnw&feature=youtu.be
  • Embed code:
    <iframe frameborder="0" height="360" iframe="" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/kqXY39xBBnw?rel=0" width="640"></iframe>
  • MP4 is available upon request by contacting Nikki Gamer.

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Catholic Relief Services is the official international humanitarian agency of the Catholic community in the United States. The agency alleviates suffering and provides assistance to people in need in more than 100 countries, without regard to race, religion or nationality. CRS’ relief and development work is accomplished through programs of emergency response, HIV, health, agriculture, education, microfinance and peacebuilding. For more information, please visit crs.org or crsespanol.org and follow CRS on social media: Facebook, @CatholicRelief@CRSnewsYouTube, Instagram and Pinterest.

Nikki Gamer

Senior Public Affairs Manager

Nikki Gamer
December 17, 2015

Based in Baltimore, MD

Nikki is the Senior Public Affairs Manager for CRS and connects journalists to regional stories and sources related to the agency’s life-saving development work. Previously, Nikki worked as the Communications Officer for the Middle East, Europe, and Central Asia. She has covered CRS’ response to the Syrian refugee crisis and the mass displacement...More