By Michelle Nichols
UNITED NATIONS, Oct 23 (Reuters) - Europe should not use
force to stop people smugglers in the Mediterranean, a U.N.
investigator said on Friday, suggesting the European Union could
team up with the United States, Canada, Australia and New
Zealand to resettle two million refugees.
The United Nations Special Rapporteur on the human rights of
migrants, Francois Crepeau, said the U.N. Security Council was
mistaken to authorize European Union naval operations in the
high seas off Libya to seize and dispose smugglers' vessels.
Earlier this month the council approved the EU operation,
which aims to help stem the flow of migrants and refugees as
Europe faces its biggest migration crisis since World War Two.
Crepeau warned that the crisis could last decades. urn:newsml:reuters.com:*:nL1N1290YC
"Force is not going to do anything to stop the migration
crisis. It's not going to work ... the Security Council is
mistaken and the EU is mistaken," Crepeau said.
More than 700,000 people fleeing war and poverty in the
Middle East, Asia and Africa have reached Europe this year,
according to the International Organization for Migration, with
thousands losing their lives crossing the Mediterranean.
"Do for the Syrians and the Eritreans and maybe the Afghans
what we have done almost 40 years ago for the Indochinese -
resettlement programs, massive resettlement programs from
transit countries over many years," Crepeau said.
"If Canada, the U.S., Australia and New Zealand got together
with Europe and said ... 'let's divide up all those refugees
from the Middle East and do this over five, six, seven years'
... we come to very small numbers in the end," he said.
The United Nations has said that more than 4 million Syrians
have fled the country during a nearly five year long civil war.
Some 250,000 people have been killed in Syria and an estimated
6.3 million are internally displaced.
A Syrian government crackdown on a pro-democracy movement in
2011 led to an armed uprising. Radical Islamic State militants
have since seized on the chaos to declare a caliphate in
territory they have seized in Syria and neighboring Iraq.
"If peace is made in Syria, not 10 years from now, but in a
year or two, peace comes back to Syria and some kind of
reasonably functional government is put in place, I expect that
a good number of Syrians in Europe will go back," Crepeau said.