"Saving lives, providing protection and upholding human dignity cannot but be the first priority. The need is to maintain open borders and not close them," India's Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN Ambassador Bhagwant Bishnoi told the UN General Assembly here yesterday.
Asserting that nations need to refrain from the temptation of reducing benefits available to asylum seekers in order to discourage them from seeking succour, he said that erecting "razor wire fences" to keep out refugees undermines the notion of common humanity and "strikes a blow at the very concept of the United Nations."
Blaming the powerful Security Council for creating the refugee crisis, he said the failure of the UN organ to deal with the situation highlights the crucial need for its reform.
"It is ironical that the crisis is actually created by the Council, through its acts of omission. By failing to fulfill a responsibility reposed on it by the larger membership, to find a political solution to the conflict. The need for reform speaks for itself," Bishnoi said.
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Criticising the UNSC, he said some resolutions by the Council lead nations to believe that boats used by refugees to escape persecution "constitute a threat to international peace and security and that they need to be seized and destroyed."
The High Commissioner for Refugees has noted that about 60 million people have been displaced as a result of war and persecution, unprecedented since the Second World II.
Over 4,000 lives have been lost crossing the Mediterranean last year and more than 3,511 this year alone.
Bishnoi stressed that the tragic deaths at sea are only because of the lack of safe passage and if land routes were available, asylum seekers would not have to take to the sea.
While countries of the Middle East region have given shelter to more than four million refugees from Syria, the international community needs to be conscious of the need to support those who bear the greatest burden, he said.