Japan accepted 27 asylum seeker in 2015

Japan rejected 99 percent of refugees in 2015. Justice ministry says it accepted 27 asylum seekers out of record 7,586 applications last year.

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The country’s justice ministry said on Saturday it received a record 7,586 asylum applications in 2015, up 50 percent compared to the year before. The accepted applicants included six from Afghanistan, three Syrians, three Ethiopians and three Sri Lankans.

Japan, which faces a demographic problem due to an ageing population and declining birthrates, is the world’s third largest economy and runs the tightest refugee recognition system among industrialised economies. In 2014, it granted refugee status to 11 people, out of 5,000 applicants.

Saori Fujita, an official for the Immigration Bureau of Japan, was quoted by the Japan Times website as saying that 2015’s increase was due to a rise in the number of Indonesian applicants. Fujita said 17 Indonesians applied in 2014, compared to 969 last year.

On Wednesday, Japan’s parliament approved $350m in humanitarian aid for Syrian and Iraqi refugees, which is to complement a $810m package approved last year, according to Deutsche Welle.

Asked by reporters at the UN General Assembly last September whether Japan would join other countries in accepting Syrian refugees, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe replied that his country needed to boost its own workforce first by empowering more women and older people to work.

“As an issue of demography, I would say that before accepting immigrants or refugees, we need to have more activities by women, by elderly people and we must raise the birthrate,” he said. “There are many things that we should do before accepting immigrants.”

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Source: Japan rejected 99 percent of refugees in 2015