Eritrea’s repressive regime each made up 12 percent of arrivals. Other top countries of origin include conflict-wracked Somalia, Nigeria, Iraq and Sudan, the report said. This year has also seen a sharp increase in the numbers of people dying as they try to cross the Mediterranean. So far 1,867 have been killed—1,308 of them in April alone. The unprecedented number of deaths thatmonth spurred European leaders to significantly broaden search and rescue operations in the Mediterranean, cutting fatalities to 68 inMay and 12 in June. “With the right policy, backed by an effective operational response, it is possible to save more lives at sea,” Guterres said. Still, “for the thousands of refugees and migrants who continue to cross theMediterranean every week, the risk remains very real,” he added. Many of those fleeing to Europe first seek safety in overburdened neighbouring countries such as Lebanon, where a quarter of inhabitants are nowSyrian refugees, the report said. The UN also noted a shift in migration patterns, with the number of people travelling the eastern Mediterranean route from Turkey to Greece now surpassing the route from north Africa to Italy. Italy, which last year had 170,000 people land on its shores —more than three quarters of all maritime arrivals in Europe — sawthat slump in the first half of 2015 to 67,500. In Greece, however, arrivals have more than doubled to 68,000 so far this year compared to 43,500 in all of 2014, the report said. Greece has fewer than 2,000 reception places, and many refugees and migrants push on, aiming often for northern and Western Europe, particularly Sweden and Germany,which are seen as offering better protection and support. But getting there often requires a long and dangerous journey, often at the hands of smugglers who route migrants through the Balkans and onwards through Hungary. Every day, an average of 1,000 people enter Macedonia from Greece, up from 200 just a few weeks ago, UNHCR said. Broad European cooperation is needed to face the challenge, the report said,warning that controversial anti-migration policies like Hungary’s planned fourmetre high border fence,will not halt the influx. “In times of conflict, fences and borders will not stop people fleeing for their lives,” the report said.—AFP