Addressing a UN summit on refugees, May highlighted Britain's commitment to international aid but called for a "more effective policy approach" toward massive migration from war-torn Syria and elsewhere. "We must also be clear that this crisis has been exacerbated by unprecedented levels of uncontrolled migration," May told the summit.
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"Because it is not only refugees who are moving in large numbers, it is also those seeking greater economic opportunities," she said. May called for all governments to enforce the principle that asylum seekers will apply in the first safe country where they step foot -- generally meaning, for those fleeing Syria, neighbors such as Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan.
"We need to be clear that all countries have the right to control their borders and protect their citizens and be equally clear that countries have a duty to manage their borders to reduce onward flows of illegal and uncontrolled migration," she said.
May, a Conservative who took office in July after Britain's shock vote to leave the European Union, said there was "nothing wrong with the desire to migrate for a better life" but that the current system did not benefit asylum seekers themselves.
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May's predecessor David Cameron last year promised that Britain would accept 20,000 Syrian refugees by 2020. Germany by comparison took in one million asylum seekers last year alone as Chancellor Angela Merkel voiced hope of averting a humanitarian disaster.
Rob Williams, chief executive of the British charity War Child, criticised May, saying: "Now is not the time to ask who is least deserving." Half of the people displaced by conflict are children, he said.
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"Rather than getting too distracted by complex definitions of refugees and migrants and focusing on who to exclude, the prime minister could make a real difference by spearheading a global action plan for children forced to flee," he said in a statement.
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