At 70, the global convention on refugees is needed more than ever
But rich countries need to do more to make it work

WHEN THE Turkish coastguard found them in the Aegean in the dead of night, they had been adrift for three hours. The air was hissing out of their rubber dinghy. The motor would not start. Anas and the eight other Somali men shielded their eyes from the glare of the searchlights. His wife, Faduma, the only woman, panted from stress and exhaustion. They had paid $2,000 apiece to a smuggler to reach Greece. Faduma, six months pregnant, was the first to climb onto the Turkish boat.
This article appeared in the International section of the print edition under the headline “Well-founded fears”

From the August 7th 2021 edition
Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents
Explore the edition
The 19th century is a terrible guide to modern statecraft
A world carved up between Presidents Trump, Xi and Putin would be unstable and unsafe

Putin’s radioactive chokehold on the world
The Kremlin dominates the cross-border business of nuclear fuel and technology

How South Africa could harness Donald Trump’s wrath
Talk of “white genocide” is baseless. But some American pressure could be helpful
Sex work in the gig economy
Sweden is banning OnlyFans content as the lines around sex work blur
Feckless Europe accepts Trump’s Lone Ranger diplomacy
It is meekly welcoming the new sheriff’s vigilante justice