According to this article Rwanda's safer for you than the UK
Bloody hell
Just can't get a break those Tories
Now the numbers of illegals will go up when they find out if they can sneak in they get sent to a nice warm safe country
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Global Finance Magazine
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DATA
Top 100 Safest Countries In The World
JANUARY 1, 2024
Author:
Marc Getzoff
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The aftermath of a global pandemic re-shuffles Global Finance’s ranking of the world’s safest countries.
With the world turned upside-down and inside-out by international conflict—Russia’s war in Ukraine, Azerbaijan’s attacks on Armenia, the brewing civil war in Sudan—determining the safest countries is now more important than ever. Global Finance’s safest countries in the world rankings features updated data, a new time frame, and incorporates each country’s experience and risk from Covid-19.
So which countries have proven to be safe and which have not?
Like our
previous rankings, the safety score for countries takes into account three fundamental factors. These factors are war and peace as measured by the global peace index, personal security meaning a very low crime rate, and the risk of natural disasters which includes the potential of a new pandemic. In order to make sure the data is relevant to current conditions, the Covid-19 scores were derived from data as of May 30, 2021. Compared to the fundamental factors, our Covid-19 scores weight deaths per capita from the disease twice as heavily as the other factors and takes vaccinations per capita as a countervailing or positive factor into account, weighing it equally as the other fundamentals. In essence, a country’s overall score is made up of one-half fundamental factors, one-third Covid-19 deaths per capita, and one-sixth Covid vaccination per capita.
Deaths per capita is a
direct measure of how well or poorly a given country responded to the spread of Covid-19 which in turn is based on the country’s
healthcare infrastructure, government capabilities, political leadership and culture in face of a major, unexpected crisis. Vaccinations per capita on the other hand reflects a country’s
financial power and future performance via preventative measures stemming further outbreaks.
Since
Global Finance’s safest country ranking is driven by data, countries without the relevant metrics were excluded. Countries suffering from political instability like Belarus and Sudan do not have scores from the safety and tourism report while other countries like Kosovo and Somalia are missing data from the World Risk Report.
Click here to see the World’s Safest Banks
The top ranking safest countries are spread amongst the European Union and Asia, making them strong contenders for the title of most peaceful region overall. Of the top 20, nine of them are located in Europe and four of those are Northern European (Iceland, Finland, Denmark, Norway). The remaining 11 out of 20 are primarily countries in the Middle East or Southeast/East Asia. Missing from the top 20 are many of the other European countries that performed well in past rankings. Countries such as Portugal,
Spain, Slovenia, and
Belgium suffered greatly in the rankings because their governments handled the Covid-19 crisis poorly and experienced high Covid-19 deaths per capita as a result. Portugal (29), Spain (41), Slovenia (47), and Belgium (66) all had some of the highest Covid-19 death rates in the world and previously ranked in the top 20 safest countries. Hungary (90),
Italy (84), and the UK (38) also saw high Covid-19 deaths per capita which pushed them downward in the ranking. Despite being the world’s only superpower, the United States ranks 71 because although it scored well in other categories it was unable to prevent widespread outbreaks and deaths.
The pandemic created a situation in which many developing countries in Africa and Southeast Asia outperformed their more developed peers.
Laos (32), Vietnam (49), and Cambodia (80) as well as African countries such as Uganda (81) and
Rwanda (37) all were able to effectively manage Covid-19 and limit deaths per capita which dramatically improved their safety rankings compared to previous years. Yet while these countries effectively managed and prevented Covid-19 outbreaks, they often have much higher risks in terms of military conflict, crime, and general danger to the population.
In essence, Covid-19 disproved the conventional wisdom about the safety of any given country. Countries in North America, Europe, and perhaps some in the Middle East and Asia would dominate the top spots mainly because of their wealth and developed status. Developed countries would also be much better equipped to handle something as dangerous and complex as a pandemic than their less developed peers. Yet what we have seen is that many of the world’s major economic powers (United States, France, U.K) or regional powerhouses (
Brazil, Russia,
India, China) became epicenters of the pandemic in their areas of the world.
While Covid-19 reshuffled our world’s safest countries ranking, it did not boost the worst-performing countries and their relative rankings. Countries with serious civil conflict that have high risk from natural disasters such as the Philippines, Nigeria, and El Salvador all reported relatively low death tolls from Covid-19, yet performed poorly in terms of safety overall. Yemen’s brutal civil war and El Salvador’s high murder rate (the highest in Latin America) offset any improvement in safety ranking due to avoiding the worst-case Covid-19 scenario.
The Philippines remained at the bottom of
Global Finance’s safest country ranking where it was in the 2019 and 2017 editions because of relatively high crime rates, high natural disaster risk (
volcanic eruptions,
earthquakes,
tsunamis), and poor response to the Covid-19 pandemic. Because we derive our composite safety score from purely quantitative data and indices from global publications, we do not quantify the intensity or lethality risk of factors such as war. So Yemen (where 233,000 people have
died as a result of the war) is ranked as relatively more safe than the Philippines because it has less natural disaster risk and violent crimes.
A final word of caution: while the fundamental factors of this ranking rely on concise reports produced by NGOs and international organizations, the Covid-19 death tolls and the vaccination rates are largely based on self-reporting by governments. Countries like China,
Tanzania, and Venezuela may not be producing credible figures. Another point of difficulty is that some governments may not be capable of gathering all the necessary data. In developing countries without standardized and modern government reporting structures, deaths can go unreported, making it impossible to measure death tolls accurately. This is probably what is occurring in India as many families have reported
undercounting of Covid-19 deaths by the country’s authorities.
To sum up, Covid-19 upended pre-pandemic assumptions regarding which countries are safest and why. While the core factors that ordinarily make up our safety rankings are largely unchanged, Covid-19 presented a new challenge for governments across the world. And as the world’s vaccination numbers steadily rise, we are left with a sobering question: How would the world cope with a future pandemic?
Safest Countries in the World 2023
Global Finance magazine’s safest country index factors in the risks facing individuals such as natural disasters, violent crimes, terrorism and war to present a well-rounded analysis of overall societal safety.
Rank Country
Global Finance Safest Country Index Score
1
Iceland 3.9724
2
United Arab Emirates 4.2043
3
Qatar 4.5609
4
Singapore 4.6184
5
Finland 4.9782
6 *****lia 5.6092
7
Norway 5.9003
8
Denmark 6.2422
9
Canada 6.3129
10
New Zealand 6.4352
11
Australia 6.7699
12
Bahrain 6.8054
13
Cyprus 7.2315
14
Switzerland 7.3316
15
Austria 7.3454
16
Estonia 7.4615
17
South Korea 7.5089
18
Kuwait 7.6480
19
Saudi Arabia 7.6917
20
Germany 7.7059
21
Ireland 7.8351
22
Japan 7.9247
23
Israel 8.0181
24
Morocco 8.0539
25
Oman 8.0631
26
China 8.0636
27
Malaysia 8.0923
28
Mauritius 8.1622
29
Portugal 8.2539
30
Kazakhstan 8.2994
31
Sweden 8.4163
32
Lao P.D.R. 8.4237
33
Netherlands 8.7304
34
Serbia 8.8283
35
Lithuania 8.8327
36
Botswana 8.9897
37
Rwanda 9.0024
38
United KingdomUnited Kingdom 9.0055
39
Latvia 9.0456
40
Tajikistan 9.2339
41
Spain 9.2561
42
Ghana 9.2945
43
Nepal 9.2971
44
Sri Lanka 9.3609
45
Zambia 9.3652
46
Azerbaijan 9.4562
47
Slovenia 9.554
48
Malawi 9.5802
49
Vietnam 9.6150
50
Tanzania 9.6671
51
Romania 9.6706
52
Jordan 9.6991
53
Liberia 9.7067
54
Senegal 9.7235
55
Equatorial Guinea 9.7488
56
Lesotho 9.7576
57
France 9.7914
58
Greece 9.8026
59
Sierra Leone 9.8059
60
Indonesia 9.8128
61
Algeria 9.8847
62
Namibia 9.9067
63
Albania 9.9300
64
Mauritania 9.9736
65
Egypt 9.9841
66
Belgium 9.9869
67
The Gambia 10.0195
68
Chile 10.0716
69
Poland 10.1538
70
Thailand 10.1649
71
United States 10.1875
72
Uruguay 10.2331
73
Kyrgyz Republic 10.2730
74
Croatia 10.3129
75
Angola 10.5200
76
Benin 10.5253
77
Dominican Republic 10.5449
78
Guinea 10.5547
79
Zimbabwe 10.6430
80
Cambodia 10.6824
81
Uganda 10.6838
82
Mozambique 10.7103
83
Ethiopia 10.7221
84
Italy 10.7901
85
Slovak Republic 10.8384
86
Czech Republic 10.8644
87
Côte d’Ivoire 10.9747
88
Georgia 11.0289
89
Bolivia 11.2715
90
Hungary 11.2723
91
India 11.2968
92
Burkina Faso 11.3025
93
Tunisia 11.3096
94
Burundi 11.4464
95
Paraguay 11.4676
96
Kenya 11.4996
97
Costa Rica 11.5232
98
Argentina 11.5349
99
Nicaragua 11.5449
100
Panama 11.6456
101
Guinea-Bissau 11.6872
102
Armenia 11.7685
103
Haiti 11.8219
104
Russia 11.8306
105
Bangladesh 11.8453
106
Iran 11.8461
107
Turkey 11.8725
108
Ecuador 11.9027
109
Trinidad and Tobago 11.9682
110
Jamaica 12.3555
111
Cameroon 12.3830
112
Chad 12.4076
113
Moldova 12.5802
114
Bulgaria 12.7019
115
Mali 12.7392
116
Pakistan 12.7415
117
Democratic Republic of the Congo 12.7944
118
Lebanon 12.8760
119
Ukraine 12.8897
120
South Africa 13.0681
121
Montenegro 13.0748
122
Venezuela 13.3481
123
Honduras 13.5859
124
El Salvador 13.6809
125
North Macedonia 13.7346
126
Yemen 13.7672
127
Peru 13.7978
128
Mexico 14.0531
129
Brazil 14.1011
130
Bosnia and Herzegovina 14.1361
131
Nigeria 14.2778
132
Guatemala 14.5842
133
Colombia 14.8461
134
Philippines 14.8899
Sources: World Economic Forum, The Global Institute For Peace.
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