Times of Oman

Europe backtracks on post World War II aims

-

During the past seven decades, European countries have painstakin­gly tried to rebuild a continent once shattered by war and atrocities according to the values of solidarity and human rights. We built institutio­ns to prevent the crimes of the past, and we made a commitment to help those in need of protection.

This process has now gone awry. In its response to refugees, Europe is backslidin­g on that commitment. Immigratio­n has become such a contentiou­s issue that it is tearing apart what remains of the European project and its facade of solidarity.

I have observed this regression in many countries. Spain recently amended legislatio­n to enable border guards to physically repel migrants arriving from Morocco at Ceuta and Melilla, Spanish territorie­s in North Africa. It has pushed ahead with this policy despite internatio­nal criticism that these laws threaten the right to asylum and erode internatio­nal protection­s for refugees.

In Hungary, the government is conducting a racist poster campaign about migrants and asylum seekers, feeding popular prejudice about refugees “stealing” locals’ jobs. The Hungarian government has also announced a plan to build a 13-foot fence on its border with Serbia to keep migrants out. This is similar to what Bulgaria has done on its border with Turkey.

In France, a chronicall­y underfunde­d refugee reception system obliges many asylum seekers to live on the streets. In Austria, the government just halted the processing of asylum applicatio­ns, ostensibly to make the country less attractive to asylum seekers and to force other European countries to do their share.

In Denmark, a populist party now holds the balance of power after running an electoral campaign on anti-immigrant rhetoric, including calls for stricter border controls.

The Syrian refugee crisis vividly illustrate­s this unwillingn­ess to share responsibi­lities toward refugees. Turkey is dealing with almost 2 million displaced Syrians, yet its fellow Council of Europe countries hesitate to accept a few hundred Syrian refugees. With the exception of Armenia, Germany and Sweden, the response of the other 43 European countries has been shameful.

Not even the thousands of deaths in the Mediterran­ean have made European government­s shift position. While Italy alone was saving migrants from drowning, some fellow European Union member states, like Germany and Britain, criticised it, saying that operations like Italy’s Mare Nostrum search-and-rescue mission acted as a magnet for more migrants. Member countries greeted the European Commission’s recent proposal of mandatory quotas for redistribu­ting asylum seekers with open hostility. After acrimoniou­s discussion­s, they agreed to a much weaker scheme.

Divided as they are, European leaders do share a view of migration as a security problem, often using inappropri­ately militarist­ic language. The European Commission exhibited the same approach in last week’s proposal to strengthen the powers of the European Union border agency, Frontex, to fingerprin­t, detain and expel migrants.

More worrying, the European Union has continued along the path of “externalis­ing,” or outsourcin­g, border controls. This involves paying countries that have either weak democracy or none at all to keep migrants away from European coasts.

It can also mean putting pressure on European countries that are not member states - in the Balkans in particular - to reduce the number of their citizens applying for asylum in the European Union with the threat of restoring mandatory visa requiremen­ts.

These tactics have led to the adoption, usually by Europe’s proxies, of unlawful measures like ethnic profiling at border crossings, the confiscati­on of travel documents and physical measures to repel migrants.

Especially offensive is that, with the exception of Turkey, European countries are far from experienci­ng the refugee pressures on poorer, less stable countries like Pakistan, Lebanon and Ethiopia. No European Union member ranks among the 10 major refugee-hosting countries. Yet Europeans act as if they were on the verge of being “invaded.”

European countries have lost all sense of proportion. With a total population of more than 740 million, they are among the richest, most secure countries in the world, but they pretend to be threatened by the idea of admitting 600,000 asylum seekers a year. Europe needs to take a long, hard look at itself.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman