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EU summit steps up attack on refugees and foreigners
By Ulrich Rippert
5 July 2002
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At their recent summit meeting in Seville, held June 21 and
22, the fifteen governmental leaders of the European Union (EU)
countries decided on drastic measures to further limit the flow
of immigration into Europe.
Countries of origin and transit lands deemed to be not adequately
controlling their borders and thus not cooperating with
the EU satisfactorily will in future face bitter consequences.
It was agreed that joint action will be undertaken to secure the
EUs external borders before the end of the year, and a joint
European border police force will be rapidly established. Close
cooperation in the training of border guards and provision of
technical equipment is already the practice in the most important
countries of the European Union.
In the future, so-called third countries lying
between the countries of entry and the destination of migrants
will be obliged to take back refugees illegally entering the EU.
This is a ploy aimed at forcing these countries to insulate their
own borders against transit refugees. It was further
agreed that the Unions resolutions concerning asylum are
to be enforced more speedily than has so far been the case.
Prior to the summit Spains prime minister, José
Maria Aznar, whose conservative government held the EU presidency
for the past six months, and Silvio Berlusconi, Aznars Italian
counterpart, presented a plan for action against illegal
immigration. Apart from upgrading the weaponry of EU border
guards, this plan envisaged cutting development aid to uncooperative
countries of origin and transit.
During a tour of the European capitals, Aznar received considerable
support. At a meeting in Paris on May 28, French President Jacques
Chirac and German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder demanded sharper
controls over EU external borders. At a meeting in Rome
four days later, the EU interior ministers decided on recommendations
to gradually establish a European police force and discussed using
the new European satellite programme, Galileo, for the observation
of waves of migration.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair was one of the most vocal
supporters of Aznars xenophobic plans. Despite opposition
from Sweden and other countries at the summit negotiations in
Seville, he expressly defended his governments policy of
making future development aid dependent on the readiness of recipient
states to take back rejected asylum seekers. In this respect,
he specifically named Somalia, Sri Lanka and Turkey.
Blair made no secret of the fact that this campaign against
illegal immigration was a reaction to the recent election
successes of extreme right-wing parties.
Discontent fuelled by the pro-business policies of social democratic
governments has given a boost to right-wing demagogues in several
European countries. Jean-Marie Le Pen outpolled the incumbent
Socialist Party Prime Minister Lionel Jospin in the French presidential
election, and the Liste Pim Fortuyn party won a large vote in
Holland. Only five of the former 13 social democratic governments
in Europe are still in power.
The remaining social democratic governments are reacting to
this development by adopting the policies of the right and stirring
up racist feelings against foreigners and refugees. According
to the German magazine Der Spiegel, the British prime minister
launched a major verbal attack against foreigners
a few weeks ago. Blair claimed that the triumphal march
of right-wing extremism could be stopped only by adopting
drastic measures against illegal refugees in the whole
of Europe.
The Guardian newspaper quoted from a confidential government
document, indicating that a general mobilisation against illegal
immigration is being planned. British navy warships are to track
down and intercept refugee boats in the eastern Mediterranean,
while the British air force will be commissioned to transport
rejected asylum seekers back to their home countries on a massive
scale.
The same attitude characterises the Social Democratic-Green
Party coalition government in Berlin. For years, Social Democratic
Interior Minister Otto Schily has been blocking every attempt
to introduce even the slightest form of liberalisation into European
refugee law. He rejected the recommendations of the EU commission
for the reunion of families and the standardisation of the asylum
legal process with the words: That will deprive us of room
for manoeuvre when it comes to our own immigration policy.
At a recent conference of the European interior ministers in
Luxemburg, Schily called for a tough stance towards the third
countries. He said, Whoever fails to observe his international
obligations should realise that certain consequences are bound
to follow.
Schilys claim that the fight against illegal immigration
improves the conditions for legal immigrationThe less
illegal immigration we have, the greater the possibility we have
for legal immigrationis utterly cynical. The truth
is precisely the opposite. The sharp increase in illegal immigration
results above all from the fact that the opportunities for legal
immigration have been systematically curtailed. Apart from specialists,
sought for their value to the economy, it is nowadays virtually
impossible for immigrants to enter Europe legally.
In the course of the debates in Seville on sanctions against
transit countries unwilling to thoroughly enforce EU requirements,
German Chancellor Schröder remained conspicuously silent,
while behind the scenes he supported the stance of Aznar, Berlusconi
and Blair.
The word sanctions was avoided in the final declaration
of the Seville summit, and the reduction of development aid was
threatened only indirectly. The European government heads were
rather more elegant in expressing their determination to insulate
Europe against immigrants, declaring: Inadequate cooperation
on the part of a country could be detrimental to the development
of relations between the country concerned and the European Union.
The cause of refugee misery
The idea that the swelling wave of refugees from starving African
countries or the socially devastated regions of eastern Europe
and Russia can be halted by ringing western Europe with armed
border guards is both barbaric and illusory.
In reality, the European ruling class is confronted with a
problem for which it has no answer. According to the estimates
of Europol, the European police authority in The Hague, at least
half a million peoplein addition to 400,000 asylum seekerstry
to enter EU countries illegally each year. The number is 13 times
greater than in 1993, and it continues to swell.
Der Spiegel quoted an official from Germanys
Interior Ministry who said the real number could be twice
or even 10 times higher than this. No one really knows how
many are secretly penetrating the borders.
Twilight communities have already come into existence
all over Europe. In Paris, Amsterdam, Berlin and Vienna there
are already districts inhabited by three times the number of people
officially registered. Social tensions are mounting at a tremendous
rate.
Chancellor Schröder and a section of the liberal press
continually speak in the following vein: Of course, we sympathise
with the difficult situation refugees find themselves in. Social
misery in numerous countries is driving an increasing number of
people to look elsewhere for a better existence. But the problem
cannot be solved by having all, or even a large proportion, of
the most poverty stricken come to Europe. Our social system would
collapse.
This argument is both cynical and mendacious. Within Europe,
the crisis of the social system is not the consequence of a burdensome
surplus of immigrants, but rather of policies thatto further
the interests of big businesssystematically reduce the taxation
of large firms and the rich, while cutting state expenditures
on social services. To this point a large proportion of asylum
seekers and refugees have not been allowed to have regular jobs
or earn their own living.
At the same time, the misery driving people to flee their home
countries is a direct result of the plundering of the poor countries
by European and American capital. The roots of this misery reach
back to the colonial policies of previous centuriespolicies
continued today under the auspices of the World Bank and the International
Monetary Fund (IMF).
In a World Bank report from 2000, the total debt of the underdeveloped
countries was calculated to be $US2.5 trillion. The report shows
that these countries pay nine times as much in debt repayments
to the big international banks as they receive in development
aid.
When Mozambique was struck by a flood disaster in 1999, over
a million people lost their homes. Nevertheless, the country paid
$US70 million in debt repayments to Western banks. While diseases
like cholera and malaria were spreading, only 1.1 percent of the
gross domestic product was spent on the health system. After an
IMF redevelopment programme imposed 10 years ago,
expenditure on health in that country has actually been reduced
by 75 percent.
In the whole of Africa, where, on average, only every second
child goes to school, the governments transferred four times as
much capital to international banks and creditors as they spent
on education and health. According to a World Bank report, poverty
in Africa increased by 50 percent between 1994 and 2000. On account
of structural adjustment programmes implemented in the 1980s,
income per head in the 1990s receded to the level that existed
prior to the end of colonial rule.
The various shock therapies of the IMF and the
World Bank have had similar effects in eastern Europe and Russia.
In the last decade, economic activity in the regions of the former
Soviet Union has shrunk by more than half. A United Nations report,
prepared in 1999, estimated that the number of people living in
poverty, i.e., on 4 US dollars or less per day, in the countries
of eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union had risen from 13.6
million in 1989 to 147 million.
Consequently, a genuine struggle against increasing impoverishment,
which is the source of the vast waves of refugees, requires a
socialist perspective directed against capitalism. The European
working class must place itself unconditionally on the side of
the refugees and asylum seekers and together fight against the
hegemony and dictates of the European and international banks
and business concerns, as well as their governments. As part of
this struggle, it must defend the right of people to live and
work in the country of their choice, and demand the elimination
of all legal barriers to immigration and all forms of discrimination
against immigrants.
The brutal measures, today directed externally against refugees
and asylum seekers, will soon be instituted internally against
the unemployed, social welfare recipients and the majority of
the population in European countries. This development was also
clearly visible at the Seville summit.
One day before the meeting of the government heads, a nationwide
general strike paralysed public life in Spain. In each of the
major cities of Madrid and Barcelona, a half a million people
demonstrated against mass sackings and the Aznar governments
anti-social labour laws. Special units of the police attacked
pickets and demonstrators with water cannon and truncheons. According
to accounts from the CNT trade union, several hundred people were
injured, some of them severely. The government wanted at all costs
to prevent the strike linking up with the following days
protest, organised by opponents of globalisation.
In Seville, the class character of the European Union was strikingly
apparent: an association of the major European banks and business
concerns, enforcing in ruthless manner their own interests and
privileges against both refugees and the working people of Europe.
See Also:
European Union plan to restrict
immigration
[20 June 2002]
The European
Union
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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