The
Global Refugee Crisis
Humanity's Last Call for a Culture of Sharing and
Cooperation
The real
crisis is not the influx of refugees to Europe
per se but a toxic combination of destabilising
foreign policy agendas, economic austerity and
the rise of right-wing nationalism, which is
likely to push the world further into social and
political chaos in the months ahead. - See more
at: http://www.sharing.org/information-centre/articles/global-refugee-crisis-humanitys-last-call-culture-sharing-and#sthash.iTpFLniu.dpuf
The real
crisis is not the influx of refugees to Europe per
se but a toxic combination of destabilising foreign
policy agendas, economic austerity and the rise of
right-wing nationalism, which is likely to push the
world further into social and political chaos in the
months ahead
By Rajesh
Makwana
March 15, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- "Sharing.org"-
Razor-wire fences, detention centres, xenophobic
rhetoric and political disarray; nothing illustrates
the tendency of governments to aggressively pursue
nationalistic interests more starkly than their
inhumane response to refugees fleeing conflict and
war. With record numbers of asylum seekers predicted
to reach Europe this year and a morally acceptable
humanitarian response nowhere in sight, the
immediate problem is more apparent than ever: the
abject failure of the international community to
share the responsibility, burden and resources
needed to safeguard the basic rights of asylum
seekers in accordance with international law.
Of
immediate concern across the European Union,
however, is the mounting pressure that policymakers
are under from the far-right and anti-immigration
groups, whose influence is skewing the public debate
on the divisive issue of how governments should deal
with refugees and immigrants. With racial
intolerance steadily growing among citizens, the
traditionally liberal attitude of European states is
fast diminishing and governments are increasingly
adopting a cynical interpretation of international
refugee law that lacks any sense of justice or
compassion.
The 1951
Refugee Convention, which was implemented in
response to Europe’s last major refugee crisis
during World War II, states that governments need
only safeguard the human rights of asylum seekers
when they are inside their territory. In violation
of the spirit of this landmark human rights
legislation, the response from most European
governments has been to prevent rather than
facilitate the arrival of refugees in order to
minimise their legal responsibility towards them. In
order to achieve their aim, the EU has even gone so
far as making a flawed and legally questionable deal
with President Erdogan to intercept migrant families
crossing the Aegean Sea and return them to Turkey
against their will.
Instead of
providing ‘safe and legal routes’ to refugees, a
growing number of countries on the migration path
from Greece to Western Europe are adopting the
Donald Trump solution of building walls,
militarising boarders and constructing barbed wire
barriers to stop people entering their country.
Undocumented refugees (a majority of them women and
children) who are trying to pass through Europe’s
no-longer borderless Schengen area are at times
subjected to humiliation and violence or are
detained in rudimentary camps with minimal access to
the essentials they need to survive. Unable to
travel to their desired destination, tens of
thousands of refugees have been bottlenecked in
Greece which has become a warehouse for abandoned
souls in a country on the brink of its own
humanitarian crisis.
Ostensibly,
the extreme reaction of many EU member states to
those risking their lives to escape armed conflict
is tantamount to officially sanctioned racial
discrimination. Unsurprisingly, this unwarranted
government response has been welcomed by nationalist
parties who are now polling favourably among voters
in the UK, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Denmark
and Poland. The same is true in Hungary, where the
government has even agreed Nazi-era demands to
confiscate cash and jewellery from refugees to fund
their anti-humanitarian efforts.
There
can be little doubt that the European response to
refugees has been discriminatory, morally
objectionable and politically dangerous. It’s also
self-defeating since curtailing civil liberties and
discarding long-held social values has the potential
to destabilise Europe far more than simply providing
the assistance guaranteed to refugees under the UN
convention. Albeit unwittingly, the reactionary
attitude of governments also plays directly into the
hands of Islamic State and other jihadi groups whose
broader intentions include inciting Islamophobia,
provoking instability and conflict within western
countries, and recruiting support for terrorism in
the Middle East and across Europe.
Dispelling
nationalist myths of the far-right
With the
public increasingly divided about how governments
should respond to the influx of people escaping
violent conflict, it’s crucial that the pervasive
myths peddled by right-wing extremists are exposed
for what they are: bigotry, hyperbole and outright
lies designed to exacerbate fear and discord within
society.
Forced
migration is a global phenomenon and, compared with
other continents, Europe is not being subjected to
the ‘invasion of refugees’ widely portrayed in the
mainstream media. Of the world’s 60 million
refugees, nine out of ten are not seeking asylum in
the EU, and the vast majority remain displaced
within their own countries. Most of those that do
settle in Europe will return to their country of
origin when they are no longer at risk (as happened
at the end of the Balkan Wars of the 1990s when 70%
of refugees who had fled to Germany returned to
Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Kosovo, Albania
and Slovenia).
The real
emergency is taking place outside of Europe, where
there is a desperate need for more assistance from
the international community. For example, Turkey is
now home to over 3 million refugees; Jordan hosts
2.7 million refugees – a staggering 41 percent of
its population; and Lebanon has 1.5 million Syrian
refugees who make up a third of its population.
Unsurprisingly, social and economic systems are
under severe strain in these and the other countries
that host the majority of global refugees –
especially since they are mainly based in developing
countries with soaring unemployment rates,
inadequate welfare systems and high levels of social
unrest. In stark comparison (and with the notable
exception of Germany), the 28 relatively prosperous
EU member states have collectively pledged to
resettle a mere 160,000 of the one million refugees
that entered Europe in 2015. Not only does this
amount to less than 0.25% of their combined
population, governments have only relocated a few
hundred have so far.
The
spurious claim that there are insufficient resources
available to share with those seeking asylum in the
EU or that asylum seekers will ‘take our homes, our
jobs and our welfare services’ is little more than a
justification for racial discrimination. Aside from
the overriding moral and legal obligation for states
to provide emergency assistance to anyone fleeing
war or persecution, the economic rationale for
resettling asylum seekers throughout Europe (and
globally) is sound: in countries experiencing
declining birth rates and ageing populations – as is
the case across the EU as a whole – migration levels
need to be significantly increased in order to
continue financing systems of state welfare.
The facts
are incontrovertible: evidence from OECD countries
demonstrates that immigrant households contribute
$2,800 more to the economy in taxes alone than they
receive in public provision. In the UK, non-European
immigrants contributed £5 billion ($7.15 billion) in
taxes between 2000 and 2011. They are also less
likely to receive state benefits than the rest of
the population, more likely to start businesses, and
less likely to commit serious crimes than natives.
Overall, economists at the European Commission
calculate that the influx of people from conflict
zones will have a positive effect on employment
rates and long-term public finances in the most
affected countries.
A common
agenda to end austerity
If migrant
families contribute significantly to society and
many European countries with low birth rates
actually need them in greater numbers, why are
governments and a growing sector of the population
so reluctant to honour international commitments and
assist refugees in need? The widely held belief that
public resources are too scarce to share with asylum
seekers is most likely born of fear and insecurity
in an age of economic austerity, when many European
citizens are struggling to make ends meet.
Just as the
number of people forcibly displaced from developing
countries begins to surge, economic conditions in
most European countries have made it politically
unfeasible to provide incoming refugees with shelter
and basic welfare. Voluntary and compulsory
austerity measures adopted by governments after
spending trillions of dollars bailing out the banks
in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis have
resulted in deep spending cuts to essential public
services such as healthcare, education and pensions
schemes. The resulting economic crisis has led to
rising unemployment, social discontent, growing
levels of inequality and public services that are
being stretched to breaking point.
The same
neoliberal ideology that underpins austerity in
Europe is also responsible for creating widespread
economic insecurity across the Global South and
facilitating an exodus of so-called ‘economic
migrants’, many of who are also making their way to
Europe. Economic austerity has been central to the
‘development’ policies foisted onto low-income
countries for decades by the IMF and World Bank in
exchange for loans and international aid. They
constitute a modern form of economic colonialism
that in many cases has decimated essential public
services, thwarted poverty reduction programmes and
increased the likelihood of social unrest, sectarian
violence and civil war. By prioritising
international loan repayments over the basic welfare
of citizens, these neoliberal policies are directly
responsible for creating a steady flow of ‘refugees
from globalisation’ who are in search of basic
economic security in an increasingly unequal world.
Instead of
pointing the finger of blame at governments for
mismanaging the economy, public anger across Europe
is being wrongly directed at a far easier target:
refugees from foreign lands who have become
society’s collective scapegoats at a time of
grinding austerity. It's high time that people in
both ‘rich’ and ‘poor’ countries recognise that
their hardship stems from a parallel set of
neoliberal policies that have prioritised market
forces above social needs. By emphasising this
mutual cause and promoting solidarity between people
and nations, citizens can begin overturning
prejudiced attitudes and supporting progressive
agendas geared towards safeguarding the common good
of all humanity.
From a
culture of war to conflict resolution
It’s also
clear that any significant change in the substance
and direction of economic policy must go
hand-in-hand with a dramatic shift away from
aggressive foreign policy agendas that are overtly
based on securing national interests at all costs –
such as appropriating the planet’s increasingly
scarce natural resources. Indeed, it will remain
impossible to address the root causes of the refugee
crisis until the UK, US, France and other NATO
countries fully accept that their misguided foreign
policies are largely responsible for the current
predicament.
Not only
are many western powers responsible for selling arms
to abusive regimes in the Middle East, their wider
foreign policy objectives and military ambitions
have displaced large swathes of the world’s
population, particularly as a consequence of the
illegal occupation of Iraq, the war in Afghanistan
and the ill-conceived invasion of Libya. The
connection between the military interventions of
recent years, the perpetuation of terrorism and the
plight of refugees across the Middle East and North
Africa has been succinctly explained by Professor
Noam Chomsky:
“the
US-UK invasion of Iraq … dealt a nearly lethal blow
to a country that had already been devastated by a
massive military attack twenty years earlier
followed by virtually genocidal US-UK sanctions. The
invasion displaced millions of people, many of whom
fled and were absorbed in the neighboring countries,
poor countries that are left to deal somehow with
the detritus of our crimes. One outgrowth of the
invasion is the ISIS/Daesh monstrosity, which is
contributing to the horrifying Syrian catastrophe.
Again, the neighboring countries have been absorbing
the flow of refugees. The second sledgehammer blow
destroyed Libya, now a chaos of warring groups, an
ISIS base, a rich source of jihadis and weapons from
West Africa to the Middle East, and a funnel for
flow of refugees from Africa.”
After this
series of blundered invasions by the US and NATO
forces, which continue to destabilise an entire
region, one might think that militarily powerful
nations would finally accept the need for a very
different foreign policy framework. No longer can
governments ignore the imperative to engender trust
between nations and replace the prevailing culture
of war with one of peace and nonviolent means of
conflict resolution. In the immediate future, the
priority for states must be to deescalate emerging
cold war tensions and diffuse what is essentially a
proxy war in the Middle East being played out in
Syria. Yet this remains a huge challenge at a time
when military intervention is still favoured over
compromise and diplomacy, even when common sense and
experience tells us that this outdated approach only
exacerbates violent conflict and causes further
geopolitical instability.
Sharing the
burden, responsibility and resources
Given the
deplorably inadequate response from most EU
governments to the global exodus of refugees thus
far, the stage is set for a rapid escalation of the
crisis in 2016 and beyond. Some ten million refugees
are expected to make their way to Europe in 2016
alone, and this figure is likely to rise
substantially with population growth in developing
countries over the coming decades. But it's climate
change that will bring the real emergency, with far
higher migration levels accompanied by floods,
droughts and sudden hikes in global food prices.
Although
largely overlooked by politicians and the mainstream
media, the number of people fleeing conflict is
already dwarfed by ‘environmental refugees’
displaced by severe ecological conditions – whose
numbers could rise to 200 million by 2050. It’s
clear that unless nations collectively pursue a
radically different approach to managing forced
displacement, international discord and social
tensions will continue to mount and millions of
additional refugees will be condemned to oversized
and inhumane camps on the outer edges of
civilisation.
The
fundamentals of an effective and morally acceptable
response to the crisis are already articulated in
the Refugee Convention, which sets out the core
responsibilities that states have towards those
seeking asylum – even though governments have
interpreted the treaty erroneously and failed to
implement it effectively. In the short term, it’s
evident that governments must mobilise the resources
needed to provide urgent humanitarian assistance to
those escaping war, regardless of where in the world
they have been displaced. Like the Marshall Plan
that was initiated after the Second World War, a
globally coordinated emergency response to the
refugee crisis will require a significant
redistribution of finance from the world’s richest
countries to those most in need – which should be
provided on the basis of ‘enlightened self-interest’
if not from a genuine sense of compassion and
altruism.
Immediate
humanitarian interventions would have to be
accompanied by a new and more effective system for
administrating the protection of refugees in a way
that is commensurate with international refugee law.
In simple terms, such a mechanism could be
coordinated by a reformed and revitalised UN Refugee
Agency (the UNHCR) which would ensure that both the
responsibility and resources needed to protect
refugees is shared fairly among nations. A mechanism
for sharing global responsibility would also mean
that states only provide assistance in accordance
with their individual capacity and circumstances,
which would prevent less developed nations from
shouldering the greatest burden of refugees as is
currently the case.
Even though
the UN’s refugee convention has already been agreed
by 145 nations, policymakers in the EU seem
incapable and unwilling to demonstrate any real
leadership in tackling this or indeed any other
pressing transnational issue. Not only does the
resulting refugee fiasco demonstrate the extent to
which self-interest dominates the political status
quo across the European Union, it confirms the
suspicion that the union as a whole is increasingly
devoid of social conscience and in urgent need of
reform.
Thankfully,
ordinary citizens are leading the way on this
critical issue and putting elected representatives
to shame by providing urgent support to refugee
families in immediate need of help. In their
thousands, volunteers stationed along Europe’s
boarders have been welcoming asylum seekers by
providing much needed food, shelter and clothing,
and have even provided search and rescue services
for those who have risked their lives being
trafficked into Europe in rubber dinghies. Nowhere
is this spirit of compassion and generosity more
apparent than on Lesbos and other Geek islands,
where residents have been collectively nominated for
the 2016 Nobel Peace Prize for their humanitarian
efforts.
The
selfless actions of these dedicated volunteers
should remind the world that people have a
responsibility and a natural inclination to serve
one another in times of need – regardless of
differences in race, religion and nationality.
Instead of building militarised borders and ignoring
popular calls for a just and humanitarian response
to the refugee crisis, governments should take the
lead from these people of goodwill and prioritise
the needs of the world’s most vulnerable above all
other concerns. For European leaders and
policymakers in all countries, it’s this
instinctively humane response to the refugee crisis
– which is based firmly on the principle of sharing
– that holds the key to addressing the whole
spectrum of interconnected social, economic and
environmental challenges in the critical period
ahead.
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