Published by Vocal Europe
It would be unfair to criticize the European Union for
its handling of the biggest refugee and migration crisis since the second World
War, if the EU wasn’t making it all even worse by attempting to use the crisis
to grab power. Digging up plans prepared long before, the European Commission is
pushing to harmonise
asylum procedures, something still relatively innocent, while it also tries to
force unwilling member states to welcome refugees.
On Tuesday, at the meeting of EU interior ministers,
something unprecedented happened. At the instigation of the European Commission
and Germany, a majority of member states decided to override opposition coming
from four Central- and Eastern European countries (Slovakia, the Czech
Republic, Hungary and Romania) and to decide to “relocate”
160,000 refugees from Italy and Greece to the other member states, also to
these opposed to it.
The result is threefold:
-
No
redistribution of refugees: People will be told to move to a country which
doesn’t want to welcome them and where they don’t necessarily want to go. More
importantly, Slovakia and the Czech Republic are within the passport-free
Schengen-zone, so there are almost no checks possible that people will actually
stay there. It would be like telling people they can only reside in Manchester
and cannot move to London. In short: this mechanism, which the EU Commission
wants to make permanent, will not
succeed in its purpose to “redistribute the burden”.
-
Anger
among EU countries: What this measure has succeeded in already is to
create resentment against the EU and against Germany, the driver of this idea.
Jiří Pospíšil, a former Czech Justice Minister and MEP with the pro-EU TOP09
party described
the result as “a great defeat for Europe” which would facilitate the rise of
anti-EU sentiment. I was told by a French journalist that during the previous
meeting of interior ministers, France’s Bernard Cazeneuve was able to stop
German interior minister Thomas de Maizière from demanding a vote. At the next
occasion, it wasn’t possible to stop Germany from damaging good relations with
their Eastern neighbours.
-
Short
term gains for certain politicians: One thing the decision may
do is to prop up German Chancellor Merkel’s approval ratings, which for the
first time this year have
been hit, largely as a result of the refugee crisis and the
decision to bail out Greece. She desperately needed something from deflecting
attention from the backlash
within Germany against her policy.
Even if she may be right that Eastern Europe could
show a bit more solidarity, Angela Merkel should really do some deep soul
searching whether it was wise to antagonize these countries and to enable anti-EU
sentiment there only to push through a proposal which in effect won’t make any
difference in reality anyway.
Many have criticized the UK, which enjoys a Treaty
opt-out from having to participate in this EU scheme, for not doing enough to
help Syrian refugees. This overlooks that the country has spent 40% more for
refugee camps in the Middle East than Germany and much
more than France, Italy and Spain.
Discussing how to redistribute refugees which already
are in the – supposedly safe - EU really is about helping overburdened European
countries. If one wants to help refugees, it’s better to do what the UK does:
to welcome 20.000
people from refugee camps in the region. Rather than
strengthening the EU’s powers, this episode should instead be a reminder why
the attempts of the UK government to reform the EU are worth pursuing. This
agenda may now perhaps receive a bit more sympathy in Eastern Europe.
As I have made clear in another comment
piece, the solution isn’t to abolish the passport-free
Schengenzone either, given that most irregular migrants still arrive legally. Also
abolishing the so-called Dublin Regulation on asylum, which requires people
seeking refuge in Europe to do so in the first country where they set foot is a
bad idea. It would actually mean the end of Schengen, given that France or
Germany would demand the right to permanent border checks, if Italy would be
allowed to provide all migrants free passage.
Migration is a massive challenge, which is now complicated
by the wars in Syria and Iraq. The best thing the EU can do is not to divert
some of the damage to itself by trying to grab more powers on the back of the
crisis.
For extraordinary crises, one needs an extraordinary
solution. I have proposed
to create “free havens” outside of the EU, where refugees could go voluntarily and
where officials from richer countries would safeguard law and order to allow an
economy to develop. Multinationals may prefer to host their expensive
production plants in these zones, run by officials of countries with a high
level of rule of law, over unstable places like Ethiopia or Pakistan.
Unrealistic? Less than one would think. Here are three
developments which show why:
-
Guarding
the sea border will prove only realistic if there is a deal with a “third
country”:
The only
way to guard the EU’s external sea border is to pursue the Australian approach:
drag any boat trying to enter illegally to a third country. To do this, Australia
has closed a deal with Papua New Guinea . The EU has no such deal with any
third country. It can choose between pushing back migrants to unsafe countries
(or countries unwilling to take them back, like Turkey) or bringing them into
the EU. It rightly has chosen to save the lives of thousands of vulnerable
people, but as an unintended consequence, it thereby operates as a ferry for
migrants keen to cross the Mediterranean , effectively serving the interests of
human smugglers.
Since Australia’s policy was implemented, there has been criticism of the conditions in the refugee camps but only
a limited number of boats have tried to make the journey to Australia and no
deaths have been reported. This means the policy deserves to be considered. It’s
possible to learn from Australia’s success in avoiding drownings while not
repeating its mistake of providing bad conditions to live.
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Trying
to offer a positive alternative for refugees will only work if it’s something
resembling a developed country:
EU
countries have just agreed
to implement “a medium-term strategy … aimed at developing safe
and sustainable reception capacities in the affected regions and providing
lasting prospects and adequate procedures for refugees and their families until
return to their country of origin is possible”, effectively taking over a
proposal from the Dutch government. Dutch PM Mark Rutte has specified that he wants “UNHCR-plus” refugee
zones in the Middle East, which he thinks should also include access to
education and employment for migrants. A document from his government outlines Dutch
plans in more detail, stating that “staying in refugee camps without prospects
(…) must be replaced by reception in important transit countries in safe and
adequately equipped host communities of a more structural manner. To set up
such semi-permanent facilities is necessary and at the same time sensitive and
complex to execute in practice. Considerable efforts and cooperation of the
third countries involved are therefore needed, but these are conditions which the
EU and its member states can help create, through aid and direct economic
investment in infrastructure and companies”.
The Dutch
idea, which has been approved by EU countries in principle, isn’t so far off from
establishing a free haven. It even mentions how companies should be attracted,
which is key. The whole idea behind this is to make sure refugees have a
positive incentive not to move to Europe, given that they can develop their
lives somewhere else. The modest way – providing refugee camps with more funds
- is likely to fail to convince people to stay away. In order to make sure that
refugee camps in Turkey would turn into functioning cities, one needs proper
rule of law and outside investment.
EU countries have also decided to create so-called “hotspots” or “Migration
Management Support Teams” in Italy and Greece, where refugees
would be registered. Italy already opened one on the island of Lampedusa. Greek
and Italian officials are now however concerned these would turn into sprawling
refugee camps, indicating that large-scale refugee reception inside the EU’s
border is a pipe
dream.
-
The direct cost of welcoming refugees in Europe is on
the rise:
Refugees
may well contribute
to the economy on the longer term, but on the short term there is a cost. The cost
to Germany of accepting up to 1 million refugees is estimated at
25 billion euros over two years only, eating away part of its current 21 billion euros budget surplus. The German
government has already announced to drop
plans to cut the income tax as a result of the cost of the refugee crisis. Some
want
EU countries to pay billions to African countries to take back migrants, while European
Parliament president Martin Schulz has called for 7
billion euro to provide to countries in the Middle East to cope
with refugee reception.
The point
here is that large-scale investments are being made anyway, so why waste them
on imperfect border control which encourages migrants to take bigger risks and
on refugee camps which have no hope of ever turning self-reliant and where
people will only grow more frustrated? The Belgian police and justice system costs around 3 billion euro per
year, to serve 11 million people. No extra taxes need to be raised for an
investment-friendly “free haven” for refugees outside of Europe with the rule
of law. The EU’s 130 billion euro budget offers a lot of opportunities. More
than 270 billion euros are still being sent to agricultural land owners,
including the Queen of England, between 2014 and 2020. I doubt whether European
tax payers would mind using some of this cash to create a city outside of
Europe for refugees…
In any case, Turkey is unlikely to agree to allow people
to stay semi-permanently. It has already proposed that some of its almost 2
million refugees could go back to Syria, after a no-fly zone would have secured
a safe area for them, something not very realistic either, sadly.
Events are pushing policy makers to providing
permanent settlement for the millions on the run. If you want to help refugees,
but you can’t or don’t want to help them within Europe, you need to help them
outside of Europe.
Proposals similar to “free havens”
have been made by US business man Jason
Buzi, who wants to give refugees their own “Refugee Nation” and Egyptian businessman Naguib Sawiris, the 10th richest man in
Africa, who has offered to buy an island off Italy or Greece in order to rehouse hundreds of
thousands of refugees fleeing Syria and other conflicts.
Turkey may not be keen, but the EU already
had some success convincing Niger to host a number of “temporary” reception
centers in Niger. These will be launched this year as a pilot project. France and Germany support opening similar centres in Egypt, Turkey or Lebanon, so perhaps they may
consider more ambitious proposals later. Even if at first instance a refugee
zone would be created in, say, Morocco, which may be happy to receive
compensation, the EU could as well send police and justice personnel there,
similar to what it has already done in Kosovo.
The EU’s attempts to grab power on the back of the crisis and to disrespect the outcome of national democracy in Eastern Europe must be condemned, but its embryonic decision to try to provide better conditions for refugees in the region where they come from must be applauded. If the refugee and migrant crisis escalates, perhaps more ambitious solutions similar to the one I described may be attempted.
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