Henry Srebrnik, [Summerside, PEI] Journal Pioneer
It’s a human tidal wave – tens of thousands
of people fleeing war-torn regions of the Middle East, and crossing the
Mediterranean to Italy, or else landing on Greek islands and making their way
through the Balkans into central Europe.
Migrants continue to board overcrowded,
rickety boats, risking their lives, and horror stories are legion. Some have
perished in overcrowded boats that sank, others while locked in trucks making
their way across Europe. The death toll keeps climbing and had reached almost
2,700 by the end of August.
Some 310,000 have already arrived on
European shores this year, up from 219,000 in 2014. It’s the biggest refugee
movement since the Second World War. And no one really knows what to do about
it.
Most have come from Syria, where four years
of civil war has claimed more than 200,000 lives, but there are many from Libya
and sub-Saharan countries in Africa.
The
advance of the Islamic State (ISIS) across large areas of Syria has also severely
impacted civilians, with reports of grave violations of human rights in areas
under their control.
There
are already more than 150,000 Syrians in Europe. But more than 2.8 million
refugees are registered or awaiting registration in Egypt, Iraq, Jordan,
Lebanon and Turkey, and over 7.6 million people are internally displaced in
Syria. How many of these people would like asylum in Europe?
European Union countries have for the most
part sought to avoid taking any responsibility for the crisis. When refugees
arrive, EU rules leave them trapped in their first countries of arrival until
their asylum claims have been processed.
For many, that means being marooned in
Italy or Greece, which are facing full-scale humanitarian crises as refugee
numbers overwhelm the available housing and supplies. Greece, which has
absorbed 200,000, and Italy, which has taken in 110,00, demand more
burden-sharing in the EU – Greece, in particular, is in the midst of a
financial crisis.
But those seeking to move on into other
countries face opposition. In the absence of a unified solution to the migrant
crisis, individual nations across the EU are often focused on keeping migrants
out, citing strong anti-migrant sentiment or budget constraints.
Macedonia has tried to stop migrants now in
Greece to cross into the country, but its police forces have been overwhelmed.
Migrants had been pouring across the Greek
border into Macedonia at a rate of some 2,000 per day, en route to Serbia, and
then into Hungary -- and Europe’s borderless Schengen zone. Some 50,000 arrived
on Greek shores in July alone by boat from Turkey.
Hungary is building a 174-kilometre fence
along its border with Serbia, where 2,000 migrants cross daily, to prevent
onward travel but this has not stopped determined people from getting across.
It is now considering using its armed forces to help with border security.
Slovakia has announced that it will take in
200 refugees as part of the EU’s plan to resettle 40,000 people who’ve fled the
Middle East, Afghanistan and sub-Saharan Africa, but it will only accept
Christians. The Dutch have tightened their asylum rules.
German chancellor Angela Merkel has stated
that EU member states must fairly share the burden of dealing with the migration
crisis. She met with the French president, François Hollande, recently, and
they agreed that the EU needed to act together to deal with the chaotic scenes
in Greece and the western Balkans.
“The current situation troubles us
greatly,” she declared. Merkel suggested that European countries might build
new registration centres in Greece and Italy to be run and staffed by the EU as
a whole by the end of the year.
Germany has itself already taken steps to
alleviate some of the suffering. Under EU rules, if any migrants have made
their way into Germany, then Germany is supposed to deport them back to wherever
they first entered the European Union.
But now, Berlin will now allow Syrian
refugees to stay and apply for asylum. It’s a brave move, considering that
asylum policy is an increasingly volatile issue in Germany.
Far-right protesters booed and jeered
Merkel when she visited an asylum centre Aug. 26 in the eastern town of
Heidenau that was the scene of earlier riots. As more refugees cross the
Mediterranean, political volatility across the EU is bound to increase.
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