By Soeren Kern
Monday, October 02, 2023
Europe’s migrant crisis has returned with a
vengeance, and disputes between EU member states over how to confront the
challenge are plunging the bloc into an existential crisis. In a single week in
September, more than 10,000 young males from Africa and the Middle East arrived
on the tiny Italian island of Lampedusa, which has a population of 6,000 and a
migrant-reception capacity of only 400. Hundreds of thousands more migrants are
poised to cross the Mediterranean Sea from North Africa in hopes of reaching
European shores before winter arrives.
The migrant flows to Europe in 2023 have intensified in
ways not seen since 2015, when German chancellor Angela Merkel invited in
more than a million migrants from Africa, Asia, and the Middle East. The
European Border and Coast Guard Agency (Frontex) is expecting 350,000 illegal
migrant arrivals in 2023, on top of the 330,000 migrants who illegally entered the European Union in 2022. The
actual numbers are far higher because untold thousands of migrants reach Europe every year undetected. (These figures do
not include the 6 million Ukrainian refugees who legally entered the EU since
the Ukraine War began in February 2022.)
Italy is bearing the brunt of Europe’s migration crisis.
During the first nine months of 2023, at least 150,000 migrants reached Italian
shores, more than double the number of arrivals during the same period in 2022.
Tens of thousands more migrants have reached other EU front-line states,
including Cyprus, Greece, Malta, and Spain.
The renewed surge in migration is being fueled by several
factors, including political chaos in Libya, armed conflict in Sudan, and
economic crisis in Tunisia. In Libya, at least 700,000 migrants are on their
way to Europe, according to Italian intelligence estimates. In Sudan, a key
transit country for migration routes between sub-Saharan Africa and North
Africa, approximately 800,000 people have been displaced by the fighting there,
according to the U.N. Refugee Agency. Many of these will eventually make their
way to Europe.
Tunisia is now the main hub in North Africa for migrants
seeking to reach Europe. A key departure point is the port city of Sfax,
situated just 140 miles from Lampedusa, Italy’s most southerly point. Tens of
thousands of migrants are amassed there and waiting to cross the Mediterranean.
Once in Lampedusa, migrants are taken to mainland Italy,
where their asylum claims are processed according to the Dublin Regulation, an EU law that requires asylum
applications to be handled by the country through which the asylum seeker first
entered Europe.
The asylum process often takes years to conclude because
asylum seekers, seeking to avoid deportation, routinely conceal their identity
by destroying passports and birth certificates. Many migrants surreptitiously
depart Italy for other European destinations, including France, Germany, and
the United Kingdom, where they submit additional asylum applications. Even if
their applications are rejected, most migrants are allowed to stay in Europe
because deporting them is nearly impossible under European human-rights laws.
The migrant crisis threatens to unravel the Schengen Agreement, which guarantees free movement within
the bloc. The recent surge in migrant arrivals to Lampedusa has led Austria,
France, and Germany to reintroduce controls along their borders with Italy. “We
cannot embrace all of the world’s misery,” French president Emmanuel Macron
explained. “France will not take in a single migrant from Lampedusa,” France’s
interior minister, Gérard Darmanin, vowed.
The EU continues to try to outsource its border controls
to non-EU countries. In July, European officials signed a 1 billion–euro
agreement with Tunisia aimed at bribing the government there to halt illegal
immigration. So far Tunis has not received one cent, owing to intra-EU disputes
about whether the agreement, which is modeled on similar deals with Turkey and
Libya, is compatible with European human-rights laws.
The EU’s failure to honor the EU–Tunisia agreement has
led to a surge in the number of illegal arrivals to Italy from Tunisia. On
September 22, after an emergency meeting, the European Commission hastily announced that it would “quickly” deliver 127 million
euros to help the Tunisian government fight migrant-trafficking networks. This
will not be enough to deter Tunis from keeping open the floodgates to mass
migration until the EU pays what it promised.
The EU is also struggling to revamp the way it processes
and relocates asylum seekers. In June, after four years of arduous
negotiations, the EU announced the so-called New Pact on Migration and Asylum, which imposes “mandatory
solidarity” by forcing EU member states to accept migrants or require them to
pay 20,000 euros for each person they refuse to take in.
It remains far from certain that the agreement will ever
take effect, because it must first be approved by the European Parliament,
where Euroskeptic parties opposed to mass migration are expected to win big in
elections set for June 2024. If current polls prove to be accurate, populists
may gain enough seats in the parliament to impose restrictions on the EU’s
notoriously lenient migration policies.
A key factor in the rise of populism in Europe is that
most of the migrants arriving in Europe are military-aged males from Africa and
the Middle East who are not legitimate asylum seekers but economic migrants.
For a variety of reasons, including education, culture, and Islam, many of them
are unable or unwilling to integrate into their host countries.
Mass migration has made Islam omnipresent in Europe,
where Islamist-inspired parallel societies are proliferating along with sharia
courts, polygamy, child marriages, and honor violence. It is also stoking
social chaos and rampant crime, including runaway antisemitism and mass sexual
violence against European women.
The Islamization of European society is fueling support
for populist parties across Europe. In Germany, where the anti-immigration
Alternative for Germany is now the second-most popular party, half of voter
support comes from Germans who are not right-wing but are angry about mass
migration, according to a recent survey by the Allensbach
Institute.
Despite this anger, migrants continue to arrive in Europe
unabated, in large measure because many political leaders, especially in
Germany, believe that mass migration is the only way to sustain European
social-welfare systems amid a demographic crisis in which fertility rates have
fallen far below replacement levels in all 27 EU countries.
British home secretary Suella Braverman has noted that Europe’s migration crisis is being
sustained by outdated international asylum laws — including the 1951 United
Nations Refugee Convention and the 1950 European Convention of Human Rights —
that are being systematically abused to allow virtually anyone to claim asylum
for any reason, and to prevent any illegal immigrants, even criminals, from
ever being deported. Braverman has said that mass migration poses an
“existential challenge for the political and cultural institutions of the
West,” adding that “uncontrolled immigration, inadequate integration, and a
misguided dogma of multiculturalism have proven a toxic combination for Europe over
the last few decades.”
Matteo Salvini, deputy prime minister of Italy, described
the latest influx of migrants as unsustainable. “What is happening in Lampedusa
is the death of Europe.” Polish prime minister Mateusz Morawiecki agreed: “The
whole of Europe may become Lampedusa if we continue to commit the same old
mistakes.”
No comments:
Post a Comment