Europe adrift in the sea of migrations
Victor Ângelo
A
meeting of the European Union's ministers of foreign affairs and internal
administration on migration was held this week at the initiative of the
Portuguese presidency. The previous one had taken place in 2015, when more than
a million people arrived in Europe from Syria and other parts of the Middle
East, Afghanistan, and the countries of the Indian subcontinent, as well as
Africa. The long gap between the two meetings happened because migration is an
extraordinarily complex and fractious issue among EU member states. Leaders
have systematically swept the imbroglio under the rug.
Now
the meeting was a new attempt to define a common policy. There were some
generic statements about the need for a comprehensive and coherent response
that combines development and security partnerships with the migrants'
countries of origin and transit, that opens avenues for controlled migration,
that prioritizes political relations with North Africa and West Africa. All
very vague and at the level of mere lapalissades. The result was, once again,
below expectations.
The
Mediterranean Agenda proposed in February by the European Commission, which was
one of the reference documents, is equally imprecise. It lumps together
completely different national realities, as if the Mediterranean geopolitical
space were homogeneous. And it does not make a critical balance of the past. It
suggests continuing and deepening a cooperation model that, in reality, has
failed to help transform any state in the region into either a prosperous or
democratic nation.
The
fact is that there is no common position beyond strengthening Frontex as the
European Coast Guard and border police. That is the only accepted and shared
responsibility, the lowest common denominator. As for the rest, everything else
is business as usual. It will be managed by chance events. The countries of
entry of illegal immigrants will continue to have to bear the political,
humanitarian, and economic costs that result from receiving those who arrive
there. Despite the repeated appeal by the Portuguese Minister of Internal
Administration, there will be no solidarity among Europeans in this matter.
The
great truth is that most member-states do not want to receive new waves of
immigrants coming from other geographies and unfamiliar cultures. Even
countries that have traditionally been the destination of Maghrebian, African
and other immigrants share this position. We, the Portuguese, are a little on
the outside. We do not really understand the weight of migratory pressure on
the cohesion of the social fabric of big cities in France, Belgium, the Netherlands,
Germany, for example. Nor do we have a clear notion of the political impact of
the presence of vast foreign communities, when they are not integrated into the
societies that received them, thus being an argument easily exploited by
right-wing extremists and potential terrorists.
Europe
will continue to speak constructively and act restrictively, even repressively,
on this issue. International migration is one of the most complex dilemmas
facing us, but one that many Europeans do not want to consider. Despite the
progress of tolerance values, we are not fully prepared for the diversity of
cultures and faces. Anyone in doubt should visit the new ethnic ghettos that
exist in certain European metropolises. And without going any further, you can
start with certain outskirts of Lisbon.
We
have already seen that the sea is not enough of a barrier for those who are
desperate or dream of a better life. But since the intention of those in charge
is to stop population movements that seem threatening, Europe will go further.
It will pour fortunes into countries that have the potential to send us new
waves of migrants - as is already happening with Turkey. It is a carrot and
stick gamble. Now, in these countries, the powerful always get the carrot, and
the poor and the weak always get the stick. For this reason, many seek to flee
to Europe.
(Automatic translation of the opinion piece I published yesterday in the
Diário de Notícias, the old and prestigious Lisbon newspaper)
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