Thousands of refugees perish on European Union borders
United network documents nearly 4,000 deaths in 10 years
By Martin Kreickenbaum
23 July 2003
While heads of government at the European Union (EU) summit in
Thessaloniki, Greece, last month resolved on further measures to restrict
refugees, more than 250 were estimated to have drowned in the
Mediterranean in two shipping incidents. According to a study undertaken
by United, an anti-racism network, documented deaths directly attributable
to the border security measures and the consolidation of Fortress Europe
rose to a total of more than 4,000 in the last 10 years.
On June 16, a refugee boat carrying more than 60 people capsized 50 miles
south of the Italian Mediterranean island of Lampedusa. Only three
refugees who set out in a small lifeboat were rescued.
The second catastrophe took place four days later, on June 20, as a
hopelessly overloaded boat set out from Libya towards Italy despite bad
weather. The boat sank only 60 miles from the African coast. A fishing
boat’s crew sighted the sinking ship, sounded the alarm and began to
organise a rescue operation, in which a number of boats from nearby oil-
rig platforms took part. However, only 41 refugees were saved; 50 bodies
were later recovered from the Mediterranean Sea. More than 160 people were
still missing as the Tunisian rescue ship abandoned the search on Sunday
due to bad weather. It was the worst shipping tragedy in the Mediterranean
for years.
It was only a matter of luck that the week did not claim more victims. On
June 17, in the Gibraltar Straits, the Spanish coast guard captured a
distressed refugee boat carrying 160 people. In the same week, the Italian
coast guard escorted a small 12-metre boat transporting 107 refugees into
Lampedusa Harbour after an eight-day journey beginning in Turkey.
The mortality rate for refugees in the overloaded and decrepit boats
continues to rise. People smugglers, demanding up to 2,000 euros for the
passage to Europe in unseaworthy boats, get their best returns by catering
to the needs of desperate people.
However, the growing mortality rates on European borders are not simply
the result of people smuggling but due to the ever-harsher measures of the
EU against refugees and asylum-seekers. With no hope of gaining a visa and
thereby no possibility of crossing borders legally, refugees are left to
the services of smugglers. Ultimately, it is the increasingly restrictive
immigration policies of all European countries that are responsible for
the two latest shipping disasters.
Both tragedies, which were widely reported in the media, are nevertheless
only the tip of the iceberg. On an almost daily basis, refugees die
unnoticed on the outer borders of Europe or in the detention centres of
the European Union. United, a network against racism that supports
refugees and migrants, and comprises more than 550 European organisations,
has put together a document that lists almost 3,800 officially recorded
victims of Europe’s refugee policy from January 1993 to March 2003
[http://www.united.non-profit.nl/pdfs/listofdeaths.pdf]. In fact, this
figure is likely to be far higher under conditions where the fate of many
refugees—who pay with their lives during their flight or who perish from
exhaustion in the barren tracts of an east European winter—go unrecorded.
The Mediterranean: a graveyard for refugees
The majority of the deaths documented by United consist of refugees who
drowned in the Mediterranean. Most are anonymous victims, who remain
unidentified and whose identities are of little concern to the authorities.
For example, on November 30 of last year, 100 refugees of mostly unknown
origin lost their lives in two sea-damaged vessels off the Libyan coast
near the Canary Islands. On October 8, 2002, 16 Africans died in the
Straits of Gibraltar as their boat sought to avoid the ultramodern Spanish
surveillance craft, purposely built to ward off refugees and fitted out
with radar and infrared cameras. Twenty-two refugees died in July 2002
following a collision with an Italian coast guard boat. On March 7, 2002,
59 refugees from Nigeria and Turkey drowned near Malta, after an Italian
navy ship, despite its proximity, offered assistance only after some
hours, managing to pull only two refugees out of the water. A small
fishing vessel that immediately set out to help was able to save seven
lives. Similarly, 30 refugees lost their lives in August 2000 near
Tangier, Morocco, due to tardy rescue operations, this time by the Spanish
coast guard.
Other refugees drowned because they were ordered off their ships by people
smugglers miles from the coast and told to swim towards land.
However, the sea is by no means the only cause of fatalities for refugees.
Refugees also die in minefields on the border between Greece and Turkey,
as in the case of two men from Burundi who came across minefields in heavy
fog on January 4 of this year. They drowned in the Oder, the river
bordering Poland and Germany, unnoticed by the border patrols and ignored
by German authorities. Many continue to suffocate, crowded in air-tight
containers like the 58 Chinese who were found in Dover, England, on June
19, 2000.
Role of border police and government authorities
In addition, United lists many instances in which refugees were either
shot by Turkish, Spanish or German border guards, or were so badly beaten
they died of their injuries.
On November 2, 2002, a 23-year-old Albanian illegally crossing a border
was mortally wounded by Greek border police. Idris Demir, a Kurd fleeing
an imminent deportation after his asylum application was rejected, was
shot near Jönköping in February 2001 by Swedish police. On May 2, 2000, in
Austria, police beat a Nigerian to death in a refugee centre near Vienna.
Two days later, a 40-year-old Slovakian died in Vienna under interrogation
for illegal residency.
Immigration officials also bear responsibility for the deadly toll of
refugees. On February 12 of this year, in the Swiss town of Thurhof,
Nigerian Osuigwe C. Kenechukwu died after being refused medical assistance
in a refugee transit centre. Similar cases that the authorities prefer to
keep hidden have been documented in nearly every EU country.
The consequences that follow the denial of asylum-seeker status are
similarly disastrous. Suicide occurs frequently in deportation centres and
the homes of those seeking asylum. Mikhail Bognarchuk, a 42-year-old
Ukrainian, hanged himself in the deportation centre in British Haslar on
January 31, 2003. Shortly before, David Mamedov, 45, a Georgian who had
resided in Germany for some years, hanged himself at his home in Schloss-
Holte in eastern Westphalia after receiving his deportation papers.
Two instances occurring on March 22, 2001, and April 23, 2000,
respectively, illustrate in an especially stark manner the despair to
which refugees are driven. In Spain two years ago, a Moroccan refugee
threatened with deportation murdered a 40-year-old asylum-seeker from
Guinea, preferring a sentence in a Spanish jail to deportation to Morocco.
A year later in Holland, a Chinese asylum-seeker, fearing deportation for
himself and his girlfriend whose application for asylum had already been
rejected, stabbed her and then killed himself.
Border security beyond the EU perimeter
Many refugees fail to reach Europe’s borders. For example, many fatalities
due to the actions of border guards are documented in Turkey. The shelling
of a refugee boat near Cyprus in May 2002 by the Turkish coast guard
caused widespread outrage. Hidar Akay from Turkey was killed in a hail of
bullets. Nine refugees were shot and another five wounded as a group of
139 people from Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan crossed the border
between Turkey and Iran at the beginning of May 2000. This incident rated
only a brief mention in the press.
Turkey, which has been warned that it would fail to gain membership to the
EU due to its record on human rights, was in reality only following EU
practice in regard to refugees. With the Amsterdam agreement and the
decisions adopted at the EU summit in 1999 in Tampere, Finland, the
enacting of ruthless border security measures against refugees became a
requirement for EU membership. The harsh measures carried out by the
Turkish border guards are also a result of the pressure the EU exerts on
neighbouring counties and candidates for EU membership.
Libya is the last potential entryway to Europe due to the trade embargo
decreed against the Qadaffi government, which consequently does not
collaborate with the EU over the issue of refugees. Many refugees become
victims of the murderous desert conditions. According to an article in the
German tageszeitung, the Ghanaian embassy reported in recent weeks that
more than 200 Ghanaians died of thirst in the desert. In May 2001,
tourists made a gruesome discovery when they came across a van from Niger
in the Libyan desert that had been lost three months earlier. The van
contained 40 corpses.
Massive extension of European border restrictions
The hundreds dying annually in European processing centres attempting to
get to Europe are the direct result of increasingly intensified border
patrols on Europe’s external borders.
While claiming that its coffers are empty when it comes to its domestic
budget, Germany has dramatically increased its spending on border
protection. The number of security guards patrolling its eastern borders
exceeds those standing sentry on the closely watched border between the US
and Mexico.
In recent years on its southern coast, Spain has established the world’s
most modern and expensive surveillance system for the detection of refugee
boats. Equipped with radar and infrared cameras, Spanish authorities are
able to identify, along a 115-kilometre stretch of coastline, even the
smallest boat on the Moroccan shore. Coast guard ships then force detected
boats to turn back.
Partly through financial aid, partly by the exertion of tremendous
pressure, countries bordering the EU have been forced to step up measures
against asylum-seekers. The EU has almost completely equipped Hungary with
its border control equipment. The sum of 50 million euros was foisted onto
Rumania to turn its border with Moldavia into an impassable wilderness for
refugees. Pressure was exerted on Poland, particularly by Germany, to set
up 25 deportation centres. The Czech Republic established its first
deportation centre in November 1998. Inmates in both countries are mainly
refugees who have been sent back by German authorities according to
the “safe” third-country rule.
In a communication on July 1, the EU Commission proposed the strengthening
of an agreement between neighbouring states with future boundaries with EU
states after the EU expansion of 2004. It is estimated that about 1
billion euros, a figure that could be increased, out of the total directed
to development aid for future border regions will go towards the
militarisation of the borders for refugee protection.
The collaboration within the EU on border security in refusal of entry
permits, deportations and the development of a common policy on asylum and
immigration issues at the lowest level continues to take ever more drastic
forms. At the EU summit in Thessaloniki, 140 million euros were expressly
allocated to intensify cooperation on policing the EU’s external borders;
250 million euros were allocated for deportations and the development of
cooperation with third countries for the return of refugees. This was in
order to further streamline the mass deportation of refugees out of the
EU. Already, 350,000 people annually are expelled and approximately
150,000 forced to return to their countries “voluntarily.”
The summit also established a common visa system allowing complete
surveillance by recording biometric information, recorded on the passport
of the bearer. In centralised records, the Visa Information System (VIS)
would then assemble data that would be made available to all border and
police authorities.
There are also plans to link the VIS to the Schengen Information System
(SIS). The latter was strengthened after an agreement was reached in
Thessaloniki to broaden and accelerate the data system. Together with the
ongoing militarisation of the EU’s external borders, the VIS draws the EU
electronic curtain ever tighter, with ever more deadly consequences, as
the United report notes.
The only ones to profit would be the people smugglers, whom the EU is
ostensibly aiming to combat. A market would be established by the EU’s
xenophobic policy against the asylum-seekers. People smugglers can already
demand exorbitant fees for the Mediterranean crossing or for a lorry
transport across the eastern borders of the EU. Prices range from the “all-
inclusive” (i.e., guaranteed transport from the origin of the journey to a
destination point with forged papers) for around 10,000 euros, to a guided
escort across the border on foot for a few hundred euros. Prices will
increase as border-crossings become riskier and the illegal paths longer
due to ever-tightening EU borders.
Refugees, who borrow heavily in order to take the road to Europe, will
become victims not only of higher financial debt. In the ruthless trade of
people smuggling they will increasingly pay with their lives.
The narrowing of freedom of movement and travel as well as the death of
refugees on the inner German borders (the so-called “wall deaths”),
deplored by Western countries during the period of the “iron curtain,” are
increasingly becoming a feature of EU politics.
See Also:
European Union plans drastic restraints on right to asylum
[17 June 2003]
EU summit steps up attack on refugees and foreigners
[5 July 2002]
European Union plan to restrict immigration
[20 June 2002]
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2003/jul2003/ref-j23.shtml
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