Merkel’s
grandstanding on Syrian refugees will lead to many more deaths at sea
The
incentive is greater for people to risk the perilous journey to
Europe
12 September 2015 /
James Forsyth /
http://www.spectator.co.uk/features/9628872/merkels-big-gesture-on-syrian-refugees-will-lead-to-many-more-deaths-at-sea/
Of all the
irresponsible decisions taken in recent years by European
politicians, few will cause as much human misery as Angela Merkel’s
plan to welcome Syrian refugees to Germany. Hailed as enlightened
moral leadership, it is in fact the result of panic and muddled
thinking. Her pronouncements will lure thousands more into the hands
of unscrupulous people-traffickers. Her insistence that the rest of
the continent should share the burden will add political instability
to the mix. Merkel has made a dire situation worse.
On Tuesday last
week, Germany declared that any Syrian who reaches the country can
claim asylum there. In the days that followed, 25,000 arrived at
Munich central station and that number is growing fast. Some trains
from Austria have been diverted to other German cities to ease the
pressure. Merkel now wants to use her clout to distribute these
refugees around Europe — arguing that EU plans to resettle 160,000
may not be sufficient.
The current wave of
migration started about 15 years ago, an unforeseen side-effect of
globalisation. It has been vastly intensified by the chaos which
followed the Arab Spring, and particularly the civil war in Syria.
The EU’s responsibility is laid out in the Dublin Convention of
1990, which decrees that refugees must claim asylum in the first
European Union country that they reach. This crucial safeguard was
torn up by Merkel when her government declared that it will be
‘responsible’ for processing the claims of Syrians. The Dublin
rules were made for a reason: to save lives, as well as to protect
Europe’s borders. German panic has imperilled both priorities.
The welcome that has
been given to refugees in Germany is remarkable. But encouraging
these people to continue their journey is risky. The 71 refugees
found dead in a lorry on an Austrian motorway last month might still
be alive today had they ended their journey in Budapest. Some 7,000
refugees are estimated to have passed through Vienna during one day
this week, but fewer than 100 claimed asylum there, choosing instead
to head on north. Austria is rich, but Merkel’s promise exerts such
a pull that people don’t want to stop until they reach Germany.
The distinction
between refugee and economic migrant is also being elided. Many of
the Syrians making this journey are fleeing war, but many others are
fleeing camps in neighbouring Jordan or Turkey. The incentive to do
this is growing, because life there is becoming harsher. As Michael
Moller, the head of the UN’s Geneva office, warned this week, these
millions will ‘get up and leave and come to Europe’ unless
conditions in the camps improve. Iraqis are also joining in; extra
flights are being laid on from Baghdad to Turkey as people go on the
move in the belief that Merkel has created a window of migration
opportunity that may not last. It is at this point that the
distinction between refugee and immigrant, on which European law is
based, breaks down.
12 issues for £12
The economic pull is
exacerbated because, unlike in previous times, the residents of the
refugee camps have access to mobile phones and information. They know
that Germany has said it expects to accept 800,000 asylum-seekers
this year (a figure greater than the population of some EU members).
They will have heard about — or seen — the welcome being given to
refugees arriving there, the reception committees and the politicians
holding placards saying ‘refugees welcome’. All of this will
encourage many more to embark on the perilous journey to Europe.
The European Union’s
energies would be far better spent improving life in the camps and
finding ways to allow people to work there, as Professor Paul Collier
suggested in these pages last month. The camps should be properly
funded. The UNHCR claims it currently has a $795 million funding gap
in its Syrian operation. France has given a fraction of what Britain
has to this work, which puts a rather different perspective on
François Hollande’s insistence that Britain must take on more of
the refugee burden. No country in Europe has given more to the
refugee camps than Britain.
Another danger of
Merkel’s open-door policy is that it may make Syria’s recovery
from civil war harder. By accepting those who have managed to make it
to Europe, rather than those still in the camps, Germany is,
intentionally or not, cherry-picking the more prosperous members of
what used to be Syrian society, those who have sufficient resources
to pay the traffickers. Without them, their ravaged country is far
less likely to make a recovery once the fighting eventually stops. As
the French foreign minister Laurent Fabius warned this week, ‘If
all these refugees come to Europe or elsewhere, then Isis has won the
game.’
Compounding Merkel’s
folly is her desire to impose mandatory refugee quotas on the rest of
the EU. (Britain won’t be part of this, we are one of the countries
with an opt-out.) Forcing countries to accept refugees they don’t
want is bound to boost support for populist anti-immigrant parties.
German public opinion might be strikingly liberal on these issues —
it is important to remember that, before her recent announcements,
Merkel was being criticised for not doing enough to help — but
opinion in other European countries is far less so. Strong-arming
recalcitrant eastern European countries into taking a significant
numbers of refugees will push politics to the nationalist right in
these countries. In France, Marine Le Pen has already been making
political hay out of Merkel’s actions.
Given the disaster
unfolding on the continent, it’s odd to see Britain coming under
pressure to become more like Germany. The Prime Minister’s decision
to accept refugees from the camps, rather than send thousands more
into the hands of people traffickers, seems to demonstrate a better
understanding of the issue. To criticise the Prime Minister for not
taking those refugees who have already reached Europe is bizarre; it
seems to play into the hands of the people-traffickers, who would be
pushing for their customers — those who have reached Europe — to
be given priority over those who are still on the Syrian border.
Many in Cameron’s
circle are furious at Merkel. There is a suspicion that, as one of
the Prime Minister’s confidants puts it, ‘This has more to do
with what happened in Europe 70 years ago than what is happening
today.’ There is also anger at the criticism being directed at
London from other European capitals. One Downing Street figure says
that if Britain were not supporting the camps on Syria’s borders,
at least a million more people would be coming to Europe. And we
should remember those who aren’t even in the camps, those who have
been forced from their homes but remain trapped inside Syria.
To save lives,
Europe needs to stop people from thinking that if they take the risk
of trying to cross into the European Union, then they will be able to
claim asylum. This means turning around the boats that attempt the
journey, and paying for processing stations in Turkey and Egypt. This
may be hard, but there is nothing compassionate about giving
desperate people false hope.
Britain can be the
voice of sanity in this debate, while others panic. Cameron can point
out that refugees and migrants who are already in Europe are not in
imminent fear for their lives. Those gathered at Calais trying to
cross the Channel might have once fled Syria, Somali or other
war-torn countries — but they are now risking their lives to leave
France, which is another matter entirely.
Merkel’s actions,
now, will be hard to correct: her words cannot be unsaid. She has
exacerbated a problem that will be with us for years, perhaps
decades. More than 40 per cent of those who applied for asylum in
Germany in the first half of this year came from the former
Yugoslavia; the last of its wars ended 14 years ago. Handling all of
this correctly will require true statesmanship, which means thinking
through consequences. Merkel is failing that test spectacularly.
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