The EU’s woeful response to the refugee crisis has
revived Golden Dawn
Yiannis Baboulias /
Monday 21 September 2015 18.27 BST http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/sep/21/eu-refugee-crisis-golden-dawn-greek-neo-nazi-europe
The gains of the Greek neo-Nazi party in the recent
election are emblematic of how the far-right across Europe
is exploiting the deficit of leadership on this issue
In the port
town of Mytilene , the weight of the refugee
crisis faced by Lesbos and other Greek islands
becomes painfully obvious. Despite the fact that only about 5,000 people remain
(out of the 20,000 who were stuck here in previous weeks), there’s hardly an
inch of public space in which tired bodies escaping war and poverty aren’t
present under the scorching sun. Taking advantage of the visibility and scale
of the problem, Lesbos became one of the main
targets for the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party, as it sought to strengthen its
influence in the run up to yesterday’s elections. Unfortunately, it seems that
it has worked.
As Syriza
and Alexis Tsipras are celebrating a strong result that puts them seven
percentage points ahead of conservative New Democracy and ensures they’ll be
returning to the helm of the country, the polls also tell another story that
will have repercussions beyond Greece ’s
borders. It is one of a neo-Nazi threat that not only refuses to go away, but
also has managed to solidify a block of voters that still supports it, despite
the numerous charges and convictions of party members and leaders, including
several counts of assault and murder.
Golden Dawn
has secured the third place with 7% of the vote, up from 6.3% in January. While
its percentage is artificially inflated because of very high abstention rates,
it seems that some 400,000 Greeks will always turn up to support it in the
ballot. And if it is losing much of its influence in the working-class
neighbourhoods of big cities (as preliminary data suggests), it is making it up
with an influx of votes from areas afflicted by the refugee crisis.
On Lesbos,
the third biggest island in Greece ,
Golden Dawn’s share of the vote shot up to 7.8%, from 4.7% in January. On Samos , the party received 7.7%, from 5.5% in January.
Across the Dodecanese, its percentage went up to 8.1% from 5.5%, with the tiny island of Symi – that has little more than 2,000
permanent residents and which has received 5,500 refugees since March – giving
it 10.7%, up four points from the 6.5% where it stood before.
Ukip, the
Front National in France ,
and Viktor Orbán in Hungary
are using the crisis to stoke up fears of 'invasion'
A few days
before the elections, Yiorgos Palis, a candidate then with Syriza in Lesbos and now MP for the island, told me that “the
far-right showed its face here, but the people kept their cool”. While a
massive turn to the far-right failed to materialise, it made significant gains.
The reasons
for this are plain to see. The lack of a coherent strategy and astonishing
deficit of leadership we are witnessing from EU politicians on how to deal with
the refugee crisis across the continent is playing right in the hands of the
far-right.
Similarly
to Golden Dawn, parties such as the Front National in France , Ukip in the UK
and Viktor Orbán’s party in Hungary ,
are using the crisis to stoke up fears of “invasion” and advertise threats to
the very existence of a “Christian Europe” which they must defend, reaping
temporary but significant electoral benefits. The poison they are promoting has
viral qualities: even in the Czech
Republic , a country
hardly faced with an immigration problem, xenophobia and far-right rhetoric is
now the mainstream.
Unfortunately,
it’s not hard to see how this is achieved. Greek voters were faced with a
terrifying image last week: Golden Dawn was using small children in its TV ads,
to promote vile and xenophobic propaganda, with slogans like: “I don’t want to
be a minority in my own country.” What’s even worse is that some in New
Democracy still view Golden Dawn supporters as a legitimate pool of voters and
they regularly pander to them, adopting much of the xenophobic bile. It should
serve as a warning to those who endlessly stall and dither on coming up with a
solution to a crisis with no end in sight.
So far,
every form of crisis has been dealt in ways that make the European Union itself
appear to be the problem. The Greek financial crisis prompted capital controls (effectively
stopping the free movement of capital in the EU); the refugee crisis brought
closed borders and the suspension of the Schengen treaty. This attitude is now
giving rise to the enemy within, forces that aim to stoke fear and violence,
and put an end to any form of transcontinental solidarity and cooperation.
All these
actions are unfortunately seen as reassertions of sovereignty, in the face of
indifferent elites, by their respective electorates. And as long as we keep
trading democratic process for bureaucratic dithering, the threat will keep
growing. For now, it has created a solid base for itself in Greece .
“We are not
just a protest movement any more,” said the Golden Dawn’s deputy Ilias
Kasidiaris after the results were in. This carries an element of truth. Given
enough time and materials, it will most certainly be looking to build on it.
And the feeling is in no way limited to the Greek shores.
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