OPINION
Europe’s refugee double standard leaves it
vulnerable
The Continent’s response to those fleeing Ukraine
should be the rule — not the exception.
BY BASHAR
DEEB
March 31,
2022 4:05 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/europes-refugee-double-standard-leaves-it-vulnerable/
Bashar Deeb
is an investigative journalist who works with Lighthouse Reports.
If there’s
one positive outcome of the war in Ukraine, it’s that the response to the more
than 3 million refugees who have left the country is setting a benchmark for
what a humanitarian response can and should look like. In countries like
Poland, refugees are being greeted not with tear gas and batons but warm
sausages, blankets, wi-fi passwords, free Uber rides and room in people’s
homes.
But even as
we cheer this response, it’s important not to ignore its darker components.
European politicians, like Greece’s Minister of Migration and Asylum Notis
Mitarakis, have been quick to welcome what they describe as “real refugees”
from Ukraine. But then, one must ask, who are the fakes? Are they the Syrians,
Afghans, Iraqis and others from around the world who have been so often
described as weapons or hybrid threats?
Indeed, bad
actors like Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Belarusian President
Alexander Lukashenko have sought to blackmail the European Union with threats
of allowing migrants to freely cross over from their countries. But what the
response to Ukraine shows is that it’s not migrants who are being weaponized;
it’s the EU’s own xenophobia. After all, no one can blackmail you with unarmed
colored people unless you are scared of them. Only a Europe that is so fearful
of its far right that it ends up adopting its racist agenda can be held hostage
by people looking for a better life, a safe environment in which to raise their
families.
And it’s
not just those fleeing violence who suffer when the EU raises its drawbridges.
It’s the EU’s own interests as well. When Europe waves in Ukrainians while
leaving others floating at sea on engineless life rafts, or executes brutal
pushbacks that leave people robbed and stripped naked at its land borders, it
is directly supplying the Kremlin and its other enemies with propaganda.
News of
double standards travels far, and it inevitably finds an audience. When
Ukrainian students are relocated to other universities while their classmates
from Africa are put in detention centers, this feeds the Russian propaganda
machine with badly needed ammunition in a war that it is otherwise losing.
Discriminating
between refugees based on their ethnicity provides news agencies such as
Sputnik and RT with grist for their disinformation mills. As any observer of
Syria knows, Russia is a state with no sympathy for people of color, but such
examples play into its hands in the information war.
Some
Western commentators have added fuel to that fire, with journalists describing
Ukrainians as civilized Europeans with white skin and blue eyes, unaccustomed
to the horrors of war. Commentary like that adds nothing to the story, but it
does dehumanize the displacement experiences of black and brown people.
When I
heard these comments, as a Syrian, I could not help but feel insulted, but
because of my work, I can see where the problem lies.
Compared to
other conflicts, one reason there has been so much more reporting around
Ukraine is that there are so many reporters there, with full access to both
sides of the country’s border. This stands in stark contrast not just with
other, less-well-covered wars but also with reporters’ ability to tell the
stories of people seeking refuge in Europe. It’s much easier to dehumanize
people when you can’t bear witness to their experiences.
In today’s
EU, there are large swathes — especially around the bloc’s borders — where
reporters cannot go and from which stories cannot be reported. These blind
spots keep some of the darker aspects of the EU’s border management out of
sight.
One of
these so-called exclusion zones was recently erected in Poland, the country
rightfully being feted as a model of compassion today, after Belarus pushed
migrants to cross into the country. Others have been put in place in Greece,
along its border with Turkey and in Croatia, near Bosnia.
In these
locations, reporters had no freedom of movement, or ability to tell the stories
of people risking their lives to enter the EU. Any investigative effort relied
on digital evidence gathering and other remote reporting techniques to tell
credible stories.
This kind
of reporting is my job, and I have sat with colleagues through countless hours
of video livestreams, of footage of shootings and riots pieced together using
digital techniques to reconstruct events. During the Poland-Belarus crisis, for
example, the forbidden zone meant we could only find out who had died by
looking for Facebook posts of mourning relatives. In Croatia, my colleagues had
to disguise themselves as local hunters and lay in the bushes for days to
provide video evidence of extreme violence against migrants.
The stories
of people on the move should not be so hard to tell. We make choices about
whose stories we tell, and these choices reveal our prejudices. Europe should
understand that it is this prejudice — not the migrants — that is the weapon it
has handed its enemies. And the best defense against it is the type of
humanizing, intimate storytelling that has provoked such a welcome wave of
sympathy for Ukrainians.
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