Archive for July, 2017

European Nations at Points of Entry Grow Desperate as Migrant Crisis Rages – LifeZette

Violence at a refugee processing centerin Greece and talk of desperate measures in Italy demonstrated this week thescale of the impact the migrant crisis has wrought on European nations at keypoints of entry.

On Tuesday, police on the Greek island of Lesbos had to quell an uprising by African migrants within the Moria Migration Reception and Identification Centre, reported state broadcaster Athens-Macedonian News Agency (AMNA).

Police officers and two entire platoons of riot police were brought in from Athens to put down the revolt, according to the stunning report.

The migrants burned an acre of olive groves as well as tentsand garbage receptacles, and they destroyed some of thecenter's infrastructure before being subdued. They also damaged five cars, a few of which belonged to police, and injured seven police officers.

Authorities arrested over 30migrantsof African origin for starting the violence; they will be taken to a processing center for deportation, according to the AMNA report.

The incident in Greece came less than a week after Italy, another point of entry for many cross-Mediterranean migrants, threatened to issue 200,000 visas to African migrants and send them north into the rest of Europe.

"Letting migrants travel once they reach Italy would create a real problem for our EU neighbors. But I hope it would force France to confront the migrant problem head-on," said Deputy Foreign Minister Mario Giro said in an interview with U.K. newspaper The Times.

So dire is the situation that at the beginning of July, Italian officials threatened to seize migrant rescue ships operated by NGOs and shut down their ports entirely after 13,500 African migrants arrived on the country's shores in a span of just two days at the end of June.

In response to the massive June influx into Italy, neighboring Austria sent 750 soldiers and four tanks to the Italian border.

"The preparations at our border with Italy are not only justified but necessary. We are prepared, and if necessary we will defend our borders," said Austrian foreign minister Sebastian Kurz at the time, following a complaint from the Italian government.

This month the United Nations Migration Agency figures released earlier this month revealed that nearly 100,000 people crossed the Mediterranean during the first half of 2017 alone.

But despite the ever-worsening situation, the EUhas done very little to solve it. After weeks of desperate lobbying from the Italian government, on Tuesday the EUfinally restricted sales of rubber boats to Libya.

"EU member states will now have a legal basis to prevent the export or supply of these goods to Libya where there are reasonable grounds to believe that they will be used by people smugglers and human traffickers," EU officialssaid in a statement.

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European Nations at Points of Entry Grow Desperate as Migrant Crisis Rages - LifeZette

How Is The European Migration Crisis Affecting Polish Politics? – Social Europe

Aleks Szczerbiak

The migration crisis has rumbled on for the last two years since it developed as a major issue in Polish politics dividing the main parties in the run up to the most recent October 2015 parliamentary election. Along with the three other Central European Visegrad countries the Czech Republic, Hungary and Slovakia the previous government, led by the centrist Civic Platform (PO) grouping, initially opposed the European Commissions proposal for mandatory re-distribution quotas for Middle Eastern and North African migrants located in Greece and Italy.

However, concerned that the country was coming across as one of the least sympathetic to the migrants plight, the Polish government changed its approach following the summer 2015 migration wave. Civic Platforms EU strategy was based on trying to locate Poland within the so-called European mainstream by presenting itself as a reliable and stable member state adopting a positive and constructive approach towards the main EU powers, so it was anxious to appear to be playing a positive role in helping alleviate the crisis. In the event, at the September 2015 EU summit Poland broke with its Central European allies and signed up to a burden-sharing plan which involved the country admitting 6,200 migrants as part of an EU-wide scheme to relocate 160,000 people in total by September 2017.

On the other hand, the right-wing Law and Justice (PiS) party, at the time the main opposition grouping, bitterly opposed the EU plan arguing that Poland should resist pressure to take in migrants. The party warned that there was a serious danger of making the same mistakes as many West European states with large Muslim communities, which could lead to admitting migrants who did not respect Polish laws and customs and tried to impose their way of life on the country. While it always supported Polish EU membership in principle, Law and Justice was a broadly anti-federalist (verging on Eurosceptic) party committed to defending Polish sovereignty, especially in the moral-cultural sphere where it rejected what it saw as a hegemonic EU liberal-left consensus that undermined Polands traditional values and national identity. It viewed the migrant relocation scheme as part of this wider clash of cultures which also threatened the countrys national security.

Not surprisingly, therefore, Law and Justice accused the outgoing Civic Platform government of betraying its Central European allies by taking decisions under EU pressure that undermined Polish culture and security. It argued that the figure of a few thousand migrants was unrealistic because family members would be able to join initial arrivals and that the quota would be used as a precedent to force Poland to take in additional migrants in the future. Following its October 2015 election victory, the new Law and Justice government agreed initially to implement the scheme approved by its predecessor and, as a start, accept 100 migrants. However, in April 2016 it suspended the process arguing that the verification procedures for the vetting of migrants were insufficient to guarantee Polish national security. Since then Poland (along with Hungary) has not accepted any migrants under the EU scheme.

The migration crisis re-surfaced as a major issue last month when, in a sharp escalation of its dispute with Warsaw, the European Commission decided to launch the first step of a so-called EU law infringement procedure case against Poland (together with the Czech Republic and Hungary) for its refusal to implement the relocation plan. Although the first stage of the process simply requires Poland to give a formal response to letters of notice by the middle of July, it also opens the way for prolonged legal wrangling. The case could take up to five years to resolve at the European Court of Justice and only at this point would Poland face any possible financial penalties.

However, the governments critics argue that there could still be short-term political consequences as the Commissions action further weakens the position of a Polish government which, they say, has become increasingly isolated within the EU since Law and Justice took office. The Law and Justice administration has, for example, been involved in an ongoing dispute with the Commission since the latter initiated a rule of law procedure against Poland in January 2016 following the outbreak of a bitter, domestic political and legal row over the membership and competencies of the countrys constitutional tribunal. The governments opponents say this could have a negative impact in the next EU budget round, of which Poland is currently the largest net beneficiary, and the negotiations for which are due to begin in a few months. Law and Justice argues that, as EU budgets require unanimity, Warsaw can prevent any attempts to develop such linkages, although its critics say there are ways that this veto can be by-passed.

Shortly after the Commission launched its legal probe, Law and Justice prime minister Beata Szydo also came under fire for a speech that she made at a ceremony to mark the seventy-seventh anniversary of the first Polish prisoners arriving at the Auschwitz German death camp. Mrs Szydos comment that Auschwitz is a lesson showing that everything needs to be done to protect ones citizens was interpreted by the governments critics as a dog-whistle defence of her governments opposition to the EUs migrant quota plan. Earlier, during a May parliamentary debate Mrs Szydo had denounced the madness of the European elites for failing to stand up to terrorism and argued that the recent wave of Islamist attacks in Western Europe vindicated Warsaws refusal to comply with the relocation scheme. However, accusing her critics of cynicism, Law and Justice denied that Mrs Szydos remarks at the Auschwitz commemorations in any way referred to the issue of migration.

The Law and Justice government has responded by vowing to fight the Commissions infringement action all the way. It argued that the EU scheme was pushed through using a qualified majority vote on very weak legal foundations; Hungary and Slovakia have challenged it in a separate action which the Court of Justice is expected to give an initial ruling on within the next month. Law and Justice denounced the Commissions move as an instance of double standards, pointing out that, although Poland and Hungary were the only countries not to have taken in any migrants under the programme, no other EU member state had so far fulfilled its commitments. The party argued that Warsaw had shown solidarity by helping to protect the EUs external borders and allocating funds to aid victims of conflicts locally; although less than other countries, according to its critics. It also pointed out that Poland had taken in over one million migrants from war-torn Ukraine, thus easing migrant pressures on other EU countries; although the governments critics said that these were virtually all economic migrants rather than refugees.

In fact, most Poles are strongly opposed to the EU migrant quota scheme. A May 2017 survey conducted by the CBOS polling agency, for example, found that 70% were against accepting refugees from Muslim countries and only 25% in favour; with 65% still opposed even if Poland was threatened with financial penalties. Poland is an overwhelmingly Catholic country with very few ethnic minorities which has had little experience of the modern migrations that have transformed Western Europe. Poles are keen to avoid the kind of cultural and security problems that many of them feel West European countries have experienced through admitting large numbers of Muslim migrants who are seen as difficult to assimilate and embedding violent extremists within their communities. Not surprisingly, therefore, Law and Justice has made the European migration crisis one of the most important issues legitimising its government. Indeed, last month ruling party-backed President Andrzej Duda proposed holding a national referendum on the issue, possibly timed to coincide with the next autumn 2019 parliamentary election.

This is important because a key motivation for Poles voting overwhelmingly to join the EU in the countrys 2003 accession referendum, especially among the older generations, was the idea that the European integration process represented a symbolic re-uniting of Poland with a Western international community of shared values that they had always considered themselves to be part of culturally and spiritually. This notion of EU membership as a natural and obvious historical and civilisational choice has, however, come under strain in recent years due to an increasing sense of cultural distinctiveness that many Poles feel towards Western Europe. This was particularly evident in the sphere of moralcultural values where Polish attachment to traditional morality and national identity stands in stark contrast to the socially liberal, cosmopolitan consensus that predominates among West European cultural and political elites.The contrasting reaction of Poles (and other Central Europeans) to the European migration crisis highlighted this and raised questions about whether they actually wanted to make the same civilizational choices as West Europeans.

At the same time, the migration crisis has left Polands liberal-centrist opposition uncertain how to respond. Civic Platform, which is now the main opposition party, has undertaken dramatic political contortions on the issue trying to strike a balance between competing domestic and international pressures. On the one hand, party leader Grzegorz Schetyna was concerned to be seen to be responding to popular anxieties, so in May told a reporter that Civic Platform was against Poland accepting any refugees. Then, as it came under pressure from the strongly pro-EU liberal-left media and cultural establishment, Civic Platform rowed back saying that it was only against illegal migrants. Moreover, accusing Law and Justice of being anti-European and promoting xenophobia, Mr Schetynas party said that it favoured accepting a few dozen refugees as long as they were mostly women and children who were genuinely escaping armed conflict and had been vetted on security grounds.

However, one problem for Law and Justice is that a number of senior clergymen from Polands influential Catholic Church appear to disagree with the governments approach towards the migration issue. This is awkward for the ruling party which presents itself as a staunch defender of Christian values and enjoys a great deal of sympathy among Catholic bishops, clergymen and Church-linked civil society organisations. One suggestion made by the Church Episcopate has been to establish so-called humanitarian corridors for the medical treatment in Poland of a few hundred carefully selected refugees. However, although the government appears to be broadly sympathetic to this idea, it has also expressed concerns about the practicalities, specifically whether effective security controls can be implemented to vet these refugees, and has argued that it is easier to open hospitals on-site in refugee camps where more people could be treated.

Polands Law and Justice government has, therefore, taken an increasingly hard line against the EUs migrant re-distribution programme and appears ready for a lengthy legal battle with the Commission over the issue. The ruling party considers the migration crisis to be of huge political and symbolic importance going well beyond the numbers involved and raising vital concerns about national sovereignty, identity and security. Knowing that the vast majority of Poles are strongly opposed to the EU scheme, and that the liberal-centrist opposition is uncertain how to respond, Law and Justice will continue to use the issue to mobilise public support and thereby, it hopes, smooth the ruling partys path to re-election in 2019.

First published on LSEEuropp blog

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How Is The European Migration Crisis Affecting Polish Politics? - Social Europe

Jeh Johnson: Trump ‘scared off’ illegal immigrants with ‘rhetoric’ – Washington Examiner

Former Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson on Thursday credited President Trump with sharply reducing illegal immigration through the southwestern U.S. border just through the power of his tough talk against illegal migrants.

"Illegal migration on our southern border has gone down since this president has been in office, basically because, through his rhetoric, he scared off a lot of women and children in Central America who'd rather stay in their desperate circumstances, or just migrate to Mexico and stop there," Johnson said.

While working for former President Barack Obama, Johnson and other officials worked for years to reduce illegal immigration after the 2014 border crisis that saw thousands of unaccompanied children try to enter the country. Illegal immigration fell in 2015 after the Obama administration worked closely with Central American countries in an effort to get their help in reducing the flow of people, but it rose again in 2016, Obama's last full year in office.

Under Trump, the flow of illegal immigrants fell immediately, which most chalked up to Trump's tougher policy position on immigration, which included new direction to DHS that said agents need to look to deport anyone who enters illegally.

Johnson said under Obama, officials looked to deport only the most dangerous immigrants. But Johnson said he believes Obama's policy was "humane," and said he hoped the Trump administration would approach the problem the same way.

"I believe that we have to enforce our immigration laws consistent with our values and consistent with humanity," he said.

"At the end of the day, when you enforce immigration laws, you have to be able to look at yourself in the mirror, look your own family in the eye, recall the women and children who are desperate, to say, 'I did my best to enforce the law consistent with our priorities and consistent with our values,'" he said. "I hope that the current administration does not lose sight of that."

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Jeh Johnson: Trump 'scared off' illegal immigrants with 'rhetoric' - Washington Examiner

NPR Boosts Latina Teens’ Pro-Illegal Immigration Protest in Texas – NewsBusters (press release) (blog)


NewsBusters (press release) (blog)
NPR Boosts Latina Teens' Pro-Illegal Immigration Protest in Texas
NewsBusters (press release) (blog)
Romo continued by transitioning to the pro-illegal immigration protest: "But what happened on the steps of the Texas Capitol earlier today was something more than a celebratory rite of passage for fifteen teens in bedazzled and sherbet-colored princess ...

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NPR Boosts Latina Teens' Pro-Illegal Immigration Protest in Texas - NewsBusters (press release) (blog)

Illegal Aliens Practicing Law | Center for Immigration Studies – Immigration Blog (blog)

Sapna Rampersaud has written an article for National Review Online's The Corner titled "Illegal Immigrants Can Now Defend the Laws They Break", detailing how the states of New York and California have moved to permit illegal aliens to practice law. This is the kind of thing one might expect to see as a headline on the satirical website The Onion, but, sadly, it's true.

Actually, they've been headed that way for some time. John Feere, previously a legal policy analyst here at the Center, wrote about California's efforts clear back in January of 2014, and commented on the back flips achieved by the California Supreme Court in deciding that permitting illegal aliens to practice law was copacetic:

[N]ew lawyers must take an oath to "support the Constitution of the United States" and must also pass an ethics exam. The California Supreme Court explained in its holding that it "assumes" that a licensed illegal alien "will make all necessary inquiries and take appropriate steps to comply with applicable legal restrictions." The Committee of Bar Examiners explained that "there is no reason to believe" Garcia [the illegal alien applicant seeking approval to practice law] "cannot take the oath and faithfully uphold his duties as an attorney."

It is unclear why the court and the bar examiners would assume such things. Illegal immigrants regularly fail to comply with a whole host of laws. Within Garcia's own circle of family and friends one can identify a variety of potential legal violations, if media reports are accurate.

Garcia admits to working a number of jobs prior to law school, and depending on how he obtained the work, he may be liable under False Personation of a U.S. Citizen (18 U.S.C. 911), Fraud and False Statements (18 U.S.C. 1001), and Social Security Fraud (42 U.S.C. 408), just to name a few examples. We estimate that nearly half of working illegal aliens have filled out I-9 Forms and are likely in violation of these statutes. If the Obama administration decided to enforce federal immigration law, Garcia could potentially face many years in jail and significant fines. It is important to remember that these crimes often create real victims.

In addition to Feere's very cogent observations, I'm also wondering how, exactly, an attorney who is illegally in the United States can be deemed an "officer of the court". Aren't the two things, when put together, inherently oxymoronic? An alien who has no lawful status must inevitably engage in deception and subterfuge in order to remain in the United States without being apprehended. That doesn't sound like the kind of upright behavior required of officers of the court.

Moving back to the article on The Corner, Rampersaud has her own version of the "Mr. Garcia" described above:

One such lawyer is Lizbeth Mateo. Born in Mexico, Mateo and her family illegally crossed the border when she was 14 and have been residing in California ever since. In 2013, Mateo returned to Mexico knowing she had no legal visa to come back and, as part of what became known as the Bring Them Home Campaign, returned to the U.S. border with eight other children and demanded unauthorized reentry into the U.S. which she was granted. Having graduated from Santa Clara University School of Law and working jobs that required the use of a stolen Social Security number, Mateo now spends her time as an immigration lawyer "preparing legal strategies to help undocumented immigrants stay in the country" all while flaunting her own undocumented status.

As Rampersaud goes on to remark:

This example illustrates the extent to which certain states both accept and encourage illegal immigration. Mateo is praised for being a "leader" and a "bold advocate" but should instead be described as what she is: a lawbreaker. Mateo has taken an oath of office to uphold the Constitution, but breaks federal law every day. Square that circle.

She's right. You can't square that circle. But one thing I can say for certain is this: It takes more than just a state license to practice immigration law because, of course, immigration laws are federal in nature. Attorneys who wish to represent aliens before the Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR), the Justice Department division that handles the immigration courts and Board of Immigration Appeals, must register with and be approved by the EOIR director.

While I don't see any particular prohibition of illegal aliens in the provision of the federal regulations governing such registration, at 8 CFR Section 1292.1, it would defy logic and make a mockery of the immigration courts for the director to approve such an application for registration.

There is also the issue of fairness to the illegal alien being represented by another illegal alien: What happens if his lawyer is arrested before his hearing is completed, thus leaving him high and dry? For EOIR to permit such a situation to occur would be tantamount to malfeasance. On the other hand, it defies logic that certain states have already taken that step-too-far, and that, too, seems to me to smack of malfeasance.

Maybe it's time that Attorney General Jeff Sessions steps in to require his new EOIR director to amend the regulation and make the prohibition against illegal alien lawyers representing other illegal aliens in the immigration courts crystal clear.

Meantime, if an illegal alien attorney shows up in court to represent an alien respondent in removal proceedings, perhaps the presiding immigration judge will have the good sense to summon immigration agents to arrest the attorney and place him or her into proceedings as well. After all, they're fair game. Being a lawyer shouldn't intrinsically place anyone above the law, should it?

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Illegal Aliens Practicing Law | Center for Immigration Studies - Immigration Blog (blog)