Archive for the ‘Migrant Crisis’ Category

Ireland’s ‘migrant crisis’ is one of equality, not integration – Irish Times

Tue, Feb 28, 2017, 00:00 Updated: about 9 hours ago

A family participates in a Travellers rights protest in Dublin in December 2009. Assimilation policies pursued over the past 50 years are responsible for Travellers terrible health and social status. Photograph: Alan Betson

Whatever is happening elsewhere in Europe, Ireland does not have a migrant crisis. The 2011 census shows that 12 per cent of people living here are of migrant origin. Three-quarters of these are of other white background, 2 per cent are of Asian origin, and just over 1 per cent are African or other black background.

Full integration into society is the best way to ensure the health and wellbeing of these new Irish. Integration is defined in current Irish policy (Integration: A Two Way Process, 1999) as the ability to participate to the extent that a person needs and wishes in all of the major components of society without having to relinquish his or her own cultural identity.

Integration involves changes in Irish society and institutions so that the benefits of diversity are realised. Many countries have had limited success in integrating migrants because they have pursued policies of assimilation (migrants expected to behave like natives) or ghettoisation (migrants kept together in the same locality), with disastrous results. These policies generate deep resentments in migrant populations and huge health and social problems.

A new Migrant Integration Strategy: A Blueprint for the Future was recently launched by the Department of Justice. The strategy includes actions on, among other things, accessing citizenship and strengthening the law in relation to racist behaviour and hate crimes. It also puts the responsibility on local authorities to promptly remove racist graffiti.

The strategy envisages migrants and their children benefitting fully from the education system and participating fully in politics and public life as provided for by law. Integration policies will be mainstreamed in the work of all Government departments, local authorities and other public sector organisations and agencies, such as the HSE.

Although integration is the policy stated in the strategy, some of the language sounds as if assimilation is the real goal. The vision, for example, is that Migrants interact with the host community and participate with them in cultural, sporting and other activities while preserving their own traditions as they wish. There is no mention of native Irish participating on an equal level with migrant cultural activities.

As well, the phrase host community is an unfortunate choice of words, conjuring up images of, at best, natives magnanimously tolerating migrant cultures, and, at worst, parasites feeding on their hosts. It also implies assimilation as migrants will be introduced to Irish society to enable them to adapt to it.

The strategy has a fund of 500,000 for 2017. Grants of up to 5,000 will be provided to community groups for projects to promote integration, which is like giving grants to womens refuges to prevent violence against women when what is needed is a crackdown on perpetrators.

The Government and State agencies must not make the same mistakes with migrants that they made with Irish Travellers. Assimilation policies pursued over the past 50 years are responsible for Travellers terrible health and social status. The most recent report from the ESRI shows that Travellers experience exceptionally strong levels of prejudice.

Only 8 per cent complete second level education. Out of a total health and social care workforce of more than 100,000, only 88 are Travellers. Their health deteriorates very rapidly after the age of 35 because of cumulative disadvantage. The Childrens Rights Alliance Report Card 2017 gave a woeful E? grade, the lowest possible, to Traveller and Roma children. Traveller children leave school an average of five years earlier than non-Travellers. Traveller babies are 3.6 times more likely to die in infancy than non-Traveller babies.

Being Travellers, migrants or Roma is not the problem. First Nations people in Canada, the US and Australia also have poor health because of the assimilation and ghettoisation policies pursued by mainly white immigrants. Being treated unequally and unfairly is the root cause of the health and social problems that develop in these communities.

Without equality, integration will not happen. Unfortunately, the Government strategy says almost nothing on treating migrants equally and fairly. It does recognise the importance of equality of opportunity but does not say how this might come about. Interpreting facilities will be provided so that services can be accessed on an equal basis and thats it.

The strategy must be closely monitored over the next few years to ensure integration is happening. If not, a new strategy must be developed with an emphasis on equality or Ireland will end up with a migrant crisis.

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Ireland's 'migrant crisis' is one of equality, not integration - Irish Times

MIGRANT CRISIS: Hungary risks EU’s wrath as it starts building ANOTHER border fence – Express.co.uk

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Prime Minister Viktor Orban's right-wing government considers migration to be one of the largest threats to the status quo in the EU.

But officials in Brussels and some other EU centres are distressed by some of his go-it-alone policies.

A European Parliament committee, for example, was due on Monday to discuss the state of fundamental rights in Hungary.

Mr Orban was also a rare EU leader to endorse US President Donald Trump, who is seeking to built a wall along the US-Mexico border.

The European Commission should not stand by while Hungary makes a mockery of the right to seek asylum.

Benjamin Ward

A barbed-wire fence is already in place, erected in 2015, when Hungary was part of the main overland route for hundreds of thousands of migrants and refugees, many fleeing the war in Syria.

It effectively blocked the route to Germany, where many were heading, but Hungary has said a second fence would make the barrier more effective and hold back migrants while processing their asylum requests.

Although the pressure on the border is far from the peak of the 2015 crisis, border patrols still prevent hundreds of illegal border crossings per day and escort back dozens of migrants who manage to break through, the government says.

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Poles for the second fence are already standing near the border station Kelebia, and construction materials have also been shipped to the border elsewhere.

Mr Orban's chief of staff, Janos Lazar, last week said the government had earmarked 110million for the fence and containment camps to hold migrants.

He said the second border fence, which will extend only to the Hungary-Serbia border for now, would be built as soon as the weather permitted and would be standing by the end of spring.

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A Migrant is helped to wash tear gas from his eyes after clashes with Hungarian police at the Horgos border

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Rights groups Hungarian Helsinki Committee and Human Rights Watch on Friday sent a complaint to EU Migration Commissioner Dimitris Avramopoulos about current practices and proposed legal changes.

Human Rights Watch deputy director Benjamin Ward said: The European Commission should not stand by while Hungary makes a mockery of the right to seek asylum.

"Using transit zones as detention centres and forcing asylum seekers who are already inside Hungary back to the Serbian side of the razor-wire fence is abusive, pointless, and cruel."

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The Hungarian government's practice of allowing only 10 people in per day also creates a dangerous bottleneck along the Hungary-Serbia border in sometimes inhumane conditions, the rights groups added.

The government rejected that in an emailed reply to Reuters.

A statement said: Human Rights Watch... again tries to denigrate those serving at the border.

"Hungary was among the first to honour the EU's rules, protects the Schengen borders, stops, registers and separates refugees from economic migrants."

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MIGRANT CRISIS: Hungary risks EU's wrath as it starts building ANOTHER border fence - Express.co.uk

Stephen Rea: NI actor says people should get angry about migrant crisis – BBC News

Stephen Rea: NI actor says people should get angry about migrant crisis
BBC News
Leading Northern Ireland actor Stephen Rea has said people should "get angry" about the migrant crisis in Europe. He was speaking during a visit to the city earlier in the week to launch the File festival programme. Bafta-winning actor Rea, is also an ...

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Stephen Rea: NI actor says people should get angry about migrant crisis - BBC News

EU satisfied with Serbia’s handling of migrant crisis – European Western Balkans (press release)


European Western Balkans (press release)
EU satisfied with Serbia's handling of migrant crisis
European Western Balkans (press release)
TANJUG_mali BELGRADE - At Thursday's press conference following a handover of 82 vehicles donated to the Serbian Interior Ministry, Christian Danielsson, the European Commission's Director General for Neighbourhood Policy and Enlargement ...
EU "impressed with Serbia's handling of migrant crisis" - Politics - on ...B92

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EU satisfied with Serbia's handling of migrant crisis - European Western Balkans (press release)

Greek Migrant Crisis Film Nominated For Oscar – Emerging Markets … – Barron’s (blog)

By Dimitra DeFotis

A documentary short made about the migrant and refugee crisis in Greece received an Academy Awardnomination.

The 2017 Oscars will be doled out Sunday night. The film, 4.1 Miles, captures drama on one day in October 2015as the Greek coast guard rescues refugees and migrants in the choppy waters between Turkey and the Greek island of Lesbos, which is 4.1 miles away. It was directed by Daphne Matziaraki, herself an immigrant from Greece who completed the doc as her thesis at the University of California Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism. It was published by The New York Times Op-Doc video portal.

In the film, a Lesbos island coast guard leader says of the refugees:

I cant reassure them. Its impossible. When I look into their eyes, I see their memories of war. and we see these families losing each other in the Greek sea. In the sea of a peaceful country. Because of the way they have to cross

Financially troubledGreece has balked at housing and feeding let alone employing the flood of people moving into Europe. As for the Greek economy, little progress was made this week on its bailout review with Eurozone creditors. The Global X MSCI Greece exchange-traded fund (GREK) was fractionally higher on the week. See our post, Greece: ETF Rises, But Is Austerity Over?Also see our Penta Daily post, Refugee Crisis: How to Help.

Deadline Hollywood interviewed the directoron refugees, Greece and more.

For investors, see our free post onGreece, Turkey, Refugees, Crisis & NATO from James Stavridis, a retired U.S. Navy admiral and dean of the Fletcher School of law and diplomacy at Tufts University. Also see ourposts on the Greek economy, and on Turkey for investors.

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Greek Migrant Crisis Film Nominated For Oscar - Emerging Markets ... - Barron's (blog)