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<text id=93TT2029>
<title>
July 19, 1993: Europe Slams The Door
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
July 19, 1993 Whose Little Girl Is This?
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
IMMIGRATION, Page 38
Europe Slams The Door
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Overwhelmed by migrants and too broke to support them, the nations
of Western Europe are pushing the newcomers back home
</p>
<p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--With reporting by Bruce Crumley/Paris, Leonora Dodsworth/Rome and
Nomi Morris/Berlin, with other bureaus
</p>
<p> The grassy square in the middle of Slubice, a Polish town on
the German border, is known locally as "the Bermuda Triangle."
Most mornings, but particularly on Tuesdays and Thursdays when
traffic across the frontier is heavy and the guards are busy,
crowds of hopeful immigrants from Eastern Europe creep out of
the woods and doorways where they have spent the night. Men,
women and children straggle into the square to rendezvous with
their "tour guides," the smugglers who will help them disappear
into the West--for fees ranging from $50 to $200.
</p>
<p> In another village 20 miles away, Polish entrepreneurs are carrying
on a lively trade in rubber dinghies that will ferry migrants
across the Oder River to Germany. Farther south, the activities
of similar "travel agencies" directed or supervised by criminal
gangs crowd the towns along the Czech-German border. Pilsen
is so jammed with migrants from Bosnia and Croatia that its
native Czech residents call it "Yugoslav City." That is partly
a misnomer because while many of those in transit are from war-ravaged
segments of the former Yugoslavia, other thousands are Bulgarians,
Romanians, Turks and Russians. All of them, though, have something
in common: they are desperate to get into Germany and to the
other prosperous European Community countries they see as the
promised land, and they are increasingly less likely to succeed.
</p>
<p> West European governments are now more determined than ever
to keep the foreigners out, and they are beginning to use regulations,
deportations and gunboats to do so. The poor but eager migrants
have become the main targets of murderous racial attacks on
foreigners and xenophobic political movements in a dozen countries.
With reception facilities overburdened, unemployment rates climbing
to a national average of 10% and voters shouting in protest,
Western governments are calling a halt. From Sweden in the north
to Greece in the south, the Continent echoes with the sound
of doors slamming shut.
</p>
<p> Their fears are not unfounded. The U.N. Population Fund last
week released its annual report, which confirms that illegal
migration is rapidly increasing. "From 1980 to 1992 alone,"
the report estimates, "15 million people entered the West European
countries as migrants." Other experts suggest that 5 million
to 10 million people are planning to leave the states of Eastern
Europe and the former Soviet Union. Half of them hope to head
for Germany.
</p>
<p> The U.N. report carefully observes that these migrants are not
refugees, though there is considerable confusion on this issue.
The word refugee is used regular--but mistakenly--to describe
anyone driven to leave home for any reason. But most national
governments and international organizations recognize as refugees
only those who live in "fear of political persecution if they
return" to their homeland. As a result, many migrants who wish
only to work and improve their life claim falsely to be refugees
and ask for political asylum. Last year 700,000 of them applied
to West European countries for asylum--438,000 in Germany
alone. "I risked my life to get here," says Anton Lupu, a 33-year-old
Romanian painter who made it across the border from Poland and
has applied for asylum in Eisenhuttenstadt, Germany. "We didn't
come to steal, only to work respectably. The difference between
Germany and Romania is the difference between heaven and earth."
</p>
<p> Though many will not say so in public, Europeans generally agree
with French Interior Minister Charles Pasqua, who declares that
France "no longer wants to be a country of immigration" but
wants to move "toward zero immigration." France, a country of
57 million, is host to almost 4 million legal immigrants and
as many as 500,000 illegals. The new conservative government
in Paris has moved quickly in Pasqua's desired direction. Last
month it increased the requirements foreigners must meet to
acquire French citizenship. A second step, restricting the rights
of legal immigrants, was approved in the first of two readings
by both houses of parliament. A third measure gives police the
power to stop foreigners and check for proper documentation.
How would the police know for sure someone is a foreigner and
thus susceptible to inspection? Suggested the bill's author,
Alain Marsaud of the neo-Gaullist Rassemblement pour la Republique:
"If you are reading the New York Times in the street, you may
be presumed to be a foreigner." With classic logic, Pasqua argued,
"How do you recognize a foreigner? By the fact that he is not
French. How do you know he is not French? I answer: Ask him
for his papers."
</p>
<p> Germany, having taken in 887,000 asylum seekers during the past
three years and 224,000 in the first six months of this year,
has resolutely moved to stanch the flow. Without declaring it
as such, Bonn has adopted a zero-immigration policy. The Bundestag
has amended the Basic Law, Germany's constitution, to restrict
the almost universal right of asylum it formerly--and proudly--provided. Effective July 1, economic migrants, who have made
up about 95% of the more than 1 million who have arrived since
1990, are no longer to be treated as refugees. Border patrols
have been beefed up, and the new law provides for the immediate
expulsion of illegal migrants.
</p>
<p> Under an agreement between Germany and Romania, deportation
flights to Bucharest take off almost every day from Berlin.
In the first five months of this year, 21,800 Romanians were
returned. Germany has signed similar agreements with Bulgaria
and Poland and most recently with the Czech Republic, which
has taken back 18,000 people who entered Germany illegally in
the first quarter of 1993. The treaties provide for cash payments
from Germany to help countries absorb the returnees. Poland,
for example, is to receive $71 million by the end of next year.
</p>
<p> Germany's return policy follows guidelines agreed upon by E.C.
immigration ministers last December, when the principle of "first
safe country" was approved. That means that a bona fide refugee,
fearing for his life, must seek asylum in the first safe country
he reaches. If he does not and instead enters an E.C. state,
he could be pushed back to the last safe country he was in before
arriving inside the E.C.
</p>
<p> The list of "safe countries" conveniently includes such eastern
states as Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Romania, Bulgaria
and Hungary. Thus not only can Germany send unwanted arrivals
back to those states, but the "safe" countries will now be much
more careful about letting migrants cross their borders lest
they be stuck with them. Hungary, for example, turned back 1.3
million people from farther east over the past year because
Austria and Germany will not accept them. Austria, in turn,
has tried to stop Bosnians from using it as a route into Germany.
Measures adopted in Vienna this year make it much harder for
anyone entering Austria to live and work there, and this month
new regulations go into effect that strictly monitor the length
of time even legal workers may remain.
</p>
<p> Italian officials insist they do not intend to go the way of
France and Germany, but many of them are worried because the
country is host to about 800,000 legal and at least 300,000
illegal foreign workers, even as unemployment heads toward 10%.
Says Social Affairs Minister Fernanda Contri: "We need to work
on the idea of a certain number of foreigners allowed in, a
fixed number each year." To guard against a return of the Albanian
boat people who were sent back two years ago, the Italian navy
is patrolling the Adriatic. The powerful opposition group, the
Northern League, calls unabashedly for zero immigration. "There
should be an end to all this false pity," says Gianfranco Salmoiraghi,
a League official in Milan. "Immigrants are caught in a form
of slavery, exploited by unscrupulous employers to accept lower
wages, thus depriving Italians of work."
</p>
<p> The gates of Fortress Europe moved closer to the locked position
last week when Sweden and Denmark announced new immigration
restrictions that require Bosnians, as well as Croats, Macedonians
and Serbs, to arrive with a valid visa. At the same time, Sweden
has told 40,000 Bosnians now in residence that they can stay,
but Denmark says its 14,000 Bosnians will be sent home when
the civil war in the former Yugoslavia ends. The Danes should
not hold their breath.
</p>
<p> Greece, meanwhile, is rounding up and repatriating thousands
of Albanians. Explains Foreign Minister Michalis Papakonstantinou:
"Because of our tolerance, we have been swamped by Albanians."
Officials in Athens estimate that the country now holds 200,000
illegal Albanians among 500,000 workers who have slipped in
from other countries.
</p>
<p> Britain's immigration laws have been tough for decades, but
a bill now before Parliament would tighten the requirements
for political asylum and take away the right of tourists and
students to appeal when their request for an extension is refused.
Under pressure from the E.C., Spain requires visas for arrivals
from Morocco. The Spanish have persuaded Morocco to take back
its own citizens as well as others who illegally enter their
country across the mouth of the Mediterranean.
</p>
<p> Residents of the poor countries and the former communist states
are willing to do almost anything to reach the lands of opportunity
in the West. Citizens of former Warsaw Pact countries thought
that political freedom and the collapse of barbed-wire borders
throughout Eastern Europe would bring them the opportunity to
move around the world unhindered. Their expectation collides
with the fact that many West Europeans simply do not want to
encourage immigration into their ethnically homogenation-states.
The only foreigners who have a right to live in Germany today
are those who have been granted refugee status or those who
hold valid work permits, most of whom come in on "guest worker"
programs. Germany has no immigration program in the sense that
the U.S. or Canada or Australia has, with rules about moving
in and becoming a citizen. Germany has only recently begun to
consider ways to make it easier for thousands of ethnic Turks
born and educated in the country to become German citizens.
</p>
<p> Hopeful East Europeans may not be aware of that. On the grass
of Slubice's Bermuda Triangle stands a group of well-dressed
young Romanians--none really the victim of political persecution,
discussing the newly erected barriers they face. "How exactly,"
one asks, "can you immigrate legally into Germany?" The frustrating
answer: "As of now, you can't."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>