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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!gumby!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: EUROPE: Closing the doors to asylum seekers
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.011052.26500@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
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- Organization: PACH
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 01:10:52 GMT
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-
- /** headlines: 470.0 **/
- ** Topic: EUROPE: Closing the doors to asylum **
- ** Written 11:57 am Nov 9, 1992 by newsdesk in cdp:headlines **
- /* Written 12:15 am Nov 8, 1992 by newsdesk in igc:ips.englibrary */
- /* ---------- "EUROPE: Closing the doors to asylum" ---------- */
- Copyright Inter Press Service 1992, all rights reserved. Permission to re-
- print within 7 days of original date only with permission from 'newsdesk'.
-
- Title: EUROPE: Closing the doors to asylum seekers
-
- an inter press service feature
-
- by lucy johnson and ramesh jaura
-
- bonn, nov 06 (ips) -- according to the united nations commission
- for refugees, 85 percent of the world's estimated 18 million
- refugees seek shelter in a neighbouring country.
-
- most of these refugees face war, political repression and
- starvation far away from western europe. but the civil war in
- former yugoslavia and the collapse of the communist regimes of
- central and eastern europe has put the question of asylum firmly
- on the western european politicial agenda.
-
- leaked reports at the end of october revealed that the european
- community was planning to tighten up the laws covering asylum by
- setting up an ec-wide definition of ''manifestly unfounded
- applications'' in order to harmonise european border controls.
-
- ''as signatories to the united nations convention, europe has to
- grant sanctuary to those fleeing persecution but -- as europe gets
- more and more concerned with numbers -- it is trying to avoid its
- glorious declarations,'' said anne owers, director of the human
- rights group justice.
-
- only five percent of third world refugees are able to claim
- asylum in europe -- if they can fly or sail directly to a european
- country. but under the ec draft, these refugees will be generally
- illegible for asylum unless they can prove they can find no
- redress for human rights violations in their own courts.
-
- human rights groups argue that restrictions on all immigrants
- have been tightened throughout europe over the past decade.
- ''there is a real danger that european harmonisation will be used
- to downgrade immigration proposals and every country will be able
- to blame legislation on another country,'' said owers.
-
- but as the pan-european discussions continue behind closed doors,
- the ec member states and their allies are already making moves to
- tighten individual legislation.
-
- in germany, the opposition social democratic party (spd) is
- wrestling with its concience over plans to ammend the country's
- existing asylum laws.
-
- german law has no provision for legal immigration and the asylum
- law -- guaranteeing asylum to those fleeing political persecution --
- is the only channel for people to immigrate.
-
- at last month's christian democratic union congress chancellor
- helmut kohl spoke of ''a state of national emergency'' which had
- been caused by the growing number of asylum seekers.(more/ips)
-
- europe: closing the doors to asylum seekers(2-e)
-
- europe: closing the door (2)
-
- the ministry estimates 500,000 foreigners will have filled in
- applications to stay in germany by the end of the year -- figures
- which have fueled a nationwide wave of rascist violence, with more
- than 1,400 attacks on foreigners reported this year so far.
-
- germany is not alone in its plans to change asylum laws. in
- britain parliament is currently discussing a controversial asylum
- bill which refugee groups say will send many genuine asylum
- seekers back to their country of origin.
-
- the government argues the new bill will streamline the system and
- clear the backlog of 65,000 asylum seekers who are currently being
- looked after by local authorities without central government help.
-
- refugee groups say the new bill, which requires those claiming
- refugee status to make a prompt and full disclosure of all the
- facts of the alleged persecution, does not give refugees enough
- time to appeal (two days) if they are refused admission.
-
- in the netherlands, where the issue of ''illegal immigration'' is
- currently dominating the political agenda, there are no new moves
- to restrict the rights of asylum seekers, although there are
- claims the current system is being applied unfairly.
-
- so far this year 15,225 people have claimed political asylum in
- the netherlands, just over 2,000 less than in the first 10 months
- of 1991.
-
- however a report by refugee groups in september accused the
- immigration police at amsterdam's schipol airport -- the first
- port of call for many refugees -- of sending people back to their
- country of origin without making proper attempts to find out if
- they were genuine refugees.
-
- outside the ec, the swedish government is also under heavy
- pressure to make a dramatic cut in the intake of asylum seekers.
-
- state immigration board and employment authority chiefs this week
- urged the government to grant residence permits to refugees only
- if they were covered by the geneva convention.
-
- they said sweden's current soaring unemployment rate and
- deepening debts made it impossible to accept the continuing influx
- of refugess, particularly those from the former yugoslavia.
-
- this would cut the number of asylum seekers allowed to stay by
- more than three quarters, dealing a certain death blow to sweden's
- liberal image as a haven for refugees.
-
- peter nobel, general secretary of the swedish red cross, has
- bitterly attacked the proposals. ''it would mean sending people
- back to famine, war and terror,'' he said. ''to talk of limiting
- the possibility of asylum in sweden in the middle of a burning war
- in europe is extraordinary.'' (ends/pr/rj/lj/gm/rp/92)
-
- ** End of text from cdp:headlines **
-
-