Europe's Refugee Influx Crisis

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Re: Europe's Refugee Influx Crisis

Postby American Dream » Wed Nov 04, 2015 2:52 pm

Robert Paxton: What is Fascism?

From Robert Paxton's The Anatomy of Fascism

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I believe that the ideas that underlie fascist actions are best deduced from those actions, for some of them remain unstated and implicit in fascist public language. Many of them belong more to the realm of visceral feeling than to the realm of reasoned propositions. In chapter 2 I called them “mobilizing passions”:

a sense of overwhelming crisis beyond the reach of any traditional solutions

the primacy of the group toward which one has duties superior to every right, whether individual or universal, and the subordination of the individual to it

the belief that one’s group is a victim, a sentiment that justifies any action, without legal or moral limits, against its enemies, both internal and external

dread of the group’s decline under the corrosive effects of individualistic liberalism, class conflict, and alien influences

the need for closer integration of a purer community, by consent if possible, or by exclusionary violence if necessary

the need for authority by natural chiefs (always male), culminating in a national chieftain who alone is capable of incarnating the group’s historical destiny

the superiority of the leader’s instincts over abstract and universal reason

the beauty of violence and the efficacy of will, when they are devoted to the group’s success

the right of the chosen people to dominate others without restraint from any kind of human or divine law, right being decided by the sole criterion of the group’s prowess within a Darwinian struggle.



Fascism according to this definition, as well as behavior in keeping with these feelings, is still visible today. Fascism exists at the level of Stage One ('the creation of movements') within all democratic countries – not excluding the United States. “Giving up free institutions”, especially the freedoms of unpopular groups, is currently attractive to citizens of Western democracies, including some Americans. We know from tracing its path that fascism does not require a spectacular 'march' on some capital to take root; seemingly anodyne decisions to tolerate lawless treatment of national 'enemies' is enough. Something very close to classical fascism has reached Stage Two ('the rooting of fascist movements in the political system') in a few deeply troubled societies. Its further progress is not inevitable, however. Further fascist advances toward power depend in part upon the severity of a crisis, but also very largely upon human choices, especially the choices of those holding economic, social and political power. Determining the appropriate responses to fascist gains is not easy, since its cycle is not likely to repeat itself blindly. We stand a much better chance of responding wisely, however, if we understand how fascism succeeded in the past."

~ Robert Paxton, The Anatomy of Fascism, Allen Lane (2004), pp.218–220
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Re: Europe's Refugee Influx Crisis

Postby coffin_dodger » Thu Nov 05, 2015 3:55 am

Double Bind.
"The essential hypothesis of the double bind theory is that the ‘victim’—the person who becomes psychotically unwell—finds him or herself in a communicational matrix, in which messages contradict each other, the contradiction is not able to be communicated on and the unwell person is not able to leave the field of interaction"


It's no wonder this concept was buried by modern psychology - it's used on a daily basis to enormous effect.

You must love and embrace all foreign peoples that come to our home seeking shelter

You must hate the same foreign peoples that we are bombing abroad that hate us
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Re: Europe's Refugee Influx Crisis

Postby General Patton » Thu Nov 05, 2015 10:17 am

https://translate.google.com/translate? ... edit-text=
Avpixlat reported yesterday that police found an arms cache in an asylum accommodation in Jämtland Krokom and Security Service were engaged in the case. But neither the police or the Security Service claims to have no knowledge of the case.

In his article writes Avpixlat that the discovery was made ​​last week in connection with a utility would read the meters in asylum accommodation's boiler. According to the blog, police found "a number of real firearms" and the Security Service should then be connected.

Jämtland police duty officer said, however, to the Free Times that the police do not know the details about the arms cache.
- I'm sitting in the duty officer and no police officer has been involved in a similar case.

Neither Fredrik Milder, press secretary of the Security Service, claiming to have knowledge of the case.

- There is nothing that I have information, he says to Free Times.

January Sjunnesson, who wrote the article on Avpixlat, believes that his sources are safe.

- I have good sources but can not say what kind of source it is. There are people who saw the guns in front of their own eyes, he says to Free Times.

This article is corrected: The duty officer Free Times talked to belong to Jämtland police.
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Re: Europe's Refugee Influx Crisis

Postby norton ash » Thu Nov 05, 2015 1:28 pm

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Re: Europe's Refugee Influx Crisis

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Nov 06, 2015 3:53 pm

[urlhttp://www.tomdispatch.com/post/176063/tomgram%3A_michael_klare%2C_are_resource_wars_our_future/]Tomgram: Michael Klare, Are Resource Wars Our Future?[/url]
Posted by Michael Klare at 7:24am, November 3, 2015.

These days, all you have to do is look around if you want your hair to stand on end on the subject of our future on this planet. Here’s just a little relatively random list of recent news on climate-change-related happenings.

Mexico was recently hit by the most powerful hurricane ever recorded in the Western Hemisphere. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, average global temperatures for September ran off the rails. (“This marks the fifth consecutive month a monthly high temperature record has been set and is the highest departure from average for any month among all 1,629 months in the record that began in January 1880.”) It was the seventh month of 2015 to be “record shattering” and the year itself looks as if it might cumulatively be the same. (By now, this story is considered so humdrum and expectable that it didn’t even make the front page of my hometown newspaper!) The cataclysmic civil war, terror war, and international conflict in Syria is being reclassified as the first climate-change war based on the staggering drought that preceded it. That, in fact, has been called “the worst long-term drought and most severe set of crop failures since agricultural civilizations began in the Fertile Crescent many millennia ago.” Turning to colder climes, ice in Antarctica is melting so unexpectedly quickly that, according to the latest research, the continent’s ice shelves might be heading for collapse by 2100, guaranteeing a future rise in sea levels of potentially staggering proportions. Meanwhile, last week you could go online and watch dramatic video evidence of the melting of Greenland -- rivers of water raging across a dissolving ice shelf that, one of these decades, will raise sea levels by an estimated 20 feet globally. And oh yes, for those of you curious about the hotter regions, a new study indicates that heat waves in the Persian Gulf may be so fierce before or by the end of this century that, in some of parts of the oil heartlands of the planet, they might quite literally endanger human survival.

Need I go on? Need I mention why the upcoming climate change confab in Paris in a few weeks matters big time? Need I add that, whatever agreements may be reached there, they are essentially guaranteed not to be enough to bring global warming truly under control. And in that context, if you think that a Greater Middle East with five failed states in it since 2001 is already a nightmare, consider TomDispatch regular Michael Klare’s vision of a resource-war-torn planet in a “record-shattering” future of abysmal heat and climate tipping points. If you want to know what’s at stake for our grandchildren and great-grandchildren, read this article. Tom

Why the Paris Climate Summit Will Be a Peace Conference
Averting a World of Failed States and Resource Wars
By Michael T. Klare

At the end of November, delegations from nearly 200 countries will convene in Paris for what is billed as the most important climate meeting ever held. Officially known as the 21st Conference of the Parties (COP-21) of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (the 1992 treaty that designated that phenomenon a threat to planetary health and human survival), the Paris summit will be focused on the adoption of measures that would limit global warming to less than catastrophic levels. If it fails, world temperatures in the coming decades are likely to exceed 2 degrees Celsius (3.5 degrees Fahrenheit), the maximum amount most scientists believe the Earth can endure without experiencing irreversible climate shocks, including soaring temperatures and a substantial rise in global sea levels.

A failure to cap carbon emissions guarantees another result as well, though one far less discussed. It will, in the long run, bring on not just climate shocks, but also worldwide instability, insurrection, and warfare. In this sense, COP-21 should be considered not just a climate summit but a peace conference -- perhaps the most significant peace convocation in history.

To grasp why, consider the latest scientific findings on the likely impacts of global warming, especially the 2014 report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). When first published, that report attracted worldwide media coverage for predicting that unchecked climate change will result in severe droughts, intense storms, oppressive heat waves, recurring crop failures, and coastal flooding, all leading to widespread death and deprivation. Recent events, including a punishing drought in California and crippling heat waves in Europe and Asia, have focused more attention on just such impacts. The IPCC report, however, suggested that global warming would have devastating impacts of a social and political nature as well, including economic decline, state collapse, civil strife, mass migrations, and sooner or later resource wars.

These predictions have received far less attention, and yet the possibility of such a future should be obvious enough since human institutions, like natural systems, are vulnerable to climate change. Economies are going to suffer when key commodities -- crops, timber, fish, livestock -- grow scarcer, are destroyed, or fail. Societies will begin to buckle under the strain of economic decline and massive refugee flows. Armed conflict may not be the most immediate consequence of these developments, the IPCC notes, but combine the effects of climate change with already existing poverty, hunger, resource scarcity, incompetent and corrupt governance, and ethnic, religious, or national resentments, and you’re likely to end up with bitter conflicts over access to food, water, land, and other necessities of life.

The Coming of Climate Civil Wars

Such wars would not arise in a vacuum. Already existing stresses and grievances would be heightened, enflamed undoubtedly by provocative acts and the exhortations of demagogic leaders. Think of the current outbreak of violence in Israel and the Palestinian territories, touched off by clashes over access to the Temple Mount in Jerusalem (also known as the Noble Sanctuary) and the inflammatory rhetoric of assorted leaders. Combine economic and resource deprivation with such situations and you have a perfect recipe for war.

The necessities of life are already unevenly distributed across the planet. Often the divide between those with access to adequate supplies of vital resources and those lacking them coincides with long-term schisms along racial, ethnic, religious, or linguistic lines. The Israelis and Palestinians, for example, harbor deep-seated ethnic and religious hostilities but also experience vastly different possibilities when it comes to access to land and water. Add the stresses of climate change to such situations and you can naturally expect passions to boil over.

Climate change will degrade or destroy many natural systems, often already under stress, on which humans rely for their survival. Some areas that now support agriculture or animal husbandry may become uninhabitable or capable only of providing for greatly diminished populations. Under the pressure of rising temperatures and increasingly fierce droughts, the southern fringe of the Sahara desert, for example, is now being transformed from grasslands capable of sustaining nomadic herders into an empty wasteland, forcing local nomads off their ancestral lands. Many existing farmlands in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East will suffer a similar fate. Rivers that once supplied water year-round will run only sporadically or dry up altogether, again leaving populations with unpalatable choices.

As the IPCC report points out, enormous pressure will be put upon often weak state institutions to adjust to climate change and aid those in desperate need of emergency food, shelter, and other necessities. “Increased human insecurity,” the report says, “may coincide with a decline in the capacity of states to conduct effective adaptation efforts, thus creating the circumstances in which there is greater potential for violent conflict.”

A good example of this peril is provided by the outbreak of civil war in Syria and the subsequent collapse of that country in a welter of fighting and a wave of refugees of a sort that hasn’t been seen since World War II. Between 2006 and 2010, Syria experienced a devastating drought in which climate change is believed to have been a factor, turning nearly 60% of the country into desert. Crops failed and most of the country’s livestock perished, forcing millions of farmers into penury. Desperate and unable to live on their land any longer, they moved into Syria’s major cities in search of work, often facing extreme hardship as well as hostility from well-connected urban elites.

Had Syrian autocrat Bashar al-Assad responded with an emergency program of jobs and housing for those displaced, perhaps conflict could have been averted. Instead, he cut food and fuel subsidies, adding to the misery of the migrants and fanning the flames of revolt. In the view of several prominent scholars, “the rapidly growing urban peripheries of Syria, marked by illegal settlements, overcrowding, poor infrastructure, unemployment, and crime, were neglected by the Assad government and became the heart of the developing unrest.”

A similar picture has unfolded in the Sahel region of Africa, the southern fringe of the Sahara, where severe drought has combined with habitat decline and government neglect to provoke armed violence. The area has faced many such periods in the past, but now, thanks to climate change, there is less time between the droughts. “Instead of 10 years apart, they became five years apart, and now only a couple years apart,” observes Robert Piper, the United Nations regional humanitarian coordinator for the Sahel. “And that, in turn, is putting enormous stresses on what is already an incredibly fragile environment and a highly vulnerable population.”

In Mali, one of several nations straddling this region, the nomadic Tuaregs have been particularly hard hit, as the grasslands they rely on to feed their cattle are turning into desert. A Berber-speaking Muslim population, the Tuaregs have long faced hostility from the central government in Bamako, once controlled by the French and now by black Africans of Christian or animist faith. With their traditional livelihoods in peril and little assistance forthcoming from the capital, the Tuaregs revolted in January 2012, capturing half of Mali before being driven back into the Sahara by French and other foreign forces (with U.S. logistical and intelligence support).

Consider the events in Syria and Mali previews of what is likely to come later in this century on a far larger scale. As climate change intensifies, bringing not just desertification but rising sea levels in low-lying coastal areas and increasingly devastating heat waves in regions that are already hot, ever more parts of the planet will be rendered less habitable, pushing millions of people into desperate flight.

While the strongest and wealthiest governments, especially in more temperate regions, will be better able to cope with these stresses, expect to see the number of failed states grow dramatically, leading to violence and open warfare over what food, arable land, and shelter remains. In other words, imagine significant parts of the planet in the kind of state that Libya, Syria, and Yemen are in today. Some people will stay and fight to survive; others will migrate, almost assuredly encountering a far more violent version of the hostility we already see toward immigrants and refugees in the lands they head for. The result, inevitably, will be a global epidemic of resource civil wars and resource violence of every sort.

Water Wars

Most of these conflicts will be of an internal, civil character: clan against clan, tribe against tribe, sect against sect. On a climate-changed planet, however, don’t rule out struggles among nations for diminished vital resources -- especially access to water. It’s already clear that climate change will reduce the supply of water in many tropical and subtropical regions, jeopardizing the continued pursuit of agriculture, the health and functioning of major cities, and possibly the very sinews of society.

The risk of “water wars” will arise when two or more countries depend on the same key water source -- the Nile, the Jordan, the Euphrates, the Indus, the Mekong, or other trans-boundary river systems -- and one or more of them seek to appropriate a disproportionate share of the ever-shrinking supply of its water. Attempts by countries to build dams and divert the water flow of such riverine systems have already provoked skirmishes and threats of war, as when Turkey and Syria erected dams on the Euphrates, constraining the downstream flow.

One system that has attracted particular concern in this regard is the Brahmaputra River, which originates in China (where it is known as the Yarlung Tsangpo) and passes through India and Bangladesh before emptying into the Indian Ocean. China has already erected one dam on the river and has plans for more, producing considerable unease in India, where the Brahmaputra’s water is vital for agriculture. But what has provoked the most alarm is a Chinese plan to channel water from that river to water-scarce areas in the northern part of that country.

The Chinese insist that no such action is imminent, but intensified warming and increased drought could, in the future, prompt such a move, jeopardizing India’s water supply and possibly provoking a conflict. “China’s construction of dams and the proposed diversion of the Brahmaputra’s waters is not only expected to have repercussions for water flow, agriculture, ecology, and lives and livelihoods downstream,” Sudha Ramachandran writes in The Diplomat, “it could also become another contentious issue undermining Sino-Indian relations.”

Of course, even in a future of far greater water stresses, such situations are not guaranteed to provoke armed combat. Perhaps the states involved will figure out how to share whatever limited resources remain and seek alternative means of survival. Nonetheless, the temptation to employ force is bound to grow as supplies dwindle and millions of people face thirst and starvation. In such circumstances, the survival of the state itself will be at risk, inviting desperate measures.

Lowering the Temperature

There is much that undoubtedly could be done to reduce the risk of water wars, including the adoption of cooperative water-management schemes and the introduction of the wholesale use of drip irrigation and related processes that use water far more efficiently. However, the best way to avoid future climate-related strife is, of course, to reduce the pace of global warming. Every fraction of a degree less warming achieved in Paris and thereafter will mean that much less blood spilled in future climate-driven resource wars.

This is why the Paris climate summit should be viewed as a kind of preemptive peace conference, one that is taking place before the wars truly begin. If delegates to COP-21 succeed in sending us down a path that limits global warming to 2 degrees Celsius, the risk of future violence will be diminished accordingly. Needless to say, even 2 degrees of warming guarantees substantial damage to vital natural systems, potentially severe resource scarcities, and attendant civil strife. As a result, a lower ceiling for temperature rise would be preferable and should be the goal of future conferences. Still, given the carbon emissions pouring into the atmosphere, even a 2-degree cap would be a significant accomplishment.

To achieve such an outcome, delegates will undoubtedly have to begin dealing with conflicts of the present moment as well, including those in Syria, Iraq, Yemen, and Ukraine, in order to collaborate in devising common, mutually binding climate measures. In this sense, too, the Paris summit will be a peace conference. For the first time, the nations of the world will have to step beyond national thinking and embrace a higher goal: the safety of the ecosphere and all its human inhabitants, no matter their national, ethnic, religious, racial, or linguistic identities. Nothing like this has ever been attempted, which means that it will be an exercise in peacemaking of the most essential sort -- and, for once, before the wars truly begin.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Europe's Refugee Influx Crisis

Postby General Patton » Mon Nov 09, 2015 6:19 pm

A Serbian human trafficker was given a suspended sentence because he was smuggling asylum seekers:
https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=y&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.welt.de%2Fpolitik%2Fdeutschland%2Farticle148562388%2FRichter-straft-Schleuser-wegen-Regierungspolitik-milde.html&edit-text=
The District Court Passau has capitulated in a judgment against a 43-year-old smugglers from Serbia before the refugee policy of the Federal Government. Against the background that the policy is not some rich here a sentence of two years of probation, according to the verdict of the judge of November 5, the present of the "Welt am Sonntag".

The sentence has not been fully exploited. The judge justified this as follows: ". Given the conditions at the boundaries of the legal system is suspended by the German policy, therefore, no unconditional prison sentence is granted, asylum seekers are from the German Chancellor invited to come to Germany."

The federal police blew up just this week with a large-scale raid an internationally active smuggling ring. Almost 600 officers searched on Wednesday in North Rhine-Westphalia, Lower Saxony and Baden-Württemberg at the same time building on 24 locations and arrested seven suspects. The smugglers are said to have provided for up to 10,000 euros per person Lebanese and Syrians with fake travel documents and residence permits, and organized their entry into Germany with airplane tickets.

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Re: Europe's Refugee Influx Crisis

Postby General Patton » Mon Nov 09, 2015 10:11 pm

Another converted refugee center burned down:
http://www.aftonbladet.se/nyheter/article21719941.ab

Image

So many of them have been burned down that insurance companies are now refusing to insure homes used by asylum seekers.
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Re: Europe's Refugee Influx Crisis

Postby General Patton » Tue Nov 10, 2015 1:22 pm

https://www.rt.com/news/320578-greece-lesbos-dead-refugees/
A surge in the number of bodies of refugees whose boats capsized as they desperately tried to reach Europe has filled the burial grounds of the Greek island of Lesbos to capacity, the island’s mayor said, adding that over 50 bodies remain unburied.

The island’s morgues, cemeteries and emergency services have been overwhelmed with a record number of bodies of migrants who died trying to cross the Mediterranean in October. According to the latest UN data, over 218,000 people arrived in the EU during the month, beating the total annual number for the whole of 2014.
...
Mayor Spyros Gallons told the Greek media that, while five funerals were held this weekend, 55 bodies remain at the morgue and the island is having a hard time finding burial ground for them.

“Yesterday we held five funerals, but there are still 55 bodies at the morgue,” NBC News quoted Galinos as saying. “Who could have anticipated such a carnage in the Aegean?
...
On Monday, the tragic situation was exacerbated, as 11 refugees, most of them children, drowned in the Aegean Sea while trying to reach Lesbos. Moreover, on Sunday another 15 people, including six children, died in the Aegean after their boat capsized off the Greek island of Samos.
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Re: Europe's Refugee Influx Crisis

Postby conniption » Tue May 31, 2016 7:07 am

RT

EU war on people smugglers is repeating disaster of war on drugs


Dan Glazebrook
Dan Glazebrook is a freelance political writer who has written for RT, Counterpunch, Z magazine, the Morning Star, the Guardian, the New Statesman, the Independent and Middle East Eye, amongst others. His first book “Divide and Ruin: The West’s Imperial Strategy in an Age of Crisis” was published by Liberation Media in October 2013. It featured a collection of articles written from 2009 onwards examining the links between economic collapse, the rise of the BRICS, war on Libya and Syria and 'austerity'. He is currently researching a book on US-British use of sectarian death squads against independent states and movements from Northern Ireland and Central America in the 1970s and 80s to the Middle East and Africa today.

Published time: 30 May, 2016

The EU’s “war on people smuggling”, escalated last week by David Cameron, appears to be modeled on the failed “war on drugs” – and a new House of Lords report shows it is already producing the same disastrous results.

On 19th April 2015, the sinking of a single refugee boat off the coast of Lampedusa led to the drowning of over 700 people. By the end of the month, an estimated 1,300 had drowned in the same way, making it the deadliest month on record in the Mediterranean refugee crisis. The tragedy was the direct result of a successful British-led campaign to end the Italian search-and-rescue operation Mare Nostrum, which had prevented such mass drowning before it’s ended in October 2014. Those events led to a public outcry and pressure to restart search-and-rescue operations; but resisting such pressure, on 23rd April 2015 the European Council instead adopted a British-drafted resolution vowing to “undertake systematic efforts to identify, capture and destroy [refugee] vessels.” The EU was giving notice that its response to the refugee crisis would no longer be based on humanitarian commitments, but on military force. It was, not coincidentally, a proposal originally made by the British nationalist Nick Griffin five years earlier.

I wrote at the time that such a policy suffered all the basic economic flaws of the disastrous three-decades long ‘war on drugs’, and would lead to the same devastating results. Focusing on bombing supply without addressing demand, as any economics student could tell you, will push up prices, whilst concentrating the trade in the hands of the most ruthless and militarized providers. As a consequence, it would make the trade deadlier and more profitable but would not reduce it, as demand would remain unaffected. This has been precisely the outcome of the war on drugs, as the murder toll in Mexico’s Jalisco province – 100,000 in the eight years – grimly demonstrates. And, as a House of Lords report earlier this month shows, the same results are starting to emerge from the EU’s war on migration.

The EU’s ‘Operation Sophia’ entered its second phase – the capture and destruction of refugee boats – last October. Since then, according to the European border agency Frontex, it has destroyed 114 vessels and arrested 69 “suspected smugglers”. This is supposed to act as a deterrent to people smugglers, thereby limiting the opportunities for would-be refugees to flee to Europe. It has not worked. As noted by the House of Lords EU Committee’s report, “The mission does not… in any meaningful way deter the flow of migrants, disrupt the smugglers’ networks, or impede the business of people smuggling on the central Mediterranean route…There is therefore little prospect of Operation Sophia overturning the business model of people smuggling.”

Indeed, numbers crossing the Mediterranean this March – almost 10,000 - were three times higher than March 2015.

That the EU’s military campaign would not deter refugee flows was entirely obvious to the witnesses interviewed by the House of Lords Committee, given that the policy does nothing to address the demand for people smuggling services. The opening sentence of the report was a quote from Peter Roberts of the Royal United Services Institute that “migrants in boats are symptoms, not causes, of the problem.” Another witness, Steve Symonds of Amnesty International’s Refugee and Migrant Rights Program, agreed: “If you do not have an answer to the situation of those people, we are skeptical about the mere targeting of the smugglers,” adding that the conflicts from which refugees were fleeing was “becoming more protracted and intractable and they are spreading.” Summing up, the Committee wrote: “We conclude that a military response can never, in itself, solve the problem of irregular migration. As long as there is need for asylum from refugees and demand from economic migrants, the business of people smuggling will continue to exist and the networks will adapt to changing circumstances.”

Whilst unable to reduce the numbers crossing the sea, Operation Sophia has had an effect on those crossings: it has made them more dangerous. As the Lords report noted, “the destruction of vessels has simply caused the smugglers to shift from using wooden boats to rubber dinghies, which are even more unsafe.” In addition, Cameron’s plans to return fleeing refugees to war-torn Libya are likely to escalate the death toll even further. On this proposal, made earlier this year, migration expert Professor Brad Blitz commented: “It’s just outrageous. Libya is a country that is divided, which cannot guarantee human rights, which has produced hundreds of thousands of displaced people…If the concern is to prevent deaths, as [Cameron] has said, then really he should be promoting safe passage, rather than diverting people so that they have to seek longer and more dangerous routes.”

The Committee also heard evidence that the EU’s militarized approach is changing the business model of refugee transport in other ways. According to Edward Hobart, Migration Envoy for the British Foreign Office, although there was “plenty of activity that [was] in the grey market or illegal or irresponsible,” at the moment there were no “large-scale organized crime groups.” This, however, was likely to change. Said the report: “Mr. Hobart did see a likelihood of an ‘increase in criminal activity.’” He explained that ‘a symptom of better control … at the border will be an increased opportunity for organized crime.’ As EU borders become more challenging to navigate, migrants will be more likely to turn to smugglers to facilitate their illegal crossings.” Criminal gangs, that is, are likely to be boosted, not deterred, by Operation Sophia. And in an ominous hint of what is to come, Lieutenant General Wosolsobe referred to one incident in which armed men had prevented the destruction of a boat. As the non-violent providers are put out of business, this is likely to become increasingly common. Just as the war on drugs has concentrated the trade in the hands of the most violent paramilitary groups, so too the war on refugees will put nonviolent groups out of business whilst ensuring that only the best armed will thrive.

And these groups will find themselves amassing ever greater profits: noted the report, “Mr. Symonds was skeptical of the EU’s efforts to barricade its external border. Analysis had shown that stronger policing of the EU’s external borders had effected only ‘the movement of ever larger numbers of people around different routes by different journeys, usually at greater danger and cost to them, so of greater profit to smugglers.’”

In Latin America, this combination of concentrating the trade in the hands of violent gangs and increasing their profits has given drug smuggling groups the financial and military muscle to buy police protection for their activities. In Mexico, for example, where the drug war has been massively stepped up since 2007, “Drug trafficking organizations have operated….with near total impunity in the face of compromised security forces” whilst “official corruption is widespread.” The quotes are from official US Embassy cables from 2010.

Again, the EU’s military approach is likely to have the same effects on the refugee transport business in Libya, entrenching corruption and providing the most violent paramilitary groups with the financial means to buy themselves police protection. The report noted that “smugglers are part of the fabric of Libyan political and economic life. Patrick Kingsley, Migration Correspondent, Guardian Media Group, explained that smugglers are often ‘connected to militias,’ ‘have important roles to play in their local communities’, and ‘provide quite a lot of money to the local community’. The ‘people at the top are going to be protected to some extent, even by people who are major players in Libyan politics.’”

In sum, then, the House of Lords is clear on the results of Operation Sophia: it has failed to deter migration, increased the risk of death for refugees, and is militarizing the trade whilst boosting its profits. The likely result will be a growth in the political and economic power of the most violent paramilitaries currently involved in the trade.

So why did David Cameron last week announce an escalation in this disastrous militarization strategy? Speaking at the G7 conference in Japan, he promised to send another warship to join Operation Sophia, this time hoping to extend its mission into Libyan territorial waters.

Does he not have access to the House of Lords’ report? Is he completely ignorant of the devastating consequences of the war on drugs? Does he lack even a schoolboy level understanding of the basic economic laws of supply and demand? The English ruling class, from India to Iraq, have always presented themselves as essentially well-meaning buffoons when it comes to foreign policy; “absent-minded imperialists” who, with the best will in the world, end up bumbling into the destruction of entire regions due to their misguided commitment to the civilizing mission or to “faulty intelligence.” Personally, I don’t buy it.

More likely is that Cameron is pursuing this seemingly counter-productive strategy for two reasons: to justify the re-occupation of Libya, and to facilitate the boosting of his chosen death squads of the so-called ‘Libya Dawn’. Indeed, the Times noted last Thursday that British Special Forces are already fighting alongside Libya Dawn, the paramilitary force at war with the elected government based in Tobruk. MI6 and the CIA learnt in the 1980s that facilitating the Mujahedeen’s takeover of the region’s heroin trade was a great way to allow their allies to fund themselves outside of Congressional approval. It looks like Cameron is planning to repeat the trick for the Libyan death squads’ people smuggling business.


~~

Revolution News

Worst Since World War II: 51 Million Refugees World Wide

06/20/2014

Image

http://revolution-news.com/worst-since- ... orld-wide/


~~

also this:
conniption » Wed Jul 02, 2014 2:49 pm
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Re: Europe's Refugee Influx Crisis

Postby tapitsbo » Tue May 31, 2016 2:06 pm

How do IS fighters feel about "crusaders" fighting by their side in certain theatres and against them in others?

Sorry that most recent article got me wondering.
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Re: Europe's Refugee Influx Crisis

Postby jakell » Wed Jun 01, 2016 5:20 am

WTF is 'Revolution News' anyway? it seems a usefully non-specific name that could be attached to anything.

The first thing I think of is a hangover from international Communism, but really, the only thing that could could be described as revolutionary in the West is various forms of identitarianism.
" Orwell feared those who would deprive us of information. Huxley feared those who would give us so much that we would be reduced to passivity and egoism"
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Re: Europe's Refugee Influx Crisis

Postby seemslikeadream » Sun Jun 12, 2016 11:28 pm

Europe Is Slamming Its Doors Shut to a Growing and Historic Humanitarian Crisis
Refugee numbers are surging.
By Vijay Prashad / AlterNet June 7, 2016

A woman carries her baby near the gate of a Greek-Macedonian border crossing near the Greek village of Idomeni, on March 6, 2016.
Photo Credit: AFP Photo/Dimitar Dilkoff

Over the past week, the UN Refugees Agency says that eight hundred and eighty people died in the Mediterranean Sea. They had been trying to get to Europe–for many, the beacon of a future that they have not been able to build in their own countries. These migrants left from the Sabratha region—the northwestern coast of Libya–where the local economy now relies upon the refugee trade. Almost fifty percent of the Gross Domestic Product for this region comes from the human traffickers.

Europe worries about what is perceived in the continent to be an invasion into its lands. Far Right groups are open about their antipathy, but they reflect–in some measure–the petty bigotry of sections of society. It is easy to turn on the migrants and refugees, for their desperation makes them prey to all kinds of fantasies–that they steal jobs or are violent or that they are importing antique social mores into civilized Europe. These are old ideas, as ancient as the 19th century. When the cholera swept through Russia in 1831, the French parliament believed that the disease would stop at the borders of France; no antediluvian disease could penetrate the democratic soil of Europe. Cholera broke the barriers and swept through Paris. The ‘Oriental disease’ could not be stopped. Prejudice is not a firm enough wall.

Turkey

Last year, close to ninety per cent of the million refugees and migrants who attempted to enter Europe did so through Greece. Harsh retribution along the axis of Eastern Europe and terrible illiberalism by the Greek government has now substantially closed off that pathway. A European Union deal with Turkey on 18 March has now pushed the refugees to camps in Turkey. Those who risk the journey do so at great peril. But Turkey has been no real haven.

An Amnesty International briefing from June 3rd shows that Turkey’s policy towards refugees is under great strain. Official numbers indicate that there are almost three million Syrian refugees and half a million other asylum seekers from parts of Africa and Asia (including Afghanistan) plagued by war and poverty. These numbers are beyond the scope of the Turkish authorities. Amnesty’s report shows that most of the refugees are living in substandard housing, with little opportunity to make a living (which is why children amongst the refugees seek employment in large numbers). One asylum seeker told Amnesty, ‘Maybe we will die, maybe we won’t arrive—but it doesn’t matter because we can’t stay in Turkey anymore.’

Where could the refugees go? Routes out of Turkey are difficult. Re-entry into Syria is beyond imagination. Greece has shut its doors. The modest numbers of refugees taken in by Europe and the United States—with great fanfare before the cameras—do not make a dent in the crisis. Even the Dalai Lama has come out saying that Germany has taken in sufficient refugees. His statement is as outrageous as a reality itself. The Dalai Lama and a large section of the Tibetan population came to India as refugees in 1959. They have enriched Indian society. What does the Dalai Lama think these desperate refugees are supposed to do?

Most refugees out of Syria would like to return home—but home has vanished in the endless war. The Syrian government of Bashar al-Assad and the rebel forces toy with the UN attempts to get vital humanitarian aid into besieged cities. This produces acute suffering among people, for whom flight becomes the only alternative. But where can they flee? Jordan and Lebanon are saturated. Only the end of the use of aid as a weapon of war and the end of the war could solve this exodus from Syria.

Tensions are high between Germany and Turkey because of the German parliament’s censure for the genocide of the Armenians by the infant Turkish state. The March deal might collapse as a result. Nationalism is a fragile sword in the hands of the current Turkish government. It cannot afford to take this condemnation quietly.

Libya

Meanwhile, in Libya, large numbers of refugees gather to make the dash across the dangerous Mediterranean Sea to the Italian island of Lampedusa—the beachhead of Europe. These are migrants who have long abandoned the destroyed economies of Western Africa and the war ravaged Horn of Africa. They are in the hands of human smugglers who operate across the Sahara Desert, with well-known hubs in Niger. They are taking advantage of a Libyan state broken by the NATO war of 2011.

What stops the refugees is the dangerous sea. Already this year, over two thousand people have died in the waters—‘making the odds of dying as high as one in 23,’ says the UN Refugees Agency (UNHCR). Last year, at this time, less than two thousand refugees drowned, while in the year before the number stood at only fifty-seven. The increased numbers should be worrying to the world community, but they are not. The UNHCR’s William Spindler said, ‘2016 is proving to be particularly deadly.’

Refugees from Western Africa—from Gambia, Senegal, Nigeria—flee decades of IMF-induced structural adjustment policies and a cotton industry wrecked by unfair European and US domestic subsidies. The IMF recently noted that its schemes have created ‘disquieting conclusions,’ but this internal criticism will be worth nothing. It is easy for the IMF to say it is sorry for its actions, but harder yet for it to pick up the pieces of its policies. Since Europe was a key player in the IMF, one could imagine that it would be contrite about the devastation in Western Africa and provide some respite to the desperate people who live there. But Europe would like to delink the IMF created problems from the West Africans who sit in rusty fishing vessels and overcrowded rubber boats.

Those who come from the Horn of Africa flee the destruction of their countries by decades of the War on Terror. Somalia’s descent into madness in the 1990s was compounded by the invasion of the country by Ethiopian troops between 2006 and 2009 under the aegis of the US government’s Global War on Terror. These fleeing people are the cognate of the Somali pirates, pushed into this industry by corporate overfishing and pollution dumping in the Somali coastline. Games with these fragile states continue to displace more and more people who are fed up with the endlessness of conflict and the fragility of their homelands. Conscription in Eritrea has sent thousands of men towards Europe – making Eritreans the largest group of desperate men in Libya.

Libya’s own ability to deal with this inflow of migrants is limited. The Europeans are eager to bolster the new Libyan unity government. But this is a very low horizon. What Europe seems to want is for the Libyan government to be the border gendarme against the refugees. A strong Libya can only close the door to the refugees. It cannot tackle the crisis that produces them – namely, the kind of policies imposed on the countries of West Africa.

Solutions

The 1951 Convention on Refugees is anachronistic. It is a Cold War document, which encourages the ‘unfree’ to seek refuge in ‘free’ societies. Such an anachronistic definition allows states to disparage certain refugees as merely economic migrants–as if these are not refugees of distress. A new international conference of states is imperative to reconsider the definitions and to highlight the new challenges–such as those produced by IMF refugees, climate change refugees, regime change refugees and so on. States should not be allowed to arbitrarily decide who is a ‘deserving’ applicant and who is not. Countries of the Global South, campaigners for refugee rights and refugees themselves need to take the lead in calling for such a conference.

The entire discourse on refugees and migrants is suffused with racism. When Americans and Europeans live overseas, they are called expatriates – not migrants. It is the darker bodies who are migrants and refugees. These dark bodies are seen as a threat to the ‘white nations’ of Europe and North America. Could there be any other way to understand the ferocious rhetoric that emanates from the Atlantic states? There is no real refugee crisis. There is, however, a crisis of humanism in Europe and North America.

Last year a West African refugee–Famara from Gambia–told me that the transit to Europe had robbed him of his sense of his identity. He is no longer a Gambian he said, let alone an African. ‘I am a refugee,’ he said, looking me in the eye. ‘That is who I have become.’
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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