By Erin Wildermuth on 6.27.08 @ 12:07AM
Why the European Union is cracking down on illegal immigration.
Self-appointed spokesmen for the international community
declared themselves shocked and outraged by immigration reforms
passed by the European Union last week. Hugo Chavez of Venezuela
has even threatened to stop supplying Europe with oil if the issue
is not resolved to his liking.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who will begin a 6-month stint
as EU President July 1, initiated large-scale immigration reform in
France this past year. Sarkozy claims the reform has been a
monumental success and now wants to harmonize EU immigration policy
during his time as President.
The EU Returns Directive is a step in that direction. It sets
common rules for deporting illegal immigrants from the 26-country
bloc. Immigrants are given 30 days to leave voluntarily. If they do
not, European nations are authorized to hold them in detention
centers for up to six months to process deportation. A 12-month
extension will be available under some circumstances.
This amounts to an 18-month holding time in some cases, which
horrifies human rights groups. They also object to a 5-year ban on
reentering the EU for some involuntarily deported immigrants.
Supporters argue that 18 months is a maximum. France, for
example, will not be changing its policy of 32-day detainment.
Countries whose policies allow more time, however, will be forced
to adhere to the new standard.
The Directive also establishes other human rights policies,
asking nations to provide shelter, food and legal aid to detained
immigrants. Unaccompanied minors and families are to be afforded
special consideration.
TENSIONS BETWEEN European nationals and immigrants have grown in
recent years, causing many states to take a more draconian view of
immigration. In several European counties, fear of extreme Islam is
changing public opinion about immigration, leading to stricter
policies.
Denmark has been taking an anti-immigration stance since 2002
when a right of center coalition group including the Danish
People's Party (DPP) came to power. The DPP has defended its
immigration policy, especially following the Jyllands-Posten
Muhammad cartoons controversy in 2006, in which the depiction of
the Muslim prophet Mohammed in a Danish newspaper led to religious
violence.
Jesper Langballe, the DPP's immigration spokesman, has
explicitly pointed to Muslim immigrants as the problem, calling
other groups essentially harmless. This has resonated. The party's
percentage of the popular vote has increased steadily since
1998.
Nor are the Danish alone in this. The Northern League, an
anti-immigration party in Italy, came in third of 12 parties in
this April's elections. The party has tried to stop new mosques
from opening in order to stifle the "Islamic invasion." It also
supports measures to decrease immigration to 10 percent of its
current levels and has advocated four-year prison sentences for
illegal immigrants.
Even in Britain, anti-immigration parties are finding support.
The formerly fascist British National Party (BNP) is certainly on
the fringes of political life but this year Richard Barnbrook of
the BNP secured a seat on the London assembly with 5.3 percent of
the votes.
Barnbrook recently published a controversial blog through the
London Telegraph blaming immigrants and their children for
violence in the city. The party claims to be speaking for native
Britons who are tired of minorities being given preferential
status. The BNP would ban burkas from public buildings and fight
Islamification in other ways.
ISLAMIFICATION. The word rings throughout the continent. Reporters,
bloggers and politicians alike are obsessed with it. Many are
terrified, others express disgust with the disgusted with the
alleged bigotry of the terrified.
Some liberals claim that these new Muslim families want nothing
more than to raise 2.3 children and live out peaceful, European
lives. But these claims are juxtaposed with terrifying statistics.
In French prisons, 60 to 70 percent of inmates are Muslim, as
compared with 12 percent of the rest of population. Other countries
have a similarly outsized prison statistics, with reason.
In 2001, two out of three rapes in Oslo, Norway were committed
by non-western immigrants. The number of cases was also rising
steadily. That same year police reports revealed that 68 percent of
all rapes in Copenhagen were committed by ethnic minorities, which
led even Muslim youth organizations to speak out against the
problem.
Not all immigrants or ethnic minorities are Muslim. Still, a
parent reading the above statistics would have every reason to be
skeptical of Islam and of immigration in Europe. This is especially
true given the many anecdotal stories reporting that young Muslim
men are permitted, even proud, to rape "infidels."
The peaceful Muslim families depicted in heart wrenching stories
of discrimination have every right to speak out. They haven't done
anything wrong. Still, the incarceration and rape statistics
skyrocket. Anecdotes of Muslim intolerance and violence proliferate
on the Internet, when they're forced out of the press through laws
outlawing religious intolerance.
Given the direction European public opinion on immigration is
going, the Returns Directive may very well be a
liberal document. Leaving these countries
alone to do what their citizens actually want might lead to
policies even more upsetting to those international
communitarians.
However, the Directive falls short of seriously addressing
Europe's true immigration problems while also alienating potential
allies and trading partners.
Deporting illegal immigrants mostly misses the mark. The thing
that Europeans are reacting against is not immigration or Islam
per se, but rather a serious spike in violence. Perhaps
their nations should respond to this by cracking down on serious
crimes instead of further criminalizing peaceful immigration.
topics:
Islam, Law, European Union, Immigration, Oil