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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: The
Balkan Crisis
The British government and the Kosovar refugees
Labour's milk of human kindness turns sour
By Tony Hyland
27 May 1999
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The Blair government says that its participation in the NATO
bombing of Yugoslavia is driven by humanitarian concern
for the plight of the Albanian Kosovars. This claim should be
examined critically in light of its treatment of asylum-seekers
in general and the Kosovar refugees in particular.
Labour's Immigration and Asylum White Paper is in its final
parliamentary stages before passing into law. This legislation
is more draconian than anything passed under the previous Conservative
administrations. It has been accompanied by newspaper articles
and TV coverage presenting the majority of asylum-seekers as bogus,
particularly those from Eastern Europe. In areas of the country
where refugees from Slovakia and Kosovo have been temporarily
stationed, such as the port towns in southeast England, this became
particularly vitriolic.
The Dover Express last October described East European
refugees as human sewage in an editorial entitled
We want to wash the dross down the drain. Similar
articles have featured prominently in the mass circulation tabloids.
The Daily Mirror, in an article headed Let's send
the asylum spongers packing, wrote: I don't blame
them for coming. But that doesn't mean they have the right to
be here. Who is being persecuted in Romania? The answer is nobody....
It's not racist to say that every immigrant who sneaks into Britain
diminishes life in this country, it's common sense.
Such statements reveal how the language of hate, usually associated
with the fascist right, has been incorporated into mainstream
journalism. Last October the Daily Mail published an article
entitled Life on Asylum Alley. This claimed that bogus
asylum-seekers were living in the lap of luxury at taxpayers'
expense. The article gave the address of one refugee hostel, which
was then subject to attack. While local police warned the editors
of the Dover Express that they could face prosecution for
racial incitement, no similar threat has been against the national
newspapers.
Home Secretary Jack Straw sought to distance his new white
paper from such overtly racist sentiments. In an article printed
in the Guardian on May 13 he claimed the reason why
the government has brought forward the bill has nothing to do
with tabloid headlines or 'criminalising' refugees as some have
suggested. He seemed to be unaware of the irony that his
disclaimer appeared under the headline: Asylum abusers.
The incongruity between Labour's professed concern for the
Kosovar refugees and its reluctance to provide aid and asylum
has become ever more glaring. The plight of the refugees amassing
in makeshift camps has been manipulated by the mass media to stampede
public opinion into supporting military action. But the United
Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) warned on May 11
that it was running out of money, having received only half the
£87 million it needed to fund its operations.
Britain was cited as one of the lowest contributors in a league
table of 18 countries. The UNHCR claimed that it had only received
£490,000 from the UK, less than the price of one cruise
missile and a fraction of the £43 million the British government
had spent at that stage of the war. The government responded by
claiming it had provided £3.4 million in direct assistance
to refugees in Macedonia and Albania. If this is true, the rebuttal
confirms the government's continued policy of bypassing the UN,
as it did alongside the US when hostilities were declared. This
figure still represents just a tiny fraction of the amount Blair
had pledged.
It is not the first time that UNHCR has been in conflict with
the Blair government over its treatment of refugees. Hope Hanlon,
a UNHCR spokesperson, described the government's new Immigration
and Asylum legislation as fundamentally unacceptable and
even inhumane. Last May, the UNHCR issued a letter to the
15 governments of the European Union and Switzerland, calling
on them to stop repatriating refugees back to Kosovo. Those affected
included Serbs, Montenegrins, Romanians and Muslim Slavs.
The UK was not even included in the initial list of countries
available to take in refugees from the overcrowded camps, as the
government refused to specify how many it would accept. Over the
last months, the Blair government has continuously violated the
principle of giving sanctuary to the very people they claim to
be rescuing in Yugoslavia.
Claire Short, the International Development Secretary, stated
that moving people out of the region is doing exactly what
Milosevic wants. In an article in the Sunday Telegraph
April 4, Blair described moves to grant asylum to Kosovar
refugees as a policy of despair, adding that they
should be kept close to Kosovo's borders, to apply maximum
pressure on Milosevic.
Britain's belated agreement to accept up to 1,000 refugees
a week was only secured after much arm twisting within the Europe
Union, and government concern that its credibility was becoming
compromised in the public eye. The Balkan region was also becoming
destabilised, as the poorest economies in Europe, such as Albania
and the republics of Montenegro and Macedonia, became the main
destination of refugees fleeing the bombing. NATO allies, such
as Germany, were becoming increasingly bitter at the fact they
had accepted a disproportionate amount of refugees.
The British government has stated that those now arriving from
the Balkan refugee camps will be granted leave to remain in the
UK, and will be entitled to benefits and to seek employment. This
contrasts with the treatment of some 7,000 Kosovar refugees that
arrived prior to the NATO bombing, who are still waiting for their
cases to be processed.
The media gives extended coverage to any demonstration of gratitude
expressed by the minority of Kosovar refugees who have managed
to obtain temporary asylum in Britain and to the Blair's stage-managed
visits to the border camps. Meanwhile, the lot of the vast majority
of refugees goes largely unreported. Under the terms of the new
legislation, those who arrived prior to the outbreak of war, like
those seeking asylum from other countries, can be subject to the
new powers of search and detention, and will have their rights
to cash benefits withdrawn. Instead, they receive vouchers that
can be used to claim a limited variety of basic items.
Only a month before the war began, a Kosovan couple who were
fleeing from the Drenica region, one of the main centres of the
conflict, were imprisoned in Britain. Arriving at Heathrow, en-route
to Canada, the couple was discovered to be travelling on false
Greek passports. When they tried to claim asylum, the 25-year-old
woman, who was pregnant, was sent to Holloway prison, whilst her
husband was sent to Wormwood Scrubs. The woman was later released
after becoming ill and depressed; her husband is likely to be
released only on condition that he wears an electronic tag.
The human rights group Amnesty International is taking up their
case. A spokesman for the human rights group commented, There
are two government policies on Kosovan refugees. The high profile
one that involves the evacuation of the camps in Macedonia and
another hidden policy which applies to the vast majority, who
are treated as if they are criminals when in fact they are just
seeking protection.
See Also:
Why is NATO at war with Yugoslavia? World
power, oil and gold
Statement of the Editorial Board of the World Socialist Web
Site
[24 May 1999]
Australian government makes Kosovar refugees
as unwelcome as possible
[4 May 1999]
Fate of Kosovars highlights
Europe's attitude to refugees
[16 April 1999]
Australian government twists
and turns on Kosovar refugeesA case study in duplicity
[9 April 1999]
United States uses, and abuses,
Kosovar refugees
[8 April 1999]
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