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WSWS : News
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: Spain
Spain imposes new anti-immigrant legislation
By Vicky Short
20 December 2000
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The right wing Popular Party government is implementing new
anti-immigration legislation that will trample on the basic democratic
rights of foreign workers.
Prime Minister José María Aznar has succeeded
in passing measures to strengthen a new aliens law ( Ley de
Extranjería) originally passed in January 2000. The
legislation is framed as a set of reforms to the existing law
passed in 1985 under the PSOE (Socialist Party) government of
Felipe Gonzalez.
Under the legislation, foreign workers will still enjoy access
to healthcare and education but the right of association, participation
in public demonstrations or rallies and the right to join a trade
union and take industrial action have all been taken away. Except
for their spouse and children, those foreign workers who are residents
will no longer be able to bring family members to Spain for humanitarian
reasons.
Under the previous law, to be found without proper papers or
working without a work permit was considered an infringement of
the lawbut did not mean automatic expulsion, only a fine
of up to £4,000. Anybody who was expelled could return after
a period of three to ten years. The ten-year exclusion period
will now be made mandatory.
It is now compulsory for drivers to check immigrants' documents
at the point of departure. If a foreigner without a visa arrives
in Spain to ask for asylum and this is denied, the company who
brought him in can be fined up to £40,000. It will now be
possible to expel a foreigner within 48 hours without appeal,
if their papers are not in order. The denial of visas will not
need to be justified. The period of stay in Spain before being
able to apply for residency has been extended from two to five
years.
The PP government wants to clampdown on the thousands of workers
from Africa and Latin America entering Spain, but illegal
immigrants play a vital part in the country's economy as a source
of cheap labour. The massive growth of agricultural production
in the south demands large numbers of temporary workers to pick
the tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers and aubergines during the warm
season. Some of these workers were given temporary work contracts
but the vast majority are undocumented, recruited on street corners,
paid extremely low wages and provided with subhuman accommodation
in barrack-style shacks near the fields where they work. The owners
are able to dictate working conditions under threat of reporting
the undocumented workers to the authorities. Many of those who
came into Spain under those conditions stayed on illegally until
the next season, living under precarious and stressful conditions.
The black economy this created became almost uncontrollable.
The government lost tax revenues from both the employers and the
workers.
The other motive for the immigration reforms is that Aznar's
coming to power after 14 years of a PSOE government coincided
with a campaign by the European Union to close its borders to
immigration, particularly from Eastern Europe. Aznar appointed
himself as the guardian of the southernmost frontier of Fortress
Europe.
The January reforms were intended to grant residency rights
only to a predetermined number of foreign workers with temporary
work permits, while giving powers to the judiciary to extradite
the rest. But in January, the PP was a coalition government at
the mercy of the votes of its partnersthe Catalan and Basque
nationalist partiesas well as the governments of all of
Spain's Autonomous Regions. These regional governments were under
pressure from employers, who wanted some kind of legal import
of foreign labour, from trade unions who wanted increased membership
and from immigrant organisations who wanted an end to the unrelenting
exploitation of illegal immigrants. In the event, the reforms
went in the opposite direction to the government's intentions.
In what was the biggest defeat for the government since its election
in 1996, the January reforms granted more rights to foreign workers
and even the possibility of becoming Spanish citizens.
As soon as the reforms were passed by parliament, the government
began its campaign to overturn them. This became an essential
part of its election platform. Immediately following its victory
in the March 12 elections this year, where the PP won a second
term in office with a big overall majority, Aznar set out to prepare
the draft for the counter-reforms of the Ley de Extranjería.
Despite general opposition, these counter-reforms were approved
in Congress on November 24 by 187 to 117. The government's overall
majority, plus the votes of the Catalan nationalist party CiU,
and the Canary Islands Coalition ensured the passing of the new
legislation. The PSOE and the Stalinist-led United Left (IU) voted
against, although it did approve some changes previously agreed
with the PP and the government. The Basque nationalists abstained.
The PSOE had initially put forward some 50 amendments, but
its opposition eventually concentrated on the reforms of the right
to belong to a trade union and the right to strike. On December
14, the counter-reforms were imposed in their totality when the
government, again with the votes of the Catalan and Canary nationalists,
was able to have them approved by the Senate, having rejected
every single amendment.
Both immigrant organisations and employers oppose the new set
of laws, albeit for very different reasons. Several immigrant
associations and trade unions have called demonstrations in different
cities to protest the passing of the law, beginning on December
17.
A few weeks ago, dozens of immigrant workers went on hunger
strike in a local church in Almeria, demanding residency papers.
The strikers' spokesman Mohammed Bourerfas stated, We are
desperate. We want to become legal residents. That's the only
way we can stop employers exploiting us with miserable wages and
inhuman conditions. Once we get papers we can tackle the other
indignities. Other protest actions have been taking place
all over Spain. Civil Guards (police) on horseback used batons
against foreign workers queuing up to be registered and tensions
are mounting daily.
Many employers, particularly in the South, have complained
about the new law's efforts to force immigrant worker to register
and get papers, or face deportation. They regard this as undermining
their ability to use them as slave labour. Eduardo Lopez, spokesman
for the farmers' association COAG in Almeria said recently: Of
course we want our workers to be legal. But we can't legalise
everyone because we need every hand we can get, and once you give
them papers they leave Almeria and go elsewhere. They just use
Almeria as a trampoline. It's their first step to legal work in
Europe.
Racial conflicts are being encouraged with vastly exaggerated
figures and myths. It is undeniable that thousands of Moroccans
and sub-Saharan people are fleeing civil war, ethnic cleansing
and appalling social conditions all over the African continent,
to attempt to eke out a living somewhere else in the world. But
non European Union nationalslegal and illegalare
thought to amount to a mere 0.7 percent of the Spanish population.
The relative handful of highly exploited and oppressed workers
is being blamed for the decline in living standards of Spanish
workers. The Instituto Nacional de Estadistica (National Institute
of Statistics) reported a few days ago that inflation this year
had increased to 4.1 percent, while wages had only risen by 2.4
percent. In contrast, profits have grown a staggering 45 percent
on last year's rate.
Social conditions in the southern Spain are even worse than
in the rest of the country, with unemployment widespread amongst
the youth in particular. Immigrant workers in the south earn half
Spain's average rural wage, some £18 a day, with no guarantees
or social security. Right wing and fascist forces use this to
stoke up anti-immigrant sentiment based on fears that wages will
be lowered even further and jobs lost through competition with
immigrants. This is made easier by the silence of the trade unions
over the appalling treatment meted out to so-called illegal immigrants.
In July last year in the town of El Ejido, Almería, racist
attacks on North African immigrants took place for three days
and nights running. The workers responded with strikes and protests.
As a result, the autonomous government promised improved wages
and living conditions, but o date, hardly any of these have been
implemented and the tensions have continued.
In their attempt to reach Europe via Spain, hundreds of immigrants
are drowning in the Strait of Gibraltar, which they attempt to
cross in poorly constructed boats. According to Rafael Lara, the
president of the Pro-Human Rights Association, the number of bodies
found on both sides of the Strait this year was 210, compared
to about 100 last year. Many more have never been found. The
Strait has become a 57 by 13.2 kilometre common grave. It is real
genocide, the Association's report says. Others are conned
by unscrupulous human traffickers, suffocate in lorries or are
imprisoned and sometimes beaten to death in police stations. The
majority are sent back home (14,000 from Magreb alone, according
to Pro-Human Rights).
Many immigrant workers end up in mental hospitals. A recent
report on mental health by the Servicio de Atención
Psicopatológica y Psicosocial a Inmigrantes y Refugiados
(SAPPIR) in Barcelona states that the trauma of emigrating,
the difficulties faced in obtaining work and housing and, above
all, being separated from their family for long periods of time
are often too much for immigrant workers. They name Hamed, a sub-Saharan
immigrant worker as an example, who arrived in Spain in a little
boat after fleeing war and misery. Now, a year later, he is in
the Clinico hospital in Barcelona suffering from schizophrenia.
See Also:
Spanish government clamps down
on Basque separatist ETA
[13 November 2000]
Spanish Prime Minister Aznar
spearheads drive to deregulate Europe's economies
[1 November 2000]
Spain
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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