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WSWS : News
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58 Chinese migrants found dead in lorry at Dover, Britain
By Julie Hyland
21 June 2000
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The tragic deaths of 58 Chinese people, found in the back of
a lorry early on Monday, highlight the desperate situation facing
asylum-seekers and refugees.
The bodies of fifty-four men and four women were discovered
in an airtight 18 metre-long container at the port of Dover. The
driver of the Dutch-registered lorry had just made the crossing
from Zeebrugge, Belgium, when his vehicle was pulled over for
inspection by a customs official.
According to reports, when the container doors were opened
a scene out of a nightmare confronted the officer.
Warm and putrid smelling air rushed out. Two men lay by the doors,
gasping for breath. Behind them were 58 bodies lying sprawled
between crates of tomatoes. Officials who entered the container
are receiving counselling.
It is likely that the 58 died of asphyxiation, although there
is a possibility of carbon monoxide poisoning. It is believed
that the 60 people had been trapped inside the container for more
than 18 hours. Electricity to the refrigeration unit had been
turned off throughout the journey, during summer temperatures
of up to 32C (90F).
The two survivors were taken to hospital suffering from extreme
dehydration. A hospital spokesman said, I think the psychological
torment will stay with them for the rest of their lives.
Speaking through a translator, the survivors described how the
trapped passengers had tried to raise the alarm in Zeebrugge,
screaming and banging on the locked doors, but no one could hear
their cries.
The lorry driver has been arrested and police are attempting
to establish who is behind the Dutch haulage company, Van Der
Spek Transporten, which was registered only five days ago.
The 60 are believed to have travelled from the southern Chinese
province of Fujian on the Taiwan Strait. They are only a handful
of the tens of thousands that flee China each year, seeking escape
from grinding poverty and oppression. Britain has the largest
Chinese population in Europe, and the number of those applying
for asylum from China has more than doubled recently, to 500 per
month. Those found suffocated to death at Dover would have paid
up to $30,000 to get to Britain. Most would have only been able
to raise a deposit and would be forced to pay off the rest by
working as virtual slave labour in restaurants and sweatshops,
or as prostitutes.
The response of Britain's Labour government to the tragedy
at Dover, one echoed by the world's media, has been to treat it
essentially as a policing issue. Prime Minister Tony Blair and
Home Secretary Jack Straw have denounced the spread of trafficking
in asylum-seekers and refugees by criminal gangs as, in Straw's
words, a profoundly evil trade.
While this form of commerce is undeniably among the most abhorrent
forms of criminal activity, it is both disingenuous and self-serving
for the British authorities, and their counterparts in the rest
of Europe and North America, to act as though they had no responsibility
for its proliferation. From the sanctimonious statements of Blair
and the reports in the mass media, one could hardly guess that
the policies pursued by Western governments have directly contributed
to the rapid rise in the number of refugees, and their increasingly
brutal treatment by governments around the world. There is, in
fact, an intimate connection between the policies of the British
Labour government and the tragic deaths of the 58 Chinese asylum-seekers.
Earlier this year, the Blair government passed some of the
most restrictive and anti-democratic asylum and immigration legislation
in the world. The Asylum and Immigration Act introduced "fast-track"
procedures to speed up deportations and replaced cash benefits
payable to asylum-seekers with vouchers. Asylum seekers are repeatedly
denounced as bogus and scapegoated by the government
and the media, often in racist terms, in order to divert attention
from the impact of welfare cuts on working people.
Britain currently rejects 95 percent of all asylum applications
from China. The two survivors of the Dover tragedy will almost
certainly be deportedand have already been moved out of
hospital to a police station for questioning.
The Labour government is, moreover, demanding changes to the
1951 United Nations Convention on Refugees that would drastically
curtail the right of asylum. Straw wants only those applying for
asylum before they leave their country of originand
only from countries internationally condemned for severe human
rights abusesto be eligible. The proposal is said to have
the support of many of Europe's governments.
It is already virtually impossible for refugees and asylum-seekers
to enter Europe legally. The European Union (EU) has scaled back
the number of countries it recognises for asylum. Heavy fines
are imposed on airlines, shippers and trucking companies found
to be carrying stowaways, whilst border controls have been stepped
up.
Even as EU leaders meeting for a summit in Portugal this week
expressed their sadness at the 58 deaths, they promised
even harsher anti-immigrant measures. In a joint statement they
pledged that the 15 EU countries would step up cooperation over
immigration and asylum.
The situation is no different in the US, once the favoured
destination of Chinese migrants. In January this year America
deported 246 stowaways back to the Fujian province as part of
a clamp-down.
The Beijing government has for years pursued the rapid development
of private industry and the dismantling of state enterprises and
social provisions, at a terrible social cost to China's workers
and peasants. A similar situation faces millions of working people
in Eastern Europe, the second largest departure point for migration
to Western Europe.
Europe and America have both insisted on the implementation
of these market reforms and turned a blind eye to the abuses of
democratic rights that have accompanied it. Yet when the victims
of these policies seek refuge from their travails, they invariably
meet with rejection and vilification as economic refugees,
unworthy of asylum status.
See Also:
Audit Commission report critical of Britain's
compulsory dispersal of refugees
[6 June 2000]
Racial
Violence and Immigrant Issues in Britain
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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