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German interior ministers demand speedy deportations
Refugees from Iraq, Afghanistan and Kosovo targetted
By Elisabeth Zimmermann
3 June 2003
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At their May 15 conference in the city of Erfurt, interior
ministers representing the German Federal Republic and individual
German states decided that refugees coming from Iraq, Afghanistan
and Kosovo should be returned to their native countries as rapidly
as possible.
The first step is to increase pressure on the refugees to make
them leave Germany voluntarily. For the time being,
deportations to Iraq and Afghanistan are excluded due to the deplorable
state of these countries devastated by war, and also because there
are no direct flights available to Iraq. However, the interior
ministers decided that Iraqis must be returned as soon as
deportations are possible.
Already before the conference, the interior ministers of states
ruled by the CDU (Christian Democratic Union) had demanded that
deportations to Afghanistan begin as quickly as possible. According
to the interior minister of Hesse, Volker Bouffier (CDU), several
interior ministers from states governed by the SPD (German Social
Democratic Party) supported the proposal.
In the weeks before, Bouffier had been campaigning in rabble-rousing
fashion, demanding deportations to Afghanistan. As he stated to
the German Press Agency (DPA), It should be possible to
begin with deportations by the first of July. According
to his figures, 5,000 Afghan refugees live in Hesse2,000
of whom have already exceeded their allowed stay in Germany and
are already obliged to leave. While the remainder have applied
for asylum, any acceptance of their applications has been excluded.
With regard to Romani people and members of the Serb minority
in Kosovo, the interior ministers reserved the right to organized
deportations and to make use of force. They definitely ruled out
the possibility of granting these refugees a permanent right of
residence, as called for by a number of refugee organisations.
The conference and the decisions made by the interior ministers
highlight the cynicism of the German SPD-Green Party coalition
government. For years it supported United Nations sanctions against
Iraq and only opposed the US-British war half-heartedly. Nowafter
the war has devastated what remained of the infrastructure, and
water and energy supply, and with millions of people threatened
by poverty and diseasethe first priority of the federal
and various state governments is to send the few people who managed
to flee to Germany back to a life of poverty and misery in Iraq.
The German government is at least partially responsible for these
deplorable living conditions.
The same is true in respect to the situation in Afghanistan.
Only a few days before the conference of interior ministers, representatives
of the UN and Amnesty International (AI) warned against deporting
thousands of Afghan refugees back to Afghanistana country
increasingly spiralling out of control. In the May 14 edition
of the German newspaper Frankfurter Rundschau, Stefan Telöken,
the spokesman of the UNHCR (Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees) in Germany, explained that any signal
of deportation of refugees to Afghanistan is absolutely
premature.
Telöken referred to the report by Lakdar Brahimi, United
Nations special emissary in Afghanistan, that was presented to
the UN Security Council at the beginning of May. It states that
the security situation in most parts of the country, as well as
in Kabul itself, has declined considerably, with fighting
taking place between the Taliban, the supporters of the notorious
clan leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, and other clans. The report concludes
that the Afghan interim government is incapable of dealing with
the situation. According to Telöken, the worsening of the
situation explains why the number of refugees returning to Afghanistan
has fallen considerably this year compared to 2002, when about
1.8 million people returned to Afghanistan from the surrounding
countries where they had taken refuge.
In a letter to the conference of German interior ministers,
Amnesty International comes to similar conclusions regarding the
situation in Afghanistan. A delegation from the human rights organization
had recently conducted its own research in Afghanistan. In the
letter, AI warns of setting a date for deportations and questioning
the asylum status of accepted refugees.
According to Amnesty International, Former members of
the military, supporters of the communist regime, women, and people
who would prefer a secular state are those most likely to be persecuted
when they returnbecause former Mujaheddin and royalists
have the say in the interim government as well as in the local
authorities. Even the UN organisations would be unable to protect
those returning, as they themselves are being targeted by the
radicals.
In Germany, 68,000 Afghans are victims of political pressure
urging them to leave the country: 17,000 are formally obliged
to leave and have only received short-term residence permits from
the German authorities; 51,000 have been granted a long-term right
of residence. Many of these have lived in Germany for many years,
establishing professions, marrying and beginning families. But
the legal situation for refugees in Germany is precarious. The
right of residence of accepted refugees can be revoked by a so-called
revocation procedure, which can be initiated by the
Federal Office for the Acceptance of Foreign Refugees.
In the midst of the recent war in Iraq, Spiegel Online
reported on April 3 the story of 42-year-old Iraqi refugee Mohammed
al-Ali. He had managed to escape to Germany after spending 11
years in Iraqi prisons, where he suffered severe physical and
psychological injuries. Al-Ali had been sentenced because allegedly
he and his father had supported the 1991 Shiite uprising by coming
to the assistance of wounded victims. His own father died in prison.
Spiegel Online reports: It was only in December
last year that al-Ali was able to escape from Iraq to seek refuge
in Germanyat least temporarilybecause the German authorities
want to send this refugee, whose whole body is covered with scars,
back to Iraq as quickly as possiblein complete disregard
of all public declarations made by the SPD-Green government, which
claims they are sympathetic to the situation of the brutally suppressed
Iraqi population. For al-Ali this is already the second time in
his life when he can personally experience how little words and
deeds have to do with one another in Western Democracies.
Confirmation that the fate of al-Ali is not an exceptional
case or misunderstanding by the authorities, but rather evidence
of a systematic policy of deterrence carried out by the German
authorities, is provided by a report in the March 31 print edition
of Der Spiegel. The magazine states: There
is still a war going on, but the offices of the German authorities
are already considering what should be done with 84,000 Iraqis
living in Germany.
Der Spiegel quotes a high-ranking official from the
federal office dealing with refugees, who indicated that after
the overthrow of Saddam Hussein the way would be clear to
revoke the legal status of a large number of asylum-seekersas
a prerequisite for possible deportations. The first draft
by the federal ministry, outlining a plan to return the 68,000
Afghans, was issued to the governments of the German states last
week.
Four years after the NATO war against Yugoslavia, the situation
in Kosovo remains catastrophic. According to the decisions made
by the conference of interior ministers, Romani people and members
of the Serbian minority are to be deported to a region where attacks
against minorities are a daily occurrence. The population has
virtually no access to medical supplies and education, and 90
percent of Romani people and Serbs in the region are unemployed.
See Also:
Germany: Deportation centre opens in Bavaria
[17 September 2002]
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/sep2002/bav-s17.shtml
European Union plan to restrict immigration
[20 June 2002]
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2002/jun2002/immi-j20.shtml
Fate of Kosovars highlights Europes attitude to refugees
[16 April 1999]
http://www.wsws.org/articles/1999/apr1999/asyl-a16.shtml
For futher reading see also: Bouffier,
refugees, CDU, Christian Democratic Union, SPD, German, Social
Democratic Party, Germany, Telöken, Romani, Kosovo, Afghan,
Iraqi, al-Ali
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