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WSWS : News
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: Spain
Spanish government immigration policy costs migrant lives
By Keith Lee
26 August 2004
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The recently elected Socialist Party governments immigration
policy has done nothing to alleviate the suffering of an increasingly
desperate number of immigrants trying to reach Spain from Africa.
In the main it has continued the right-wing policy of its Popular
Party (PP) predecessor, which allowed small numbers of migrants
into Spain to work in menial jobs, whilst excluding the vast majority
as part of its efforts to consolidate a Fortress Europe.
Spain has come under pressure from the European Union to strengthen
its borders, and has received massive funding in order to stem
the flow of refugees from Morocco and Algeria. One of the governments
first measures for controlling migration flows was to raise the
height of the double fence that surrounds Spains remaining
possessions in North Africa from 4 metres to over 8.2 metres.
The majority of migrants who try to reach the Spanish enclave
of Ceuta on the African coast hide in mountain camps, living in
makeshift shelters before making the 50-kilometre trek overland
to Ceuta. While a handful avoids the Spanish police, most are
sent back with beatings and teargas in their lungs.
Morocco has been reluctant to bow to Spanish pressure over
immigration controls, especially as the country receives close
to $4 billion in revenue every year from workers overseas. The
remittances have been estimated at nine percent of GDPup
from five percent in the mid-1990s. Money transfers from workers
abroad, mainly from Italy, Spain and France, have played a crucial
role in Moroccos balance of payments. They are said to almost
offset its trade deficit and have increased its balance of payment
surpluses.
In an effort to strike some deal with Morocco over immigration,
Spains foreign minister, Miguel Angel Moratinos, had said,
We would like to promote with these neighbouring countries
a strong and mutually beneficial relation that is capable of facing
the challenges we confronting at the international level: terrorism,
control of migration flows and the construction of a space of
prosperity.
Yet for people trying to escape the grinding poverty and unemployment
in Africa the reality differs fundamentally from Moratinos
flowery rhetoric of shared interests. Recently, a mother and her
baby were among five people killed when their boat capsized trying
to reach the Spanish coast. Out of 33 people on board the vessel,
26 are still missing. So far this year 47 people have died trying
to reach Spain from Morocco.
Every year thousands of migrants risk their lives in an effort
to cross the 20-kilometre Straits of Gibraltar to reach Spain.
In one day last week police stopped one hundred people from reaching
Spanish soil. Many migrants pay up to 1,000 euros per person for
the crossing in inflatable rafts. Most crossings are made in summer
due to the better weather conditions.
New research by a Dutch based refugee support group has said
that over 4,500 refugees and migrants died last year trying to
enter Europe, and that the most deadly way to enter was across
the Mediterranean. Most of the 4,500 deaths occurred between Africa
and Spain.
The International Centre for Migration Policy has estimated
that 3,600 have died trying to reach Spain from Africa since 1997.
This somewhat conservative figure has been confirmed by the Madrid
government, which has also admitted that for every body found,
another two people are likely to be dead.
For those who survive the perilous journey, conditions inside
Spanish territory are appalling. El Pais reported that
at the main refugee centre at Ceuta where immigrants are detained
whilst their claims for asylum are assessed; over 80 people have
developed scabies. The 80 are part of a group of over 400 people
forced to sleep in the open. Many immigrants are also forced to
queue in the blazing sunshine for food and drinks provided by
a religious charity. Due to the paltry level of financial resources
provided by central government, if the charity runs out of money
then large numbers of people will starve.
While some of the luckier refugees have been sheltered in basic
accommodation, more than 1,000 are still waiting to be processed.
Apart from living in the streets, many are forced to live in rubbish
containers. If people put up temporary shelters these are immediately
torn down by the army.
One church group assisting migrants has said it can no longer
cope. The situation is extremely delicate, Father
Francisco Correrro said. His church has spent 18,000 euros since
March on food and shelter and has only 1,400 euros left. I
dont even have enough to pay for cleaning, he explained.
Immigration to Spain of any magnitude has been a recent phenomenon
and can be traced back to the early 1990s. Foreigners in Spain
constitute a small proportion of the populationjust six
percent, one of the smallest totals in Western Europe.
In 2003, four-fifths of the immigrants in Spain lived in 6
of its 17 regions. The figures on where immigrants in Spain came
from break down as follows: 22 percent from Europe, 13 percent
from Eastern Europe, 39 percent from Latin America and 20 percent
from Africa.
See Also:
Spain seeks to extend its
influence in North Africa
[31 July 2004]
European governments make
an example of Cap Anamur refugees
[22 July 2004]
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