External border control is a legitimate concern of any State or group of
States. Cross-border crime and drug trafficking illustrate the need for
controls. At the same time, the European Union aims to be a place of exchanges
with countries on the other side of the Mediterranean, i.e. the Anna Lindh
Euro-Mediterranean Foundation for the Dialogue Between Cultures. We – Europeans
– have no difficulty in going to, say Egypt or Morocco in order to participate
in a seminar or a youth exchange. But have you ever tried to get an Egyptian or
Moroccan artist or young person over, for the same purpose? Expectations,
disappointments and rejection are usually on the agenda because of the general
suspicion of nationals from those countries.
Being an ageing continent, the EU must pursue immigration policies.
However, the EU devotes more resources to preventing immigration and does not
possess enough political will and imagination to develop a common immigration
policy.
All defenders of human rights must denounce the confusion between irregular immigration and the fight against crime. It should be remembered that
the right to leave one's country is a fundamental right enshrined in the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights and therefore any person who leaves his/her
country and turn up at the EU borders must be considered and treated as a human
being.
In this context, the fight against cross-border crime cannot use the
same instruments as those used for the control of irregulae immigration and for
the reception of asylum seekers.
Member States of the EU signed the Geneva Convention and are therefore obliged
to ensure an asylum procedure worthy of the name. It often seems they focus
more on preventing asylum seekers from entering their territory than on
providing access to a procedure.
A panoply of repressive
methods or a policy in line with EU values.
The question is whether the current EU policies will meet the needs,
create new problems or correspond to the values the EU upholds.
Initiatives like Eurosur, the Entry-Exit system (EES) and the Registered
Traveller Programme (RTP) clearly show a willingness to act. This activism runs
the risk of overwriting the necessary precautions with regard to human rights
and of ignoring policies on asylum and immigration.
Rather than trying to cover the issue in 850 words, let’s raise a few
questions:
What are the reasons behind the Eurosur, EES and RTP policies? On what
basis, studies and analysis are they based?
The huge database created by its tools of control will quickly come to
include information on tens of millions of citizens coming into the European
Union in order to detect those who have exceeded the usual three months (with
or without visa). But what of those with a 3-month residence permit who fall
ill and cannot go back in time? Will they be hunted down by Interpol the very
next day?
If a boat carrying irregular migrants is identified in the Mediterranean
and is taken on by the EU authorities, those on board will be saved (following the
age-old tradition of rescues at sea, since codified by the International
Maritime Organisation). But what fate awaits those who are saved? Will they be
sent without any hesitation back to the Libya of yesteryear, today's Turkey or
a Syria engulfed in flame?
Military vessels made available to Frontex by Member States have a
special status – not only do they have complete immunity, they are also a part
of the national territory. People picked up on these vessels should therefore benefit
fully from the legislation in force in those countries and in particular they
should benefit from rights relative to refugees. Vessels participating in a
Frontex operation should not only be explicitly obliged to rescue migrants in peril,
but should also be obliged to consider those rescued as having entered on their
national territory. Nevertheless, do these people have access to all available and
required procedures that exist in the national state?
The Fundamental Rights Agency – a useful instrument of the EU – is
unfortunately not mandated to assume the role of monitoring and evaluating compliance
with human rights. In the context of the policies in question, should we not
change the mandate of the Agency and make it a real independent authority in
accordance with the Paris Principles?
Debate remains open. And our values – values cast in stone in the
Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union – remain.
Serge Kollwelter, Chair of the European Association for the Defense of
Human Rights AEDH
Sources:
AEDH :
Press release Eurosur: “When border control
takes precedence over migrants’ lives” – 20 June 2012, http://www.aedh.eu/Eurosur-When-border-control-takes.html
Heinrich-Böll
“Borderline – The EU’s new border
surveillance initiatives: assessing the costs and
fundamental rights implications of EUROSUR and the ‘Smart Borders’ Proposals” - 6 July 2012
AEDH : NGOs joint letter to MEPs on the
proposal for a regulation to establish Eurosur – 9 July 2012
AEDH : Joint letter to MEPs on
Eurosur – 3 September 2012, http://www.aedh.eu/NGO-joint-letter-to-MEPs-on.html
in: Government Gazette March 2013
in: Government Gazette March 2013
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