Archive for the ‘Migrant Crisis’ Category

Could Covid-19 Mean the End of Asylum Law in the United States? – The Nation

A migrant carrying a toddler stands in front of the border wall that divides Sunland Park, N.M., with Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. (Herika Martinez / AFP / Getty Images)

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The decision to flee ones country is never made easily, and leaving is rarely simple. In northern Mexico, along the United States border, weve met Hondurans who spent years saving up the money to make the trip; Salvadorans who walked for months; Haitians who crisscrossed countries to make it to the border. Every year, thousands of asylum seekers from countries like Russia, China, Romania, and India travel tens of thousands of miles to try to cross the border in northern Mexico. One of the most established refugee routes starts further south: Weve met people escaping ethnic violence in Cameroon who flew into Quito, the mountainous capital of Ecuador, and then trekked hundreds of miles north through swamp and jungle to make it to the United States.Ad Policy

For almost all of the people who made this kind of journey but were unlucky enough to complete it in the past two months, their time in this country has lasted less than a few hours before they were summarilyand illegallydeported back into Mexico. Since March 21, the Trump administration has sent over 20,000 people back across the border, thousands of whom would have otherwise sought refugee protection. In that same time, only two people were allowed to stay to seek asylum.

One of the earliest victims of the coronavirus pandemic in the United States was the countrys refugee system. On March 20, the Trump administration announced a sweeping and unprecedented order: Instead of processing new arrivals for asylum, the Border Patrol was encouraged to deport them as rapidly as possible. The United Nations said the decision was illegal under international law; advocacy groups and elected officials called the new policy a travesty. The administration defended the move, claiming it was only a temporary, 30-day measure to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. But the rapid expulsion policy remains in place, almost two months later. It has not yet been challenged in court.

While the administration has justified the end of asylum on the border as a necessary public health measure, its not hard to see the ways in which the pandemic is merely the pretext for the order, not the motivation. From its earliest days, one of the Trump administrations chief objectives has been overturning and circumventing US laws that were designed to protect refugees and people seeking protection, as well as unaccompanied children, says Eleanor Acer, the senior director of refugee protection for Human Rights First. Its now using the pandemic as yet another weapon to try to circumvent US asylum law.Read Next

On May 13, Human Rights First published a detailed report exploring the effects of the new effective asylum ban, with research based on interviews with asylum seekers in Mexico and legal experts on both sides of the border. The report found that the United States has forced over 1,000 unaccompanied children back into Mexico to fend for themselves; it also discovered that many people have been kidnapped, raped, or assaulted once returned to Mexico. The legal analysis was unambiguous: The expulsion policies violate U.S. asylum, immigration, and anti-trafficking laws, due process protections, and binding treaty obligations. U.N. Refugee Agency (UNHCR) legal guidance makes clear that a public health emergency cannot justify blanket measure[s] blocking asylum seekers.

Why, despite its clear illegality, has the total asylum ban remained in place? Scholars of immigration say the administration has capitalized on two things: the current crisis, and over 100 years of anti-immigrant propaganda casting immigrants as diseased.

Organizations that would typically challenge the law, such as the American Civil Liberties Union, are in disarray, as they deal with the shock of multiple emergencies and a pandemic that is impacting their lawyers across the country. However, even after the intensity of the shutdowns and quarantines wear off, advocates worry that fears of diseased outsiders will make Americansincluding those who otherwise support the institution of asylummore willing to give up on refugee law: Foreigners will simply be seen as too dangerous to admit, no matter the circumstances.Current Issue

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Immigration policies have often become more restrictive in the wake of crisis. After the September 11 attacks, refugee resettlement was briefly halted. Less than a year after the attacks, two new militarized agencies were created to apprehend and detain both unauthorized immigrants and asylum seekers: Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection. Worldwide, the 2008 economic crisis and the 2015 European migrant crisis led to massively increased hostility towards migrants and the abrogation of EU obligations regarding migrants.

Crisis produces an instinct to close the border and keep people out, says Charanya Krishnaswarmi, Amnesty Internationals advocacy director for the Americas.

But the Covid-19 pandemic might create long-term damage to refugee law in ways other crises have not: Sickness provides a convenient pretext to mask xenophobia. Even in the best of times, immigrants are seen by those seeking to limit immigration as a threat to our culture, our economic well-being. Now, the risk of a deadly virus means the outsiders can be presented as an existential threat as well.

Historically, anti-immigration proponents have often used the threat of illness to justify calls to end both refugee protections and immigration. An outbreak of bubonic plague in San Franciscos Chinatown was one of the precipitating events that led to the racially motivated Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, which all but barred Chinese immigration. On New Yorks Ellis Island, European immigrants underwent medical exams and those deemed disabled or diseased were summarily deported. Chinese immigrants, when they were able to make it to the United States at all, often fared far worse: In the first half of the 20th century, Angel Island, in the San Francisco Bay, was used to quarantine Chinese and other Asian immigrants, subjecting them to humiliating medical exams that included analyzing a stool sample to prove they were free of parasites and diseases.

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More recently, Stephen Miller, President Donald Trumps chief adviser on immigration, has encouraged the president to play up fears of disease among Central American migrants to restrict asylum. During the 2014 West African Ebola crisis, conservative Republicanswithout any evidenceaccused Mexican and Latin American migrants of bringing the disease over the southern border. When two prominent migrant caravans arrived on the southern border last fall, one Fox News guest fanned fears that the Central American migrants would bring leprosy into the country.

In the last two decades, across the world, political leaders seeking to limit immigration have found success in playing up public health fears, a strategy human rights scholars have studied for years, and which we call medicalized migration. Fears of both migrants and disease have led to the medicalization of borders on six different continents, with the implementation of medical examination, required vaccines, testing, and quarantine.

In the current crisis, these supposedly medical fears havent been equally applied: Even as the United States moved to ban asylum seekers in the early days of the pandemic, hundreds of thousands of Americans were permitted to return from abroad, often through airports with little to no screening measures in place.

It goes without saying that medical measures such as quarantines and inspections are vital tools in the current pandemic, but doctors are clear that the implementation of such measures is useful only when guided by public health science and not politics. As US citizens living abroad have flown home without so much as a temperature check, immigrants and refugees have been subjected to draconian medical measuresa difference that betrays the administrations politicization of medical responses to the pandemic. The administrations hesitance to place the same measures on citizens and noncitizens hampered its handling of the pandemic, wasting precious time that could have been used to help contain the virus. This unequal and punitive application of medical screenings has therefore been just one more way the administration has botched its response to the virus, and may be one with the most lasting effects.

In the initial phase of the pandemic, travel restrictions to and from China became widespread, with some 96 countries instituting travel restrictions. Now, almost 90 percent of the worlds population live in countries with some kind of travel restriction on travelers who are neither citizens nor residents. Widespread testing on arrival and mandated quarantine or self-isolation measures have been implemented from Japan to Australia. Although governments the world over have cited concerns about health and safety when announcing Covid-19 policies, they have clearly prioritized the health and safety of their own citizens over those of other countries. The suspension of asylum hearings in the United States, along with the continued deportation of migrants, and the refusal to shut detention centers, demonstrates a willingness to imperil the health and safety of noncitizens in the name of public health.

On April 21, the president announced plans to temporarily suspend immigration into the United States in a move Democrats have called xenophobic scapegoating. Covid-19 has made tangible the parallels the president himself has drawn between migrants and disease, and given such claims a veneer of legitimacy. Medicalized migration reinforces this connection between immigrant and threat, while simultaneously buttressing the inequalities between citizens and noncitizens.

What does this mean for the future of refugee law? Human Rights Firsts Acer, like other refugee experts we spoke to, suspects that the new, total asylum ban will last long after the coronavirus pandemic ends. I expect they will fight to make it last as long as this administration, however long that is, she says.

The fear is these measures will be in place long after pandemic ends, Krishnaswarmi, of Amnesty International, said.

However, even if asylum is reinstated on the southern border (for instance, under a hypothetical Democratic administration), Acer worries that the pandemic-inspired exclusions policy might have already done significant damage to international refugee protections. What Im worried about now is how countries like Hungary and Turkey will be emboldened to further refuse refugees, she says. The language of public health creates a convenient narrative for anti-immigrant zealots like Hungarian President Viktor Orbn to obscure racist and Islamaphobic rhetoric with the language of medical necessity.

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The Trump administrations cynical use of the pandemic to further its anti-immigrant agenda is not unique: Far-right groups in Italy, Austria, France, and Germany have all drawn links between foreigners and Covid-19 in an attempt to pressure governments into more-discriminatory immigration policies. With dwindling supplies of PPE and no vaccine in sight, such policies are likely to continue as governments and panicked populations face the economic and biological impact of reopening borders. The existential threat of Covid-19 has prompted a swift retreat to the nation-state, at the cost of international human rights, as countries rush to fly their own citizens home while keeping others out.

This has produced a slow-moving crisis in the making: As devastating as the impact of Covid-19 has been on the Global North, its spread into the Global South threatens suffering on a scale not yet seen, and could fuel the next generation of mass movement out of Latin America and Africa. Now, those seeking to escape the economic, social, and medical ravages wrought by Covid-19 are likely to come up against immigration policies unprecedented in their hostility and suspicion of foreigners.

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Could Covid-19 Mean the End of Asylum Law in the United States? - The Nation

"India Fortunate To Have PM, But…" Sena Jabs BJP On 1-Year Of Government – NDTV

Shiv Sena on Monday attacked PM Narendra Modi over migrant crisis.

As NDA completed its first year in power, Shiv Sena on Monday attacked PM Narendra Modi and BJP over the issues of recent migrant crisis and demonetisation of 2016.

Sena said that the imposition of "bungled" lockdown and hardships being faced by migrant workers in the last two months reminded of the plight of the people displaced during the Partition of 1947.

"India is fortunate to have leadership like Narendra Modi! He feels for the country and various issues. He is a strong and capable leader and there is no alternative to him," said the editorial in the Shiv Sena mouthpiece ''Saamana''.

Stating that PM Modi has taken some good decision, the edit also said that like "some mistakes which had happened in the 60 years (preceding 2014 when the Congress had mostly ruled the country), the last six years (of the NDA government) had also seen some mistakes".

The Congress is a ruling constituent in the Sena-led Maharashtra government.

Recently, Congress leader Rahul Gandhi had said that his party was not a decision-maker in the Maharashtra government, triggering speculation over coordination among three partners, other being the NCP, in the state government.

"The manner in which the lockdown was imposed in the country and hardships the poor migrant labourers had to suffer because of it reminded many of the partition days.

"How to rectify this mistake? India is fortunate to have Modi as the leader, but how can life of those who died during the lockdown and demonetisation (in 2016) be brought back again?" the Sena questioned.

The Sena also took a dig at leaders of the BJP for hailing the last six years of the NDA rule like never before.

"If leaders of the BJP to be believed our country has history of only six years (since Modi came to power in 2014). It seems India did not exist prior to that. Fight for Independence and struggle to become a nation, and the country's growth on fronts of industry, society, science and medicine is just an illusion," the edit said.

The Sena, however, said PM Modi had rectified some past mistakes by "abrogating Article 370 in Jammu and Kashmir, abolishing triple talaq, and starting the construction of a Ram temple in Ayodhya".

"In 1971, Indira Gandhi avenged Partition of India by breaking Pakistan and creating Bangladesh. Should this be considered a historic achievement or a blunder? (late PM) Rajiv Gandhi had laid foundation for digital revolution in India. (Former PMs) Narasimha Rao and Manmohan Singh had improved the country's economy. If all this is wrong, how are you (BJP) going to rectify this?" the Sena asked the BJP.

In the last 70 years, Atal Bihari Vajpayee of BJP had served as the PM for five-and-a-half years while other leaders like VP Singh and Chandrashekar served as PMs for nearly two years, it said.

"Those who say that all this period was a waste and India grew in just six years from 2014, it would be wrong," it said.

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"India Fortunate To Have PM, But..." Sena Jabs BJP On 1-Year Of Government - NDTV

After several deaths on special trains, Piyush Goyal urges people to travel only when necessary – Scroll.in

Union Railway Minister Piyush Goyal on Friday urged people to travel in Shramik Special trains only when necessary. His comments came after at least nine migrants died on board the special trains since Monday as a severe heatwave hit most of northern India.

I appeal to people suffering from serious ailments, pregnant women and those above 65 years and below 10 years of age to travel only when necessary in Shramik trains, he tweeted. Railway parivaar is committed to ensuring safety of all passengers.

In a statement, the Indian Railways said special trains were being run daily throughout the country to ensure that migrant workers were able to reach their homes. It has been observed that some people who are availing this service have pre-existing medical conditions which aggravates the risk they face during the Covid-19 pandemic, it added. A few unfortunate cases of deaths related to pre-existing medical conditions while travelling have happened.

The Railways sought cooperation from all passengers, saying safety was their biggest concern. Indian railway parivaar is working 24x7 to ensure that rail services are provided to all the citizens of the country needing to travel, it said. In case of any distress or emergency please do not hesitate to reach out to your railway parivaar and we will help you as always [helpline number 139 and 138].

The Centre had started the special trains on May 1 to transport migrant workers back to their home states after they were stranded in different parts of the country during the coronavirus-induced lockdown from March 25. However, there have been reports of trains not only starting late, but also taking longer to reach their destinations. The Railways claimed the trains that were delayed by many hours taking unconventional routes, such as one from Mumbai to Gorakhpur that ended up in Odisha, were just involved in route rationalisation. Passengers have also complained about the lack of food and water on these trains.

Meanwhile, the Railways has maintained that the migrants who died on trains had pre-existing medical conditions. In most of these cases, it is discovered that those who died are old sick people and chronic disease patients, who had actually gone to big cities for medical treatment and could come back only after the Railways started these special trains, a spokesperson said.

On Thursday, the National Human Rights Commission issued notices to the Union Home Ministry, the Railway Board and the Bihar and Gujarat governments in connection with the deaths on special trains. The NHRC took suo motu cognisance of media reports that claimed that many migrant labourers lost their lives during their journey because of how long they were and due to the absence of arrangements for drinking water and food.

The poor labourers cannot be treated in such an inhuman manner just because they are poor and the government has paid for their tickets, it added. Any shortcoming on the part of the government agencies cannot be covered under excuse of unprecedented situation amid countrywide lockdown.

The NHRC said the state has failed to protect the lives of those who died. The female labourers, old aged persons, ill persons, small children and specially abled persons are reportedly suffering a lot, it added. Many times the poor labourers have been told to go back as the trains got cancelled.

A video of a child trying to wake up his dead mother at the Muzaffarpur railway station in Bihar was also widely shared on social media on Wednesday. It was the latest visual to emerge from the unprecedented humanitarian crisis of millions of migrant labourers affected by the nationwide lockdown to tackle the coronavirus outbreak in India.

On Thursday, the Supreme Court ruled that the Railways and the state governments cannot charge train or bus fares from stranded migrant workers waiting to return home. It observed that there were several problems in the process of registration, transportation and providing water and food to the migrants.

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After several deaths on special trains, Piyush Goyal urges people to travel only when necessary - Scroll.in

Greek Minister for Migration and Asylum: "Our country is not an open vineyard" – Greek City Times – Greek City Times

In order to deal with the immigration crisis, we are moving in three stages, said Greeces Migrationand AsylumMinister, Notis Mitarachi during an interview with CNN Greece.

The first step for us was to better guard the borders and already in the last quarter the flows have been reduced by more than 90% thanks to the great effort of the Armed Forces, the Police and the Coast Guard.

The second big effort is to separate real refugees from economic migrants, and this quarter we have tripled the issuance of asylum decisions, Mitarachi added.

The third major stage is to have less and safer structures with security measures and with access control measures.

According to Mitarachi, arrivals reduced by more than 90%. A total of about 250 people entered our country in May compared to more than 3,000 who entered in May 2019. The reduction is very significant. To some extent, of course, it was influenced by the pandemic in the neighbouring country, but above all it is the determination of our country. Our country is not an open vineyard We are protecting our land and sea borders and we will continue to do so even now that the borders are slowly reopening.

The Minister stressed that he has absolute respect for the local communities, which have long felt that they are lifting a very heavy burden on immigration. Especially our islands but also some areas of mainland Greece. Our goal is to make the structures smaller, secondly to keep them less in the structures and thirdly to make the structures safer. And we will start with Malakasa.

Malakasa will become the first controlled-access refugee and migrant facility in mainland Greece.

Mitarakis said that a system controlling who comes in an out the camp will be installed within the coming weeks, while individuals who are not entitled to stay at the overcrowded facility will be deported.

His comments come a day after residents in Malakasa blocked the Athens-Lamia national highway, to protest the plans for the camp, which will be the second one in the area, supplementing an open facility that is currently in operation.

Six officers were injured in the clashes and five people were remanded in custody.

The locals described the migrant camp in Malakasa as a health bomb due to the coronavirus. They also claim that the refugees and migrants disturb the area with their presence, as they do not stay inside the camps but gather at the squares and have barbecues near the forested area.

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Greek Minister for Migration and Asylum: "Our country is not an open vineyard" - Greek City Times - Greek City Times

Harshvardhan Rane: I feel helpless looking at the condition of migrant workers suffering due to loc… – Hindustan Times

Not one to sulk and crib, actor Harshvardhan Rane believes in looking at the brighter side of any given situation. However, amid the ongoing lockdown due to Covid-19 pandemic, thinking about the plight of migrant workers stranded on the roads and walking miles to reach their home, makes his heart sink.

Though theres some respite after the Indian Railways began its operations in some states to ensure these migrants reach their villages safely, the actor feels this should have been arranged much before to prevent such a migrant crisis.

I feel so low and helpless looking at their condition. My smile gets wiped off from my face when I watch their news. Were sitting in the comfort of our home and have food and shelter, but these guys are struggling to get water and food, and just want to reach their homes. Its just sad to see people suffer like that, says Rane.

He adds that even if one wants to offer help, its not easy to reach them. I wish I had some superpower to help them.

When it comes to the measures taken by administration in containing the spread of the virus in the country, the 36-year-old feels theyve done a good job so far.

By imposing lockdown right on time, weve saved many lives . Of course, there have been people who flouted the norms, but our police has done a good job. It isnt easy at all, he opines.

Keeping himself occupied during such trying times and working on his mental, physical and intellectual well-being, Rane feels he ha become a better version of himself.

As the Paltan (2018) actor puts it, This lockdown has been like a software update for me. Its a great time to reset and update yourself and mind, body and knowledge are the three main areas Im focusing on. Ive started running 10 kms for the first time, and I do this daily in the parking space of my building. I practise cognitive ability games to sharpen my mind.

Besides, Rane has also enrolled himself for an online course on human evolution and also reading books to understand what inspires people and their journey from being nowhere to somewhere.

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Harshvardhan Rane: I feel helpless looking at the condition of migrant workers suffering due to loc... - Hindustan Times