The Niagara Falls Review

Europe’s trend: Austria, once open, now shows migrants door

- GEORGE JAHN

VIENNA — Austria was among the first countries in Europe to put out the welcome mat when waves of people fleeing war and poverty reached the continent. Now, its focus is showing them the door.

Parliament is set to pass a law stripping pocket money, food and shelter from those denied asylum, potentiall­y leaving them on the street. The interior minister proudly touts figures showing Austria as the European Union’s per-capita leader in expelling those rejected.

Austrian courts are toughening up too. On Thursday, eight Iraqi men were sent to prison for up to 13 years for the gang rape of a German woman on New Year’s Eve more than a year ago.

Lawyer Andreas Reichenbac­h, who defended one of the men, said the stiff sentences were a signal to migrants that “when they come to Austria, that such behaviour won’t be tolerated.”

In Germany, where during the height of the influx Chancellor Angela Merkel insisted “we will manage ,” the government now considers some areas of Afghanista­n “safe ,” and has started returning failed asylum-seekers to those regions. Additional tough measures have followed Berlin’s deadly Christmas market attack by rejected Tunisian asylum-seeker Anis Amri and gains by the nationalis­t Alternativ­e for Germany party.

The pro-migrant attitudes that once led thousands of Austrian volunteers to turn out with food, shelter and advice to the first asylum-seekers are still heard some places, but they appear outnumbere­d.

“We have to keep welcoming those who have nowhere else to go,” said Marlis Bosch. “We in Austria have more than enough to share.”

A survey of 10 EU member countries last month showed 65 per cent of the 1,000 Austrian respondent­s favoured stopping all immigratio­n from Muslim nations. Only Poles scored higher — at 71 per cent — on Britain’s Royal Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs survey. But anti-migrant sentiment in Poland has been fueled by the government. Not so in Austria.

Former Chancellor Werner Fay mann urged Austrians to deal generous ly with migrants as late as fall 2015, even as his government worked to secure its borders. But he was forced out last year after migrant policies threatened to tear apart his government coalition after he took a harder line.

His successor, Christian Kern, has found little choice but to stay tough — or risk boosting the rightwing Freedom Party and its message that migrants are overwhelmi­ngly behind the kind of crimes the eight Iraqis were convicted of Thursday.

 ?? RONALD ZAK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Police forces stand in front of demonstrat­ors during a rally of the group Austrian protesters against migrants in Vienna, Austria.
RONALD ZAK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Police forces stand in front of demonstrat­ors during a rally of the group Austrian protesters against migrants in Vienna, Austria.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada