Toronto Star

People smuggling boom has nations scrambling

Price for migrants to make illegal journey into Europe could reach up to $10,000

- MICHAEL BIRNBAUM

BRUSSELS— Amid the biggest wave of migration to Europe in decades, fastgrowin­g smuggling networks are spiriting Syrians and others to the continent, law enforcemen­t officials say — and there are few limits to the sophistica­tion of their efforts.

The 71corpses discovered in a truck on an Austrian roadside last week are only a grim glimpse of a fast-expanding wave of human smuggling hitting Europe, said officials who are charged with hunting the smugglers. Vans that once may have been used to smuggle cigarettes are being used for the much more fragile cargo of humans. On social networks and in person, migrants can pick from a menu of services, ranging from a slippery seat on a rubber dinghy to Greece all the way to a chartered business jet straight to the refugee haven of Sweden.

The long trek across the Western Balkans has taken fresh prominence in recent months after years in which Syrians and Iraqis fleeing war favoured a perilous sea route from Libya. Now, thousands of migrants set out every day to make the long journey from refugee camps neighbouri­ng Syria to the western European nations that have offered them safe harbour. They do so hand in hand with smugglers, who often advertise their services openly on Facebook and other social media sites.

“There is a growing number of networks that we saw in the past were dealing in the traffickin­g of illegal drugs and are now shifting to people smuggling,” said Robert Crepinko, head of the organized crime unit at Europol, the European Union’s policing arm. “The number of criminal activities is growing with the same speed as the number of illegal migrants.”

The criminal boom has been so rapid that Europol’s new online monitoring unit, which on July 1 began monitoring terrorist-related social media activity, has recently expan- ded to monitor smuggling, Crepinko said.

National law enforcemen­t authoritie­s have struggled to keep up with the influx of migrants, as old criminal rings move into new areas of business.

“As a global criminal enterprise, it is very lucrative,” said Patrik Engstrom, head of the Swedish police’s national border policing section, who has monitored human smuggling and traffickin­g for years, and watched as it has taken new life in Europe since the beginning of 2014.

Sweden, with Germany, has become Europe’s top destinatio­n for asylum seekers after the government announced that Syrian refugees would be granted permanent residency and the right to resettle their entire families within the country’s peaceful borders.

Engstrom said his agency has un- covered schemes to get to Sweden that are as basic as an RV over a bridge and as complicate­d as a chartered plane that lifted off from Turkey, charging the Syrian passengers about $10,000 (U.S.) each for the privilege. When they landed, they claimed asylum, he said.

The wide range of methods reflects the diverse circumstan­ces from which the asylum seekers are coming. Syria’s conflict, well into its fifth year, has upended the lives of many middle-class families with deep wells of savings. Many of them might have stayed close to Syria for years in the hopes of returning home before giving up and turning toward Europe.

Asylum seekers have powerful motivation­s to make it to wealthy nations such as Germany and Sweden without being detected along the way. If authoritie­s in other EU coun- tries detain them, they can be forced to apply for asylum under far less welcoming circumstan­ces.

Hungary has strung up a razor-wire fence along its frontier with Serbia, and Hungarian leaders this week barred their onward journey to Austria. Germany, meanwhile, expects to take up to 800,000 asylum seekers this year. Critics say that type of patchwork enforcemen­t only fuels the demand for smugglers.

“As it becomes more difficult to move in Europe, the cost for the migrants and the need for smugglers will go up,” said Tuesday Reitano, who heads the Global Initiative against Transnatio­nal Organized Crime.

There is a service for every price point, ranging in the hundreds of dollars for a choppy, below-deck voyage across the Mediterran­ean to thousands of dollars for longer, more complex journeys, law enforcemen­t officials said.

In a smartphone era, many of the smuggling services are available on Arabic-language Facebook and other social media sites. Migrants also communicat­e with one another along the journey using messaging tools such as WhatsApp to warn about where police coverage is heaviest.

“The Syrians are managing their trips in a much more savvy way than any other group that we’ve seen in the history of migration, that I’m aware of,” Reitano said.

The trip is made by boat, foot, rail and bus — and over the more than 1,600 kilometres between jumpingoff points in Turkey and the safety of Germany, smugglers are almost always involved in at least part of the journey, law enforcemen­t officials say.

Swedish authoritie­s think that 90 per cent of refugees reaching their territory used smugglers to ease at least a part of their trip. European officials estimate that the business runs in the billions of dollars.

“In Turkey, the smugglers are much more media-savvy and they cater to a specific audience,” said Izabella Cooper, a spokeswoma­n for Frontex, the EU border policing agency. “On social media, you can simply look up what’s available, there’s a specific date, and a specific type of transporta­tion being offered.”

Until earlier this year, the bulk of crossings came by sea, over the Mediterran­ean from northern Africa. Now the flow has shifted to the western Balkans, along routes that have long been used by human trafficker­s, but never at current volumes.

The sea journeys have drawn headlines with all-too-frequent capsized boats. But the Balkan routes also can carry great danger. There may be far more victims than the 71 suspected migrants who perished in the truck in Austria, authoritie­s say. Most of the asylum seekers making their way to Europe through the western Balkans pay smugglers for each leg of their journey ahead of time, giving their escorts little motivation to make sure they reach their destinatio­n safely.

 ?? MURAD SEZER/REUTERS ?? Hasan Ali Saleh, 25, a suspected Syrian smuggler, talks to his mother at a courthouse in Turkey on Friday.
MURAD SEZER/REUTERS Hasan Ali Saleh, 25, a suspected Syrian smuggler, talks to his mother at a courthouse in Turkey on Friday.

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