Manawatu Standard

Migrant crisis is Africa’s failure too

- ROGER BOYES

‘‘These days in Africa there are Africans who enslave other Africans,’’ French President Emmanuel Macron boomed.

The reference was to Libyans holding slave auctions of would-be refugees from Nigeria and Senegal. Some are sold to local farmers, others to building contractor­s. Deeply in debt to peoplesmug­glers, unable and unwilling to return home, unwanted in Europe, bullied and beaten in Libya’s holding camps, they inhabit a miserable limbo. And as Macron told African leaders, this is not solely a European dilemma. It reflects a deep failure in African governance and a cynical determinat­ion to squeeze as much as possible out of Europe’s squirming discomfitu­re.

If the migration trek to Europe is to be properly managed, African government­s have to become properly involved. Blaming the former colonial overlords is no longer sufficient. One of the great unifying features of post-colonial independen­ce was the end of slavery imposed and encouraged by foreign empires. Now African indifferen­ce is bringing it back to the continent.

Typically, migration surges are seen as a matter of pull and push. The pull was the prosperity and safety of Europe and its most extreme expression came in 2015 when Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, opened her country’s borders to a million newcomers. She presented her decision as a duty derived from Germany’s wealth: ‘‘We can do it’’.

It quickly emerged that Germany couldn’t do it, not without immense strain on its society. That’s why she has ended up with 93 members of an antiimmigr­ant party in parliament, making it excruciati­ngly difficult to form a stable government.

And that’s why Germany has become part of the Age of Deportatio­n. To speed the extraction of refugees, the government is offering fitted kitchens and bathrooms, a one-off cash incentive and a year’s rent in their home country if they leave Germany of their own accord.

Few EU countries are quite so desperate but the combinatio­n of carrot and stick has become the norm. Bribing people to leave is simply cheaper.

It is controllin­g the push that will be decisive. Some dreamers still reckon that the EU can come up with a Marshall Plan for Africa that will give young people sufficient incentive to stay at home. The fact is, though, that remittance­s home from migrants in Europe, legal or illegal, will always outweigh grand developmen­t blueprints. There have to be joint initiative­s that reward small businessme­n, that create jobs and skill up young people, that bring women into the workplace. The West has to engage more with non-government organisati­ons that can properly identify social problems and sound the alarm at corruption.

And there has to be an understand­ing with African government­s: take back the deported and Europe will selectivel­y relax visas and provide a closely monitored legal migration route. That is not easy as long as African communitie­s do not have effective civic registries providing proper documentat­ion. Again Europe, together with African administra­tions, can help modernise the continent. Illegal migration fuels populist parties that can push European government­s towards hardline policies. It is therefore in the African interest to work more closely with Europe. That was the Macron message, and he was right.

There is a confusion of purpose that thwarts these sensible goals. Driven by the mobilisati­on of the far Right and by anger at overburden­ed welfare systems yet handicappe­d by liberal guilt, we are bungling the process of deportatio­n, begging and bribing African strongmen to have their own citizens back.

What should be clear, however, to all of the government­s in subsaharan Africa, in the Horn and the Maghreb is that they too have a responsibi­lity to their citizens, that leadership is about more than taking the money and rounding up the usual suspects. The migration crisis is their failure too.

❚ The Times

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