The Star Early Edition

Migrant crisis mushrooms with no solution in sight

- PETER FABRICIUS

THE FLOW of migrants into Europe is becoming an ever-greater problem, with no solution even vaguely in sight. As if it did not have enough problems already, Greece is bearing the brunt of the influx, receiving about half of the 200 000 refugees who have arrived in southern Europe by sea this year.

At least 1 900 migrants are reported to have died during the perilous journey.

Though the jumping-off points for the sea-born migrants are in North Africa – mostly ungoverned Libya – most are actually fleeing wars in the Middle East.

In an article called “Shipwrecke­d Europe” by its researcher Liesl Louw, the Institute for Security Studies (ISS) quotes the UN High Commission­er for Refugees as saying that up to 60 percent of the migrants are from Syria, with the rest mostly from Afghanista­n, Iraq and also Somalia and Eritrea.

The EU met at summit level three months ago to agree to commit greater resources to rescuing migrants at sea and to share more equally the burden which frontline member states, such as Greece and Italy, are bearing because they are the nearest to the main embarkatio­n points. But few other EU states are willing to receive their quota of immigrants.

Individual states and other jurisdicti­ons are responding to the problem in different ways but most have been uninviting. Hungary is rapidly erecting a fence to stop immigrants entering at all.

After about 44 000 migrants crossed the Greece-Macedonia border over the past two months, Macedonia declared a state of emergency, rolled razor wire across the frontier and used riot police to try to repel the masses of people. As of Sunday, though, it appeared to have abandoned resistance to the inflow.

Poland and the Czech Republic have vowed they will accept only Christian immigrants. A Czech official has been quoted saying that Muslim immigrants will be used by Islamic State to establish footholds in Europe.

However Oliver Junk, conservati­ve Christian Democratic Union mayor of the small German town of Goslar, is asking for more migrants to prevent it becoming a ghost town because of Germany’s dwindling population.

But he is an exception. Most Europeans seem alarmed and angered by the migrant influx which appears to be increasing xenophobia.

British Prime Minister David Cameron has been criticised for referring to the people trying to smuggle themselves into the UK from France via the Channel tunnel as a “swarm”. The Labour Party reminded him they were “people, not insects”.

The rash of derogatory terms for the migrants in the UK and elsewhere has sparked a politicall­y correct counter-reaction, with the Al Jazeera news network just announcing that it will not henceforth refer to the migrants as “migrants” but as “people” or “refugees” – the latter because most are indeed fleeing political persecutio­n and/or warfare in their home countries.

But an intense debate is raging about how many of the migrants are in fact genuine refugees and how many are economic migrants, who are merely seeking a better life materially.

Louw reports in the ISS article that a seemingly outlandish proposal by US American businessma­n Jason Buzi that the world should look for a new country for the 60 million or so refugees around the globe has surprising­ly gained some respectabl­e support, including from migration expert Robin Cohen, former director of the Internatio­nal Migration Institute at Oxford University.

This shows how desperate the problem has become.

The AU has been criticised for doing too little to address the crisis, seeing that the migrants are mostly reaching Europe through Africa. But it insists it is trying to cut off the illegal migration routes – and also to return Libya, the main launchpad, to governabil­ity, a very difficult task.

The EU and AU are to hold a joint conference in Malta in November to find ways to tackle the crisis together.

But it is hard to see how they will be able to resolve a problem that is really mainly a symptom of the greater political and security crisis that is engulfing the Middle East.

Greece is bearing the brunt and few EU states are willing to receive their quota

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