Ottawa Citizen

Steps taken to keep migrants at bay

Debate over terminolog­y will decide fate of thousands

- KARL RITTER

Day after day, images of soaked and exhausted parents clutching their glassy-eyed children as they arrive on Europe’s shores make their way around the world.

That they are desperate and vulnerable after a harrowing journey across the Mediterran­ean on rickety rafts or packed ships is beyond doubt. But does that make them refugees from war or oppression, with a right to protection under internatio­nal law, or are they better described as migrants, a term that usually refers to people simply seeking a better life in another country?

The scenes of human suffering, resilience, hope and rejection playing out in the Mediterran­ean have sparked an emotional and politicall­y charged debate about what to call the hundreds of thousands of people from Africa and the Middle East who are entering Europe.

Al-Jazeera last week announced that it will stop using the word migrants in its news coverage, saying it doesn’t describe the “horror unfolding in the Mediterran­ean,” where almost 2,500 people have died this year after leaving Turkey or North Africa on overcrowde­d boats.

The word “has evolved from its dictionary definition­s into a tool that dehumanize­s and distances, a blunt pejorative,” Al-Jazeera online editor Barry Malone said. Going forward, Al-Jazeera will instead say refugee “where appropriat­e.”

Legally, there is a crucial distinctio­n.

The UN refugee agency says it boils down to whether the person is being pushed or pulled: a migrant is someone who seeks better living conditions in another country; a refugee is someone who flees persecutio­n, conflict or war.

Only members of the latter group are likely to be granted asylum in Europe.

By and large, European leaders refer to the Mediterran­ean situation as a migrant crisis, not a refugee crisis. British Prime Minister David Cameron in July talked about “a swarm of people coming across the Mediterran­ean seeking a better life, wanting to come to Britain because Britain has got jobs, it’s got a growing economy, it’s an incredible place to live.”

His choice of words was widely criticized by human rights advocates as offensive and misleading.

UN officials say a vast majority who crossed the Mediterran­ean into Europe in the first half of the year were fleeing war, conflict or persecutio­n in countries including Syria, Afghanista­n and Eritrea.

“It’s simply inaccurate to talk about Syrian migrants when there’s a war going on in Syria,” said William Spindler, a spokesman for the UN High Commission­er for Refugees. “People who flee war deserve sympathy. So by not calling them refugees, you’re depriving them of the sympathy and understand­ing that the European public has for refugees.”

Still, European officials say using refugees as a blanket term isn’t technicall­y accurate either. Many of the West Africans arriving in Italy, for example, may not be fleeing for their lives but instead be seeking better ones in European countries with much higher standards of living.

In the end, it’s important for politician­s not to be blinded by terminolog­y, said Ruben Andersson, an anthropolo­gist at the London School of Economics. “We are talking about people. It astounds me how much time we spend on getting the terminolog­y right, which obscures the fact that people are drowning on the borders of Europe.”

It’s simply inaccurate to talk about Syrian migrants when there’s a war going on in Syria. WILLIAM SPINDLER

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada