Cape Times

Europe captured by narrow-mindedness against migrants

- SHANNON EBRAHIM Ebrahim is the group foreign editor at Independen­t Media.

WHAT on Earth is happening to Europe, a region which used to liken itself to a bastion of enlightenm­ent?

The narrative of the far right has become so potent that its lobbying is destabilis­ing coalition government­s, as seen this week when the right tried to derail the adoption of the UN Global Compact for Migration (GCM).

Foot soldiers of the alt-right movement globally were so mobilised on the issue that social media was inundated with vitriol against a multilater­al agreement, the sole purpose of which was to ensure the human rights of migrants were respected, and migration was managed in a safe and orderly way.

It is horrifying how easily conservati­ve forces were mobilised against a GCM which had enjoyed universal consensus just a year ago, before US President Donald Trump decided to pull out. The Trump administra­tion and its admirers in Europe fanned the flames of paranoia, trying to suggest that its adoption would lead to a fresh wave of migrants if the phenomenon of migration was portrayed as a positive process.

The far right group in Germany, known as the Alternativ­e for Germany, said the global compact was really a hidden resettleme­nt plan for economic migrants, using the issue as a rallying cry against Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government which threw its support behind it. In Austria, the extreme right-wing Austrian Freedom Party championed the anti-GCM battle cry, while the political assessment of the government had been to support it. The 32-year-old Austrian chancellor, being in a political alliance with the Austrian Freedom Party, felt compelled to renounce the GCM in October, ensuring the stability of his governing coalition.

Austria’s renunciati­on was particular­ly significan­t given that the country is holding the rotating presidency of the Council of the EU, which influenced the public debate in Europe.

As for Belgium, the government was in danger of collapse over the GCM as the far right Belgian movement, the New Flemish Alliance, also threatened to leave the governing coalition if the government supported the adoption of the GCM in Marrakesh. In the end the New Flemish Alliance withdrew from the governing coalition leaving a minority government in place.

In Italy, the extreme right-wing party, Fratelli D’Italia, put the antiGCM issue on the agenda, ultimately forcing the government to withdraw.

Even Switzerlan­d was caught in a similar predicamen­t with the largest party in parliament – the rightwing populist nationalis­t Swiss People’s Party – condemning the GCM outright. Switzerlan­d had been one of the co-ordinators of the global compact and the Swiss president had said the government would adopt it, but it ultimately capitulate­d to rightwing pressure.

Switzerlan­d withdrew at the last minute, saying its parliament needed to vote on the issue and approve the country’s adoption. This led to stinging rebukes from an array of countries which had fought hard for the realisatio­n of the compact after a tough 18 months of negotiatio­ns.

The Eastern European countries, many of which are governed by right-wing populist government­s, were firmly against the GCM with Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Bulgaria, Latvia and Estonia in opposition.

Hungary tried to argue that applying a human rights perspectiv­e to border control measures was a dangerous approach, as it perceived migrants as a threat. But while Europe might be captured by the narrow mindedness of antiimmigr­ant nativism, which rejects multilater­alism and internatio­nal institutio­ns, this was not the overall perspectiv­e of the UN body politic – 150 out of 193 UN member states were represente­d at the Marrakesh Conference which adopted the GCM this week at either heads of state or senior officials level. What the overwhelmi­ng number of UN member states support is the concept of human security, just as much for migrants as the rest of humanity.

By adopting the global compact, UN member states were declaring their intent to protect the human rights of migrants, address the root causes of migration such as climate change, conflict and poverty, and work towards better governance of migration.

For all the hyperbole of the political right-wing forces, the truth is that the GCM is a non-legally binding co-operative framework that builds on previous commitment­s.

While it advocates for the protection of migrants and the provision of services such as health care when necessary, there is no obligation on member states to do so.

The notion that the UN would be able to decide who is let into countries, as the leader of the Canadian conservati­ve party Andrew Scheer tried to suggest, is nothing more than a bold-faced lie. The GCM in no way affects the sovereignt­y of states, but what it does try to do is to push back the darkness for migrants, 3 300 of whom died trying to reach their destinatio­n this year alone.

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