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Subject:
From:
Amadu Kabir Njie <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 22 Jul 2004 03:24:38 -0500
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European governments make an example of Cap Anamur refugees

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2004/jul2004/anam-j22_prn.shtml

By Martin Kreickenbaum

22 July 2004

On June 20, the rescue ship Cap Anamur picked up 37 African refugees from a
sinking inflatable boat in the Mediterranean Sea, near the Italian island
of Lampedusa. When the Cap Anamur tried to dock at Empodocle, the nearest
port in Sicily, Italian navy frigates and helicopters as well as the Coast
Guard were sent to force it back to sea.

For 11 days, the Cap Anamur—a converted freighter—tramped through
international waters off the Sicilian coast, while the situation onboard
deteriorated. Some of those rescued suffered nervous breakdowns and wanted
to throw themselves overboard.

Only when the captain issued an emergency call was permission given to
enter port, but any help was short-lived. Elias Bierdel, the director of
the relief organisation; the ship’s captain, Stefan Schmidt; and his
Russian first officer were all arrested immediately after setting foot on
Italian soil. They were accused of aiding illegal immigrants. The ship was
seized, and the remaining crew ordered to leave the vessel.

The refugees, whom aid agencies initially believed had fled from the Sudan,
were brought to the reception camp at Agrigento, and were transported to
Caltanissetta two days later. Their claims for asylum were dealt with in
express proceedings, without the individuals receiving any legal assistance.

Italian television reported July 17 that all 37—described in press reports
as coming from Ghana and Nigeria—were denied asylum. Fourteen of them were
immediately taken from Sicily to Rome and incarcerated in a detention
centre to await deportation. Others may be allowed to stay in Italy on
humanitarian grounds.

The end result of this high-seas rescue is that the rescuers have been
branded as criminals, and the marooned refugees have been treated as
illegal immigrants.


Repel refugees at any price

The German Interior Minister Otto Schily (Social Democratic Party—SPD) had
previously denied that German authorities had any responsibility regarding
the refugees’ requests for asylum—even though the Cap Anamur sails under
the German flag and the requests were made in writing. Their applications
were declared null and void by the Interior Ministry, on the absurd pretext
that asylum applications must be submitted on German territory.

The Italian authorities then tried to palm the matter off on a new European
Union member, Malta. They argued that, as the Cap Anamur had crossed
Maltese territorial waters after taking aboard the refugees, they should
have applied for asylum in Malta. The Maltese government, which is
notorious for interning refugees and deporting them as swiftly as possible,
washed its hands of the matter declaring, “Send them back to Libya.”

The basis for this Kafkaesque game between the various national authorities
is the EU’s Dublin Convention. According to this treaty, a refugee can only
make a single application for asylum in the EU state whose territory he
first enters. While this accord was supposed to harmonise the various
national asylum policies, the case of the Cap Anamur confirms that the
Dublin Convention created a procedure to reject refugees everywhere and
ultimately deport them back to their countries of origin.

The German and Italian authorities are both saying that no precedent should
be created, “which could then in all probability be cited by others in
similar circumstances,” according to Interior Minister Schily. Meanwhile, a
clear precedent is being established for the inhumane treatment of
shipwrecked refugees.

If one follows the logic of Schily’s argument—and that of his Italian
counterpart, Guiseppe Pisanu (Forza Italia)—the Cap Anamur crew should have
abandoned the shipwrecked refuges to their fate. German Interior Ministry
spokesman Rainer Lingenthal described as “irresponsible” Bierdel’s
announcement that he would undertake further missions in the Mediterranean
to save shipwrecked refugees. The German and Italian authorities are trying
to criminalise the relief organisation and intimidate anyone who opposes
the EU’s reactionary refugee policies.

For some time, the coast guards of those states bordering the Mediterranean
have been doing everything possible to keep refugees away from the EU.
Supported by NATO naval units, overloaded and ancient boats are stopped and
forced back into African territorial waters. The corpses of those who die
attempting to flee eventually wash up on the beaches of Europe. According
to official figures, there have been 5,000 such cases in recent years, but
the real numbers could be far higher.

EU governments—whose asylum policy literally costs lives—seem unperturbed
at the prospect of another 37 bodies being washed up on a European beach.

Using billions of tax euros, the coasts of Spain, Italy and Greece are
being transformed into a tight net through which even a small dingy could
not pass undetected. Refugees are to be prevented from reaching EU
territory at any price. The right to asylum in the EU only exists on paper,
as there are no longer any legal means for refugees to enter the EU.

The Cap Anamur Committee provides a classic example of the changes in
refugee policies. Founded by Rupert Neudeck in 1979, the relief
organisation chartered a freighter to rescue refugees from Vietnam—the so-
called “boat people”—out of the waters of Southeast Asia. Ten thousand
Vietnamese were brought to Germany by the Cap Anamur, and the ship was able
to provide medical assistance to another 30,000 shipwrecked refugees.

The Cap Anamur’s humanitarian mission was seized upon by the ruling elite
as grist for its anti-communist propaganda campaign. The refugees were
officially welcomed and the ship greeted in Hamburg with flowers and
applause. The crew was hailed for helping refugees escape from “communist
tyranny.”

Some 25 years later, the Cap Anamur is met with warships off the Sicilian
coast. Those who were previously hailed for aiding refugees to escape are
now dubbed immigrant smugglers, while the European governments make the
pursuit of refugees on the EU’s outermost borders a key priority.

Elias Bierdel and Stefan Schmidt of the Cap Anamur were detained for
several days and threatened with imprisonment for up to 14 years. Otto
Schily went further, saying that German authorities may also prosecute the
crew on charges of immigrant smuggling.

Notwithstanding the statements of some Green Party politicians like Claudia
Roth (“Europe should be a protective castle for refugees, and Germany
should be its model”) and Angelika Beer (“establishing humanity and the
right to survive”), the Greens have supported Schily’s xenophobic policies
for the last six years. Germany leads Europe in keeping out refugees. The
SPD-Green Party government in Berlin has made it practically impossible for
refugees to come to Germany. The numbers of refugees, like the numbers
granted asylum, are in free-fall, while forcible deportations are now on
the agenda.


Media joins attack on the Cap Anamur

After a few days, the media also joined in the attacks on the Cap Anamur
Committee. Not only conservative newspapers, like the Tagesspiegel, but
also papers regarded as more liberal, such as Frankfurter Rundschau and the
Süddeutsche Zeitung, cast doubt on the credibility of the rescue mission
and insinuated that the crew of the Cap Anamur instigated what happened to
attract donations.

In the July 14 edition of Tagesspiegel, Caroline Fet accused the Cap Anamur
of purposefully seeking a “high-visibility crisis,” which it found in the
Mediterranean refugees. The crew is supposed to have convinced the refugees
to say they were Sudanese to create the association in the public mind
of “Cap Anamur-war-refugees.” The journalist dismissed the refugees as
mere “economic migrants,” to whom she would deny any right to enter Europe.

On July 13, the Süddeutsche Zeitung declared in its headline that the
rescue was a “PR stunt with a happy ending.” The fact the director of the
relief organisation Elias Bierdel only came aboard the Cap Anamur after
several days accompanied by journalists was presented as a “powerful PR
action.” The story’s author, Christiane Kohl, was disturbed by the fact
that the refugees left the ship wearing clean white shirts and did not need
medical aid.

If one follows this argument, Kohl would have preferred the Cap Anamur crew
to have allowed the refugees to starve for three weeks and to have refused
to provide them with any medical aid. In her eyes, only famished refugees
in torn clothes—if any at all—deserve protection. The rest of her article
tried to make the reader believe that the whole story of what happened on
the Cap Anamur was an invention, and that the authorities were completely
justified in denying the refugees admission and criminalising those who
came to their aid.

The Frankfurter Rundschau on July 13 also joined the attack. Roman Arens
wondered why, following repairs, the Cap Anamur undertook a test voyage in
the “very part of the sea” where refugee dramas take place daily. One day
later, Joerg Schindler was even more pointed. Under the headline, “A ship
and many questions,” he accused the Cap Anamur of utilising the refugees
for its own ends. As proof, he stated that the shipwrecked refugees went
ashore “apparently in relatively good spirits,” while on board Elias
Bierdel “shook his fists.”

The source for all this seems to have been the German Interior Ministry.
Spokesman Rainer Lingenthal claimed callously on July 12—without providing
any proof—that “the circumstances would indicate that the Cap Anamur is
trying to raise its own profile.”

Responding to these attacks, Elias Bierdel declared that it is “shameful to
see the way Europe reacts to a shipwreck emergency in its coastal waters.”

The criminalisation and defamation of the Cap Anamur serve only one
purpose: to set an intimidating example. Anyone providing assistance to
refugees in distress will be punished. The only permitted response is to
sail right past their sinking boats.

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