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WORLD REFUGEE DAY: WELCOME THE STRANGER (19/06/09)
WITH WEALTH AND POWER COME RESPONSIBILITY
On 20 June, World Refugee Day, JRS Europe calls on all
EU governments to honour their human rights obligations
and create an environment conducive to the integration
of refugees and migrants within their borders.
“EU Member States must not forget that the European
Convention on Human Rights is not a haphazard agreement
to be modified to suit their own national interests”,
states Michael Schöpf, Director JRS Europe, “it is an
internationally binding treaty that all signatories are
required to uphold”.
The recent removal of more than 500 men, women, and
children to Libya by Italian authorities marked a
watershed for European asylum policies. Access to
territory where vulnerable persons can seek
international protection should be the cornerstone upon
which any viable asylum system is built. Denying such
basic access sends out a clear message to our brothers
and sisters in the developing world – that we, among the
richest states in the world, will not welcome or protect
those most in need if it encroaches on our own wealth,
prosperity, and interests.
European governments must also be reminded that
welcoming the stranger does not end upon first arrival.
Stories of rejected asylum seekers who cannot return to
their homeland, struggling in their daily lives and with
little prospect for change, continue to come from all
corners of the continent. Reports of the widespread
detention of asylum seekers in disgraceful living
conditions persist in many Member States – inhuman
conditions that constitute a violation of the human
rights of detainees who have committed no crime.
A decade has passed since the Tampere European Council*
and the Amsterdam Treaty. A decade since we embarked on
the path towards a Common European Asylum System. In
that time, many legal instruments have been adopted, but
they are instruments that need to be improved upon.
EU policy-makers now have the opportunity to make the
next five years a period that is marked by progress and
development. The legacy of the Stockholm Programme**
need not be one of authoritarian undertones, but one of
social inclusion; minimum standards that safeguard the
welfare of the vulnerable, and the proper transposition
and protection of EU Directives
“If we, as European citizens, close our eyes and shut
out refugees, we compromise the very principles of
justice and solidarity upon which all free societies are
built, upon which the European Union is proudly built”,
says Michael Schöpf.
Political pronouncements and careless media reportage on
migration issues should be recognised for what they are
– propaganda and manipulation. Our views and values
should be not be dictated by irrational fear and hatred
of the unknown. It will not require a miracle to open
our hearts to the suffering of our brothers and sisters
and to welcome the stranger seeking refuge among us.
Michael Donohoe
Media Officer
JRS-Europe
Rue du Progres 333/2
B-1030 Brussels
Tel: 0032 2 250 32 27
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