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Showing posts with label Immigration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Immigration. Show all posts

2007-11-04

What Manner Of Poverty Is This?

immigrationThousands of African migrants defy the boats, planes standing guard off the coast of Africa. A barricade put up by the European Union Border Control Agency which patrol the shores of Senegal and Mauritania so as to deter potential immigrant from seeking the golden fleece.
Every time an entreport is guarded, the migrants come with a more treacherous and longer route to get into the port towns of Ceuta and Milla. The once 3 meter fence now 6 meters have failed to deter the migrants. Upon completing this dangerous journey many migrants who often find themselves homeless, sleeping in the streets of Europe express relief. Because for them it does not matter what fate lay ahead of them. The only thing that that they have made it off the coast of the dark continent.


The new arrivals are obvious. Exhaustion written on their faces, many of them are still not up for speaking even after days in the holding center. Several sit motionless, faces propped up by their hands, on a worn-out sofa. Quiet sighs come from the wounded. They stare into empty space. In reality, though, the problem is not the height of the fence, but the failure to address the root causes of immigration.
via SpiegelOnline.
This is Africa's story a people in desperate need of a solution. An enterprising people held down by socio-economic conditions on the continent who would not take this situation anymore. In 2006, over 6000 bodies of African migrants were picked up trying to make it across the Mediterranean to the Canaries Island. This figure is up by 600% from 2005. Even after the reinforcement of the razor sharp fence, set up to keep the would be assyllum seekers. "Ayuba an Ivorien says "I want to work in Europe and send money back home,"
What makes a man leave his home, a land overflowing with natural resources, perfect weather and the distinctively cheerful rhythm of the African continent, and then move to the frigid clime where hopes of survival rest on the number of knock-off sunglasses he is able to hawk on the streets of Europe. What makes a man make these choices? Poverty in Africa do not make the headline of the evening news anymore. However the realities of poverty is stark and hope is grim in some parts of Africa. The immigrants feels the need to leave whatever memories they have of their dear homeland and move to another continent where there is a a faint shimmer of hope.
I picked up blogging late 2005 when I saw pictures of African migrants left in the Sahara desert to die. For many they speak to, there's a palpable sadness -- even regret -- over the decision to come to Europe. The reality rarely lives up to the dream, and the sacrifices they made are rarely offset by their new life. PBS

The new arrivals are obvious. Exhaustion written on their faces, many of them are still not up for speaking even after days in the holding center. Several sit motionless, faces propped up by their hands, on a worn-out sofa. Quiet sighs come from the wounded. They stare into empty space. In reality, though, the problem is not the height of the fence, but the failure to address the root causes of immigration.
via SpiegelOnline.
Having an Afro-centered outlook does not exclude talking about the ills that our countries face. To me speaking out for change is the most patriotic act you can do today. Making change occur is the most patriotic thing you can do for Africa in the long run.
immigration
An historical overview of this problem from the Oxford University.
news of drowning.
Images via BBC.
Border Crossing: A NY Times entry on this issue.
Speak up, discuss immigration issues. You may be surprised at the number of Europeans and/or Americans who aren't aware of the atrocities committed by their home countries. Blog about this issues if you are a blogger. Send me an email if you aren't a blogger and would like to discuss this issues. In the short run we as Africans reduce the depth of the crisis, while we put our houses in order.
Update...
In the report, "Unwelcome Responsibilities: Spain's Failure to Protect the Rights of Unaccompanied Migrant Children in the Canary Islands", Human Rights Watch says the children - mostly boys from Senegal and Morocco - are detained indefinitely in the migrant centers.
Children held at four centers told Human Rights Watch they had seen staff violently abusing other children on several occasions. They also said staff ignored violence between detainees.
Read Story
Update...
This happened recently; At least 47 African migrants died of hunger and thirst after their boats drifted into Mauritanian waters. Read Story

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2007-09-26

Get Those Illegals..Not So Fast...

T his article in today's edition of the NYTimes caught my attention. A case of text book economics at play. People do not always no what is good for them. Basically, its the story of a town that chased away its illegals, now biting their fingers because they ended up in a localised recession. Just too funny.
RIVERSIDE, NJ— A little more than a year ago, the Township Committee in this faded factory town became the first municipality in New Jersey to enact legislation penalizing anyone who employed or rented to an illegal immigrant.
Within months, hundreds, if not thousands, of recent immigrants from Brazil and other Latin American countries had fled. The noise, crowding and traffic that had accompanied their arrival over the past decade abated. The law had worked. Perhaps, some said, too well. With the departure of so many people, the local economy suffered. Hair salons, restaurants and corner shops that catered to the immigrants saw business plummet; several closed. Once-boarded-up storefronts downtown were boarded up again. Meanwhile, the town was hit with two lawsuits challenging the law. Legal bills began to pile up, straining the town’s already tight budget. Suddenly, many people — including some who originally favored the law — started having second thoughts. So last week, the town rescinded the ordinance, joining a small but growing list of municipalities nationwide that have begun rethinking such laws as their legal and economic consequences have become clearer. “I don’t think people knew there would be such an economic burden,” said Mayor George Conard, who voted for the original ordinance. “A lot of people did not look three years out.”

Hat tip to De'Long.

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2007-07-25

Coast Guard Chasing Assylum Seekers (Video)


Via WSJ.
Read about the plight of African immigrants here.

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