“We can’t advance and we can’t go home…For us, it’s Europe
or die.” - Bamba, from the Ivory Coast
The Scottish Trades Union Congress (STUC) Annual St Andrews
Day March and Rally takes place Saturday 28th November. The event this year has
the theme ‘No Racism: Refugees Welcome Here’
The UN Refugee Convention recognises that refugees have a
right to enter a country for the purposes of seeking asylum, regardless of how
they arrive or whether they hold valid travel or identity documents. The
Convention stipulates that what would usually be considered as illegal actions
(e.g. entering a country without a visa) should not be treated as illegal if a
person is seeking asylum. This means that it is incorrect to refer to asylum
seekers who arrive without authorisation as “illegal”, as they in fact have a
right to enter to seek asylum. Asylum seekers do not break any laws simply by
arriving without authorisation. International law make these allowances because
it is not always safe or practicable for asylum seekers to obtain travel documents
or travel through authorised channels because refugees are, by definition,
persons fleeing persecution and in most cases are being persecuted by their own
government. It is often too dangerous for refugees to apply for a passport or
exit visa or approach an embassy for a visa, as such actions could put their
lives, and the lives of their families, at risk.
If immigration has led to the rise of the far right groups -
it is only through the racist tactic of blaming economic woes on them. The
majority of informed opinion and study suggest otherwise. If you are unhappy
about this why not condemn the far right groups as opposed to immigration
itself? Building walls around Europe is the most xenophobic, impractical idea
that shows a complete ignorance towards current social and economic factors (as
well as historic). If you want to live in a inward looking walled off country,
please do not include the rest of us in your suggested dystopia. The UK is 53rd
in terms of population density, 2% overall land area taken by development and
160th in terms of birth rate. So we aren't full, and we aren't likely to be
anytime soon. Across Europe the evidence is that migration makes a positive
contribution, not a negative one. Migrants contribute far more than they take
out and they are necessary to keep a balance between retirees and workers.
"Something must be done about Libya ”…”Something must
be done about Syria,”….."Something must be done about Iraq." ...”Something
must be done...something must be done”… and so it goes on and on
We must not blame another worker for our poverty, whether
migrant or not, whether illegal or legal. Those travelling long distances
through fear or desperation are people no different to ourselves. Instead of
falling for the divide and rule tactics which weaken us all, workers should
recognise who their real enemy is and work together to defeat the system that
enslaves us all.
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