Those
who have defended the contribution of migrants have frequently fallen
back on facts and statistics. But the case made by the likes of Ukip
is about emotion and, all too often, the power of stories. The
problem is they tend not to be true. Ukip is a party of con
artists, myth peddlers, charlatans and professional shysters. But
they have succeeded in poisoning the debate on immigration .
Now, in contrast, there’s the opportunity to promote the honest,
emotional case for the rights of migrants. The migrants’ fightback
has begun, bringing a reminder that the problems we suffer are not
caused by those who have benefited this country in ways words alone
cannot describe.
Ake
Achi moved
to London to improve his English and seek opportunities. It was a
life of hard graft. He juggled a full-time job as a security guard
with full-time studies at Kingston University. Today he is a
full-time union organiser, helping workers to combat injustices
perpetrated by the powerful but all too often blamed on migrants. He
has also founded Right2workuk,
to protect Britain’s migrants’ right to work.
Achi
is part of a new movement – One
Day Without Us,
or 1DWU – that seeks to give Britain’s frequently demonised
migrants their own voice.
Migrants
will organise to challenge the xenophobia surging on our own side of
the Atlantic. Across Britain migrants and non-migrants alike will be
encouraged to link arms, grip their placards and take a picture in a
national show of solidarity. The
arrival of 1DWU is not before time. Migrants have lacked a prominent
collective voice: the debate has all too often been about them
rather than with
them.
“Immigrants
have always been blamed when things go wrong in a country,” says
Achi. The government
now bans non-EU skilled workers from
settling in Britain permanently if they have lived here for less than
a decade and earn less than £35,000 a year. That has an impact on
many NHS workers, for example. As Achi points out: “The NHS
wouldn’t survive without us.” It is all too convenient to turn on
migrants propping up Britain’s beleaguered health service, rather
than addressing the government that plunged it into what the Red
Cross describes as
a “humanitarian crisis”.
Birgit
Möller, a 55-year-old German works for a nursery, driven by her
passion for children and education. She has a husband and a son here.
It was London’s multiculturalism that first attracted her, “the
buzz of so many people from so many places coming together in one
community”. There
are many problems in this country, she says, that have nothing to do
with migrants – “like huge income differentials and problems with
businesses having too much power”. Like Achi, she notes that “it
is very convenient to find a scapegoat to deflect from real issues,
because real issues are much more difficult to tackle”.
Silvia
Aced has lived in Britain for two decades and is an advocacy worker
for disabled children. “I have a child with autism myself, and I’ve
dedicated my life to things like that,” she tells me. “I know
first hand what it’s like to have a child with special needs and
how difficult it is to advocate for them.” The scapegoating of
migrants is nothing less than “horrendous”, she tells me. The
principle behind 1DWU is simple: “Imagine we didn’t go to work
just for one day. It’d be chaos. People complain when the
Underground goes on strike – but it’d be nothing compared to the
chaos that would be unleashed if we didn’t work.”
It
will not be easy to transform the debate on migration. Successive
British governments have failed to build housing, provide the secure
well-paid jobs people need, defend living standards, and – in
recent times in particular – properly invest in public services.
Immigration has become a catch-all narrative to explain problems
caused by capitalism. This is not a debate that can be won with facts
and statistics. When we consider issues, emotions and gut feelings
play a critical role. Migrants have been missing from the debate
about them.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/feb/16/migrants-scapegoats-ukip-compelling-stories-win-over-xenophobes
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