Killing Asylum: The Turkish-EU deal on Migrants
Binoy Kampmark
Bribing officials. Relaying and returning migrants to poor countries without adequate scrutiny or screening. Closing
borders. Setting up camps with appalling conditions. Barbed wire and armed guards. Europe now faces the most profound
test on the refugee crisis so far: to persist in processing arrivals within its borders, or return them with
indifference into unsafe territories.
This is the Australian model of border control writ large. It enlists and politicises defence forces and border
protection behind a veil of military grade secrey. It shifts the burden of processing asylum seekers and refugees from
wealthier states to poorer ones. It effectively suspends the application of the Refugee Convention and does a good bit
of demonising of refugees along the way.
In October last year, before an audience attending the Margaret Thatcher gala dinner, the sniping and aggressive former
Australian prime minister Tony Abbott warned European leaders that embracing his own “turn back the boats” policy was
essential for continental stability and the protection of European civilisation. “The only way to stop people by trying
to gain entry is firmly and unambiguously to deny it.”
Critics laughed it off as irrelevant, a political product of a paranoid island continent and a clownish ex-leader.
Landlocked countries, in particular, could hardly impose a return policy en masse given the sprawling trails of humanity
coming in. It would entail massive border closures and expulsions, not of boats with dozens of human occupants but
convoys of tens of thousands.
Turning back refugees, and cutting off the lines through the Balkans, is exactly what is happening in the pursuit of a
rather venal plan of mass deportation with Turkey. The outlines of it were made at a summit on March 7, where European
leaders met the Turkish prime minister, Ahmet Davutoğlou.
The Turkish proposal involves accepting the return of all migrants and refugees who cross the Aegean to Greece in return
of a resettlement of asylum seekers in EU countries from Turkey itself. This effectively constitutes a mass removal of
individuals, a plan of questionable legality. Under international refugee law, Turkey would have to be designated a safe
haven for asylum seekers.
The summit has invariably spurred countries to close the Balkan route. Macedonia has closed the border with Greece,
resulting in the stranding of 15,000 individuals. Croatia, Serbia, and Slovenia have tightened controls, putting on the
brakes with heavy feet. Donald Tusk, president of the European Council, has expressed confidence in this new
“collective” response to the refugee crisis, claiming that “irregular flows of migrants along western Balkans route have
come to an end”.
Some of the press analysis on this sees the European-Turkish deal as “messy but necessary”. The Economist editorial on
this subject is even more chilling in admitting what Turkey has become in this entire farce of human misery. “Throughout
the Cold War, Turkey was one of Europe’s bastions against Soviet armies. Now it is being turned into Europe’s barrier
against the huddled masses of the Middle East.”
This was geographic reality – Turkey being the bridging country between two landmasses. But, argued The Economist, order
had to return, with borders opened, to a certain extent; “the only alternative to chaos is a fair and orderly migration
system”. Human flesh has become a measure of grand political bargaining.
The consequence of this haggling has been a trafficking and bartering over human matter in favour of new political
realities Turkey wishes to change. There is the issue of visa liberalisation, which Ankara has been pursuing with some
vigour.
The largest matter, one that never goes away, is that of Turkish accession to the EU. Most striking of all is the
refusal on the part of the EU to raise the issue of Ankara’s latest, and very aggressive, assault on press freedoms.
President Recep Erdoğan has every reason to be pleased, crushing dissent and scrutiny at hope while pretending to be
Europe’s broom of order.
Despite any reservations on the part of the Greek prime minister, Alexis Tsipras, his government still signed a
readmission agreement for migrants crossing the Aegean to be returned. This further builds in a regime that promises to
be more cruel than fair.
The strong message from Davutoğlou in discussions with Tsipras indicated the determination to shut out third countries
and transit points for those using the route through Turkey and effectively the Balkans, to get to EU countries. The
agreements, he argued, sent “a clear message to migrants coming from third countries, rather than countries at war… that
there is neither the political will [to allow their passage] nor the ability to cross to Europe.”
Supposedly, that aspect of the deal will cover those migrants who are not deemed to fall within the international regime
of protection. This re-admission into Turkey is problematic on several levels, assuming an orderly and expeditious
processing of individual claims. “I am deeply worried,” expressed a concerned UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo
Grandi, “about any arrangement that would involve the blanket return of anyone from one country to another without
spelling out the refugee safeguards under international law.”
Such fairness is evidently missing to those who are huddled before the closed borders. Refugees chant German Chancellor
Angela Merkel’s name in desperation and hope. Merkel in turn had regarded the Balkan closure as an “unsustainable”
travesty, an outcome of a failed approach to the issue of dealing with refugees. But she is wrong to assume that Europe
is not acting collectively on this. A dis-unified position is rapidly forming into a hardened, brutal stance of vicious
unity.
Dr. Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge. He lectures at RMIT University, Melbourne.
Email: bkampmark@gmail.com