• #Vanessa_Thompson. Abolish! For a world without borders and state violence

    Who is safe in Europe? Not everyone living in nationally organised societies is equally protected by the police and the state. Sociologist Vanessa E. Thompson examines political struggles that oppose police violence and border regimes. She designs a society that also makes protection and security tangible for vulnerable people, for example refugees and those affected by racism.


    Thompson researches critical racism studies, anti-colonial movements and theories of justice and teaches Black Studies and Social Justice at Queen’s University in Kingston, Canada. (fa)

    https://www.theaterspektakel.ch/en/program23/production/abolish-for-a-world-without-borders-and-state-violence
    #abolitionnisme #frontières #violence #Etat #police #régime_frontalier #protection #sécurité #racisme

    ping @karine4 @cede

  • Sur le climat, les frontières, la subsistance, le soin et la lutte | Out of the Woods
    https://cabrioles.substack.com/p/sur-le-climat-les-frontieres-la-subsistance

    Ainsi, nous devons penser l’organisation contre le changement climatique en prenant en compte le fait qu’il est médiatisé par un monde dominé par le capital colonial et hétéropatriarcal. La violence est organisée et différenciée par ces structures, et c’est par la lutte contre ces structures qu’il nous sera possible de subsister. Nous pouvons nous faire une image précise de ce qui a toujours été fait dans les luttes contre les catastrophes — des luttes reposant sur le soin, la reproduction sociale et l’hospitalité. Ce sont ces choses qui ont toujours permis aux gens de survivre aux catastrophes. Même si les choses vont de pis en pis, ça ne s’arrête pas là ; il y a toujours de la place pour la lutte collective.

    Out of the Woods est un collectif international de recherche partisane qui s’attelle, depuis 2014, à penser la #crise_écologique dans une perspective communiste, décoloniale, féministe et queer.

    · Notes de Cabrioles : Les éditions Présence(s) ont récemment traduit et publié L’Utopie Maintenant ! Perspectives communistes face au désastre écologique [https://presences-editions.me/utopie-maintenant ], le receuil des écrits d’Out the Woods, un collectif dont les analyses et perspectives résonnent particulièrement avec le travail que nous avons mené ici. Cette publication est importante et riche de la variété des thèmes abordés. L’entretien qui suit, réalisé en 2017, en est extrait. Nous remercions chaleureusement les éditions Présence(s) de nous avoir confié cette publication ·

    #présent_catastrophique #covid #écologie #migrants_climatiques #climat #racisme #environnementalisme #frontière #nécropolitique #expertise_populaire #dystopies #luttes #communisme_de_désastre #planification_fugitive #soin #reproduction_sociale #hospitalité #travail_reproductif #traitre #indigène #Terre_cyborg #nation_indigène

    • Ce à quoi nous devons résister ici, c’est au romantisme colonial occidental — il faut absolument le détruire, et il ne s’agit pas d’une sorte de problème littéraire abstrait, il est ce qui impulse une grande partie du mouvement écologiste au Royaume-Uni à l’heure actuelle. Il existe encore un imaginaire populaire d’une sorte de nature originelle que l’on retrouve aussi bien chez les membres de la Société royale pour la protection des oiseaux (Royal Society for the Protection of Birds) que chez les militants écologistes purs et durs, et il faut à tout prix le refuser. Et dans le même temps, nous devons nous assurer de ne pas devenir des technofuturistes prêts à embrasser l’idée d’une invasion technologique de tout ce qui existe, sans tenir compte du paradigme colonial et du développement de la technologie européenne comme arme et arbitre du « progrès » colonial. D’un certain point de vue, nous sommes ici coincés entre le marteau et l’enclume, entre l’idéalisation de la wilderness et l’idéalisation de la technologie, aussi néfastes l’une que l’autre.

      Mérite un dialogue avec l’œuvre de Charbonneau, qu’illes ne connaissent peut-être pas.

      une adhésion à la possibilité antinationaliste d’une Terre cyborg — qui ne nie pas en même temps la possibilité d’une nation indigène — est le genre de contradiction sur lequel nous devons travailler

      Par contre je ne sais pas ce qu’illes entendent pas là, ayant parlé plusieurs fois au cours de la conversation d’écologie cyborg (mmmh ?) sans définir ce que c’est (seulement « voir le chapitre XXX plus loin »). Donc soit faut lire le bouquin en entier, soit faut trouver une explication ailleurs du concept et de ce que ça implique.

  • Nord de la France : le barrage flottant, nouveau dispositif pour freiner les traversées de la Manche

    Pour faire face au phénomène des "taxi-boats" de migrants, les autorités du #Pas-de-Calais ont décidé d’installer un barrage flottant en travers de la #Canche, un #fleuve qui se jette dans la Manche tout près du #Touquet et d’où les exilés prennent souvent la mer.

    Quelques kilomètres avant de se jeter dans la Manche, le fleuve la Canche est maintenant coupé en deux par un barrage de bouées flottantes jaunes. À quelques mètres du pont rose de la ville d’Étaples, à une soixantaine de kilomètres au sud de Calais, la navigation est désormais interdite. Ce nouveau #dispositif, mis en place par la préfecture du département, vient s’ajouter à celui déjà existant pour lutter contre l’immigration illégale et les traversées de la Manche.

    Avec cette ligne de bouées qui traversent le fleuve de part en part, fixées à deux piliers en béton, c’est plus particulièrement aux "taxi-boats" que les autorités veulent s’attaquer. Un phénomène de plus en plus utilisé par les passeurs du littoral français pour rejoindre le Royaume-Uni. Comment cela fonctionne ? "Le bateau est gonflé et mis à l’eau sur des cours d’eau qui rejoignent la mer. Les passeurs remontent ensuite la côte et chargent les passagers à un endroit bien précis, ce qui permet d’éviter l’interception sur la plage", expliquait à Infomigrants Xavier Delrieu, chef de l’Office de lutte contre le trafic illicite de migrants (OLTIM), qui traque les filières d’immigration clandestine dans toute la France.

    Une technique qui peut mettre en difficulté les autorités françaises car "à partir du moment où les migrants sont dans l’eau, ce n’est plus une opération de police mais de sauvetage en mer", ajoute-t-il. Et qui peut mettre en danger les exilés, qui attendent les embarcations dans l’eau, parfois jusqu’au torse, et risquent ainsi "la noyade, l’hypothermie ou l’enlisement dans les vasières", selon la préfecture.

    Et pour justifier ce nouveau dispositif, la préfecture explique que le phénomène des "taxi-boats", "est monté en puissance depuis quelques mois". "Depuis le début de l’année 2023, 22 évènements ont été recensés sur le fleuve de la Canche, avec une moyenne de 46 migrants sur chaque embarcation". Ainsi, avec ce barrage flottant, la préfecture espère "empêcher les ’taxi-boats’ d’atteindre le rivage et interpeller les passeurs".

    "Doubler le temps de traversée et les risques qui vont avec"

    Pour les associations sur place, le discours est le même qu’à chaque annonce d’un nouveau dispositif sécuritaire dans la région : "Cela ne résoudra rien", glissent-elles à Infomigrants.

    "Là, déjà, les gens partent de la Canche pour fuir le dispositif en place sur les côtes. Tous ces nouveaux dispositifs, ça les pousse uniquement à aller encore plus loin. Ça ne fait que doubler le temps de traversée et les risques qui vont avec", tance Pierre Roques, délégué général de l’Auberge des migrants. Et d’ajouter : "Les réseaux de passeurs vont juste se réadapter et vont devenir encore plus indispensables".

    Et les chiffres montrent que malgré l’augmentation des effectifs et des moyens de surveillance de la frontière, les traversées augmentent. “Il y a toujours autant de personnes qui passent quelles que soient les dispositions”, résume Pierre Roques qui réitère la demande tenue par les associations depuis des mois : “Un accueil digne et une voie sûre entre les deux pays”.

    Contactée par Infomigrants, une source policière confiait même récemment que "plus il y a d’effectifs, plus ça part". "Ce n’est pas parce que nous sommes là qu’ils arrêtent de partir", témoignait cette même source, partageant aussi le changement de stratégie des passeurs. Selon un rapport publié par l’association Utopia 56 le mois dernier, les tentatives de traversées dans la Manche ont augmenté de 22 % en juin malgré le renforcement des effectifs de police et grâce à une météo clémente.
    "Il y a clairement une hausse des arrivées"

    Et ces derniers mois, les traversées de la Manche se sont multipliées. Près de 8 150 migrants répartis dans 180 embarcations ont tenté de traverser le détroit entre début juin et fin juillet, contre environ 7 700 sur la même période en 2022, selon les chiffres de la préfecture. En 2022, année record, 45 000 personnes ont réussi la traversée et, depuis 2018, ce sont plus de 100 000 migrants qui sont arrivés au Royaume-Uni après avoir traversé la Manche.

    Rien que pour la journée du samedi 12 août , 509 personnes ont réussi à atteindre les côtes anglaises à bord de 10 embarcations, selon le ministère de l’Intérieur britannique. Le lendemain, 759 exilés ont traversé la Manche, un record journalier depuis le début de l’année.

    "En ce moment, la situation est très tendue dans la région", confie Francesca Morassut, coordinatrice d’Utopia 56 à Calais. "Ces derniers mois, il y a clairement une hausse des arrivées [dans la région]. Toutes les associations sont vraiment hyper sollicitées. Il y a un manque d’eau et de solution d’hébergement", explique-t-elle. Selon la responsable associative, environ 1 200 personnes, "dont beaucoup de familles", vivent dans les campements informels à Calais et 800 à Grande-Synthe. "Une situation comme on n’avait pas vu depuis des mois."

    https://www.infomigrants.net/fr/post/51077/nord-de-la-france--le-barrage-flottant-nouveau-dispositif-pour-freiner

    #barrières #barrières_frontalières #murs_flottants #barrières_flottantes #Manche #Angleterre #GB #France #Calais #frontières #migrations #asile #réfugiés #militarisation_des_frontières

    –—

    Peu après l’installation de #grillages à #Vintimille :
    Ventimiglia, recinzioni sulle sponde del Roya per impedirne l’accesso ai migranti
    https://seenthis.net/messages/1012378
    #Roya

  • République dominicaine : à la frontière avec Haïti, une « grille intelligente » contre les migrants

    En #République_dominicaine, face à l’immigration haïtienne – officiellement quelque 500 000 citoyens haïtiens à vivre de l’autre côté de la frontière sur 11 millions d’habitants – le président Abinader a lancé le chantier d’un mur à la frontière avec #Haïti. Influencé par les secteurs dits nationalistes, le président a inauguré la construction en grande pompe, en février 2022, de ce qu’il appelle une « grille intelligente ». Cette initiative est une étape de plus dans la politique anti-haïtienne mise en place au plus haut sommet de l’État dominicain. Les difficultés pour obtenir des papiers et les expulsions illégales sont déjà le quotidien des migrants haïtiens en République dominicaine depuis plusieurs années. Comment est perçue la construction de ce mur dans la ville de Dajabon, où elle a démarré ?

    https://www.rfi.fr/fr/podcasts/les-murs-du-monde/20230814-r%C3%A9publique-dominicaine-%C3%A0-la-fronti%C3%A8re-avec-ha%C3%AFti-un

    #grille_intelligente #murs #frontières #migrations #asile #réfugiés
    #audio #podcast #élevage #vols #nature #lagune_Saladillo

  • Un mur flottant équipé de « scies circulaires » à la frontière américano-mexicaine
    https://observers.france24.com/fr/am%C3%A9riques/20230811-un-mur-flottant-%C3%A9quip%C3%A9-de-scies-circulaires-%


    Finalement, on n’a plus besoin des nazis comme figure universelle de la #dégueulasserie #barbare humaine ordinaire.

    Des vidéos diffusées sur les réseaux sociaux le 8 août 2023 permettent d’observer de plus près la barrière frontalière flottante installée par le gouverneur du Texas, Greg Abbott, et destinée à empêcher les migrants clandestins d’entrer aux États-Unis. Ces installations controversées, près desquelles un corps a récemment été retrouvé, sont équipées de disques métalliques pointus fabriqués par Cochrane Global.

  • Unpicking the notion of ‘safe and legal’ routes

    Introduction

    The last ten years have brought a growing recognition of the need to address the issue of mixed and irregular migratory movements through the introduction of pathways that enable people to move from one country and continent to another in a safe and legal manner. As well as averting the need for refugees and migrants to embark on dangerous and expensive journeys involving unscrupulous human smugglers, such routes promise to mitigate the negative perceptions of states with respect to the impact of such movements on their sovereignty, security, and social stability.

    This essay examines the context in which the discourse on safe and legal routes has emerged and identifies the different types of organised pathways that have been proposed by states and other stakeholders. Focusing particularly on population movements from the global South to the global North, it discusses the opportunities, difficulties, and dilemmas associated with this approach to the governance of cross-border mobility. More specifically, it scrutinises the increasingly popular assumption that the introduction of such routes will lead to significant reductions in the scale of mixed and irregular migration.
    The context

    In the mid-1980s, the world’s most prosperous states began to express concern about the growing number of foreign nationals arriving irregularly on their territory, many of whom subsequently submitted applications for refugee status. Regarding such movements as a threat to their sovereignty, and believing that many of those applications were unfounded, over the next two decades those countries introduced a range of restrictive measures designed to place new physical and administrative barriers in the way of unwanted new arrivals, especially those originating from the global South.

    The limitations of these measures were dramatically exposed in 2015-16, when up to a million people, initially from Syria but subsequently from several other countries, made their way in an unauthorised manner to the European Union, many of them travelling via Türkiye. Reacting to this apparent emergency, the EU adopted a strategy pioneered in earlier years by Australia and the United States, known as “externalisation”. This involved the provision of financial and other incentives to low- and middle-income states on the understanding that they would obstruct the outward movement of irregular migrants and readmit those deported from wealthier states.

    At the same time, governments in the developed world were beginning to acknowledge that mixed and irregular movements of people could not be managed by exclusionary measures alone. This recognition was due in no small part to the efforts of human rights advocates, who were concerned about the negative implications of externalisation for refugee and migrant protection. They also wanted to highlight the contribution that foreign nationals could make to destination countries in the global North if they were able to move there in a regular and orderly manner. The common outcome of these different discourses was a growing degree of support for the notion that the establishment of safe and legal routes could minimise the scale and mitigate the adverse consequences of mixed and irregular movements.

    This was not an entirely new approach. As then UN secretary-general Kofi Annan had argued in the early 2000s, international migration, if governed in an appropriate manner, could have “win-win outcomes”, bringing benefits to countries of origin, countries of destination, and migrants alike. But to attain those outcomes, certain conditions had to be met. In the words of the Global Commission on International Migration (GCM), a body established by Mr. Annan:

    It is in the interest of both states and migrants to create a context in which people migrate out of choice and in a safe and legal manner, rather than irregularly and because they feel they have no other option. Regular migration programmes could reinforce public confidence in the ability of states to admit migrants into their territory on the basis of labor market needs. Programmes of this kind would also help to create a more positive image of migrants and foster greater public acceptance of international migration.

    Migration governance initiatives

    In recent years, and especially since the so-called “European migration crisis” of 2015-16, this notion has been taken up by a number of different migration governance initiatives. Focusing primarily on labour migration, the 2018 Global Compact for Safe, Regular and Orderly Migration (GCM) cited “enhanced availability and flexibility of pathways for regular migration,” as one of its key objectives. Endorsed by the majority of UN member states, the GCM extended this approach to the realm of forced migration, encouraging the international community to “develop or build on existing national and regional practices for admission and stay of appropriate duration based on compassionate, humanitarian or other considerations for migrants compelled to leave their countries of origin.”

    At the same time, the Global Compact on Refugees (GCR), also adopted in 2018 and which was even more widely endorsed by the international community, underlined the necessity for people who were fleeing persecution and armed conflict to have access to safe and legal routes. “There is a need,” it said, “to ensure that such pathways are made available on a more systematic, organised and sustainable basis, that they contain appropriate protection safeguards, and that the number of countries offering these opportunities is expanded overall.”

    Similar approaches have emerged in the context of regional migration governance initiatives. The EU’s 2011 Global Approach to Migration and Mobility, for example, acknowledged the importance of “preventing and reducing irregular migration and trafficking in human beings” by “organising and facilitating legal migration and mobility.” The more recent EU Pact on Migration and Asylum also “aims to reduce unsafe and irregular routes and promote sustainable and safe legal pathways for those in need of protection.” “Developing legal pathways,” it says, “should contribute to the reduction of irregular migration.”

    In 2022, the Summit of the Americas, a meeting of states that focussed on the issue of human mobility in the western hemisphere, endorsed the Los Angeles Declaration on Migration and Protection. Using language similar to that of the EU Pact, it committed participating states to “a shared approach to reduce and manage irregular migration,” and to “promoting regular pathways for migration and international protection.” Signatories expressed their commitment “to strengthen fair labor migration opportunities in the region,” and “to promote access to protection and complementary pathways for asylum seekers, refugees and stateless persons.”

    As indicated by the declaration’s reference to “labor migration opportunities”, the recognition of the need for safe and legal pathways to be established is closely linked to another recent development: a growing and global shortage of workers. In many industrialised states, members of the existing labour force are aging, taking retirement, quitting, or changing their jobs. The Covid-19 pandemic prompted those countries to introduce new border controls and stricter limits on immigration. Taking advantage of these circumstances, employees have been able to demand better wages and working conditions, thereby pushing up the cost of producing goods and providing services. Confronted with these threats to their profitability, the private sector has been placing growing pressure on governments to remove such restrictions and to open the door to foreign labour.
    Safe and legal routes

    As demonstrated by the migration governance initiatives described in the previous section, there is now a broad international consensus on the need to provide safe and legal routes for people who wish or feel obliged to leave their own country. There is also an agreement, supported by a growing volume of academic research, that the provision of such routes has a role to play in reducing the scale of mixed and irregular migration and in boosting the economies of destination states. But what specific forms might those safe and legal routes take? The next section of this essay answers that question by describing the principal proposals made and actions taken in that respect.
    Labour migration programmes

    One such proposal has been labour migration programmes established on a permanent, temporary, or seasonal bases. The rationale for such programmes is that they would allow people from poorer countries who are in need of employment to fill gaps in the labour markets of more prosperous states. As well as boosting the economies of destination countries, such programmes would allow the migrants concerned to enhance their skills and to support their countries of origin by means of remittances.

    Until recently, for example, there have been only limited legal opportunities for the citizens of Central and South American countries, especially those with lower levels of skill, to join the US workforce. At the 2022 Summit of the Americas, however, President Biden indicated that he would introduce a package of measures designed to manage northward migration more effectively, including the establishment of safe and legal routes for Latin Americans. According to one US spokesperson, “we will have announcements related to labor pathways as part of the Los Angeles Declaration, designed to ensure that those pathways meet the highest labor standards and are not used for abuse or for a race to the bottom.”

    Mexico, another signatory to the declaration, has already taken steps in this direction, offering border worker visas to Guatemalans and Belizeans wishing to work in the country’s southernmost states—an initiative intended to meet the labour needs of the area while reducing the number of people from those two countries arriving and working in an irregular manner.

    Turning next to Germany, in 2015-16, at a time when the country was receiving large numbers of new arrivals from the Western Balkan states, most of whom submitted unsuccessful asylum claims, a new employment regulation was introduced. This opened the labour market for nationals of those countries, on condition that they had a valid job offer from a German employer.

    Since that time, EU member states more generally have begun to acknowledge the need to recruit employees from outside the bloc. Thus in April 2022, the European Commission launched what it described as “an ambitious and sustainable legal migration policy,” including “specific actions to facilitate the integration of those fleeing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine into the EU’s labour market.” In the emphatic words of the commissioner for home affairs, “legal migration is essential to our economic recovery […] while reducing irregular migration.”

    A more preemptive approach to the issue has been taken by Australia, whose Pacific Labour Mobility Scheme allows businesses to recruit seasonal and temporary workers from ten Pacific island states. The purpose of the scheme is to meet Australia’s domestic labour market needs, to promote regional cooperation and development, and, in doing so, to avert the kind of instability that might provoke unpredictable and irregular movements of people.
    Refugee-related programmes

    When Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, large numbers of people displaced by the hostilities began to make their way to neighbouring and nearby member states of the European Union. While the EU has made vigorous and often inhumane efforts to exclude asylum seekers originating from other parts of the world, even if they had strong claims to refugee status, in the case of Ukraine steps were quickly taken to regularise the situation of the new arrivals. Refugees from Ukraine were allowed to enter the EU without a visa, to enjoy residence and work rights there for up to three years, and to move freely from one member state to another.

    This arrangement, known as “temporary protection”, was based on a number of considerations: the geographical proximity of Ukraine to the EU, the great difficulty that the EU would have had in trying to obstruct the movement, a humanitarian concern for people who had been obliged to flee by the conflict, and a particular readiness to support the citizens of a friendly country that was suffering from the aggression committed by Russia, a state with a long history of enmity to the EU and NATO. While it remains to be seen how effectively the Ukrainians can be absorbed into the economies and societies of EU member states, in the short term at least, the temporary protection system provided a means of channeling a very large and rapid movement of people into routes that were safe and legal.

    Looking beyond the specifics of the Ukrainian situation, UNHCR, the UN’s agency for refugees, has in recent years made regular calls for governments—predominantly but not exclusively in the global North—to establish and expand the scale of state-sponsored refugee resettlement programmes. Such efforts enjoy limited success, however, partly because of the serious cuts made to the US resettlement quota by the Trump administration, and partly because of the restrictions on movement introduced by many other countries as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic. In the aftermath of the 2015-16 “migrant crisis”, moreover, European countries were reluctant to consider the admission of additional refugees, even if they were to arrive in an organised manner.

    In a more positive development, the decade since the beginning of the Syrian refugee emergency in 2012 has delivered a new focus on the establishment of privately- sponsored resettlement programmes, enabling families as well as neighbourhood, community, and faith-based groups in the global North to sponsor the reception and initial integration of refugees from countries of asylum in the global South. Canada has taken a particular lead in this respect, establishing private sponsorship programmes for Afghan, Syrian, and Ukrainian refugees, with Australia, the US, and some European countries also experimenting with this particular form of safe and legal route.

    A similar approach can be seen with respect to the notion of “humanitarian corridors”, an initiative taken by Italian church-affiliated groups. Self-funded but closely coordinated with the government in Rome, this programme has enabled religious communities in Italy to welcome hundreds of refugees from Ethiopia, Greece, and Lebanon. Discussions are currently underway with a view to expanding this model to other European states.

    Recent years have seen a growing interest in the notion of labour mobility for refugees, arrangements whereby refugees with specific skills and qualifications are allowed to leave their country of asylum in order to take up pre-arranged employment opportunities in another state. An approach first proposed more than a decade ago but largely unimplemented since that time, the potential of such initiatives has now been recognised by Australia, Canada, and the UK, all of which have recently established pilot programmes of this type.

    In similar vein, humanitarian organisations have promoted the notion that refugees in developing countries of asylum should be able to benefit from scholarship programmes in states that are better equipped to provide them with appropriate education at the secondary and tertiary levels. The implementation of this approach has been boosted considerably by the emergencies in Syria and Ukraine, both of which have prompted universities around the world to make special provisions for refugee students.

    When people move from one country to another in the context of a refugee crisis, a common consequence is for family members to be separated, either because some have been left behind in the country of origin, or because they lose contact with each other during their journey to a safer place. In response to this humanitarian issue, the international community has for many years supported the notion of family reunification programmes, organised with the support of entities such as the International Organization for Migration, UNHCR, and the Red Cross movement. Most recently, there has been a recognition that such programmes also have a role to play in reducing the scale of irregular movements, given the frequency with which people engage in such journeys in an attempt to reunite with their relatives.
    Relocation and evacuation programmes

    Other arrangements have been made to enable refugees and migrants to relocate in a safe and legal manner from countries that are not in a position to provide them with the support that they need. In the EU, efforts—albeit largely unsuccessful—have been made recently to establish redistribution programmes, relocating people from front-line states such as Greece and Italy, which have large refugee and migrant populations, to parts of Europe that are under less pressure in this respect.

    In a more dramatic context, UNHCR has established an evacuation programme for refugees and migrants in Libya, where they are at serious risk of detention and human rights abuses, and where escape from the country by boat also presents them with enormous dangers. A safe and legal alternative has been found in an arrangement whereby the most vulnerable of these people are transferred to emergency transit centres in Niger and Rwanda, pending the time when other countries accept them as permanent residents.

    Finally, proposals have been made with respect to the establishment of arrangements that would allow people who are at risk in their country of origin to move elsewhere in a safe and legal manner. For individuals and families, this objective could be attained by means of humanitarian visas issued by the overseas embassies of states that wish to provide sanctuary to people who are threatened in their homeland.

    On a larger scale, orderly departure programmes might be established for designated categories of people who feel obliged to leave their own country and who might otherwise have no alternative but to move by irregular means. An important—but as yet unreplicated— precedent was set in this respect by a 1980s programme that allowed some 800,000 Vietnamese citizens to relocate to the US and other western countries with the authorisation of the Hanoi government, sparing them from the dangerous journeys that the “boat people” had undertaken in earlier years.
    The potential of regular pathways

    It is not surprising that the notion of safe and legal routes has attracted so much attention in recent years. They are in the interest of refugees and migrants, who would otherwise have to embark on difficult and often dangerous journeys. They are in the interest of states, who have much to gain from the orderly and authorised movement of people. And they are in the interest of international organisations that are struggling to respond to large-scale and unpredicted movements of people, and which are trying to ensure that human mobility is governed in a more effective, human and equitable manner.

    At the same time, there is a need to scrutinise the popular assumption that such measures can substantially reduce the scale of mixed and irregular migratory movements, and to address the many difficulties and dilemmas associated with the establishment of such pathways.
    Scaling up

    Despite all of the rhetorical support given to the notion of regular pathways in recent years, the number of people who are able to access them is still very modest. And there are a number of reasons why they might not be scaled up to any great extent. First, the Covid-19 pandemic, which erupted unexpectedly not long after the GCM and GCR had been negotiated, caused many governments to act with a new degree of caution in relation to the cross-border movement of people. And while the pandemic has subsided, states may well prefer to retain some of the immigration restrictions they introduced in the context of the pandemic.

    Second, and more recently, the need for states in Europe and beyond to admit large numbers of refugees from Afghanistan and Ukraine seems certain to limit their enthusiasm and capacity for the establishment of safe routes for people from other parts of the world. With many thousands of people from those two countries left without jobs and in temporary accommodation, the introduction or expansion of other pathways would simply exacerbate this problem.

    While the admission of overseas workers appears to be a way of addressing the demographic deficits and labour market needs of the industrialised states, are the citizens and politicians of those countries ready to acknowledge the need to admit more foreign nationals, even if they arrive in a managed manner? Immigration has become a toxic issue in many of the world’s more prosperous states, and few governments or opposition parties are willing to run on electoral platforms that advocate an increase in the number of new arrivals from other parts of the world.

    In the context described above, it should come as no surprise that most of the orderly pathway initiatives introduced in recent years (such as privately sponsored resettlement, humanitarian corridors, evacuation, and relocation programmes) have all operated on a modest scale and have often been established on a pilot basis, with no guarantee of them being expanded.

    For example, when in 2021 the British home secretary introduced a new labour mobility programme for refugees, she boldly announced that “those displaced by conflict and violence will now be able to benefit from access to our global points-based immigration system, enabling them to come to the UK safely and legally through established routes”. In fact, only 100 Syrian refugees from Jordan and Lebanon will benefit from the programme over the next two years.

    And the UK is not an isolated case. According to a recent study, in 2019 the OECD countries provided complementary pathways to fewer than 156,000 people from seven major refugee-producing countries. Two-thirds of them were admitted on the basis of family reunion, with the remaining third split equally between people granted visas for work and for educational purposes. That 156,000 constituted just 0.6 percent of the global refugee population.
    Reducing irregular migration

    Even if safe and legal routes could be established and expanded, what impact would that have on the scale of irregular migration? That is a difficult question to answer, partly because the evidence on this issue is so limited, and partly because it is methodologically challenging to establish causal linkages between these two phenomena, as demonstrated by two recent studies.

    With respect to the German labour programme in the Western Balkans, one analyst has suggested that although the number of asylum applications from that region did indeed drop after the new initiative was introduced, “one cannot credibly single out the exact effect the Western Balkan Regulation had on reducing irregular migration from the region to Germany”. The author goes on to say that “the regulation was only one of many policy measures at the time, including many restrictive measures and faster processing times of asylum applications as well as the ‘closure’ of the Western Balkan route.” Consequently, “it is not possible to isolate the exact causal role the Western Balkan Regulation may have played.”

    A case study of Mexico and the US reaches a similar conclusion, suggesting “there is evidence that lawful channels for migration between Mexico and the US have suppressed unlawful migration, but only when combined with robust enforcement efforts,” including the intensification of border controls that facilitated the apprehension and return of migrants crossing the frontier in an irregular manner. This conclusion on the close relationship between safe pathways and enforcement, shared by both studies, is ironic, given that some of the strongest NGO advocates for the former are most vocal in their opposition to the latter!

    A more general review of the evidence on this matter also casts doubt on the notion that an expansion of safe and legal routes will necessarily lead to a reduction in irregular movements. Looking specifically at labour migration programmes, the study says that they are often proposed “on the basis of an assumption of a rerouting effect, whereby migrants who would otherwise arrive and enter the asylum system or stay in a country without legal status will be incentivised to try and access a legal work permit from home rather than migrate illegally.” But the validity of that assumption “will depend on the capacity of legal pathways to accommodate the number of low-skilled workers who want to migrate, but lack permission to enter their desired destination.”

    That statement concerning the number of people who would like to or have been obliged to migrate but who have been unable to do so in a safe and legal manner is readily substantiated in numerical terms. Most estimates suggest that around 15 million irregular migrants are to be found in the US and Europe alone, with millions more in countries such as India, Libya, Malaysia, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, and South Africa. According to UNHCR, there are some 30 million refugees worldwide and more than 4.5 million asylum seekers who are waiting for their applications to be processed. A worldwide survey undertaken in 2018 concluded that some 750 million people, 15 percent of all the world’s adults, would move to another country if they had the opportunity to do so.

    Given the growing demand for migration opportunities in poorer regions of the world, coupled with the general reluctance of the industrialised states to facilitate the large-scale admission of people who want to move there, it is difficult to see how this square can be circled. The most likely scenario is that the supply of opportunities for regular migration will be unable to meet the demand, meaning that aspirant migrants who are not selected for regular entry will still have a strong incentive to move in an irregular manner.

    Indeed, it can also be argued that the establishment of safe and legal routes intensifies the social networks linking countries of origin and destination, enabling those migrants who move in a regular manner to inform the compatriots they have left behind of the opportunities that exist in the countries to which they have moved and to send remittances to people at home that can be used to pay the costs of a clandestine journey to the same location. In this respect, instead of reducing levels of irregular migration, the establishment of safe and legal routes might actually contribute to their growth.
    Selection criteria and processes

    In addition to the scale of the routes that might be established and their potential impact on levels of irregular migration, a number of other issues must be considered in the context of this discourse.

    First, the notion of safe and legal pathways is based on the idea that states should control the arrival of foreign nationals on their territory, determining how many should be admitted, what countries they should come from, why they wish or need to move to another country, what their demographic profile is, and what skills they should have. In other words, for safe and legal routes to work effectively, states and other stakeholders have to establish selection criteria and processes that allow the admission of some people who would like to move, while refusing entry to others. This is not a principle accepted by some refugee and migrant advocates, for whom the notion of safe and legal routes has become a disguised proxy for “open borders”.

    Almost inevitably, moreover, different constituencies within receiving states will be pushing for priority to be given to certain categories of people. Humanitarians will want the emphasis to be on refugees. Diaspora families and communities will favour family reunification programmes and community-sponsored resettlement. The private sector will argue the case for the admission of people with the skills and capacity to fill gaps in the labour market in a cost-effective manner. Universities will argue the case for visas to be granted to refugees and other foreign citizens with the necessary qualifications or academic aptitude. The selection process is therefore likely to be a contested and controversial one, potentially limiting governmental enthusiasm for the notion of safe and legal routes.
    Status and rights

    Second, as the attempt to regularise migratory movements proceeds, some important questions will have to be addressed in relation to the status and rights of the new arrivals and the organisation of such programmes. In the context of labour migration programmes, for example, would people be admitted on a temporary or permanent basis, and in the latter case would they eventually be able to acquire permanent resident rights or citizenship? Would they be tied to a single employer or allowed to move freely in the labour market? Would they enjoy the same pay, rights, and working conditions as citizens of the countries in which they are employed?

    A somewhat different set of issues arises in the context of labour mobility initiatives for refugees. Will they be allowed to leave their countries of asylum by the governments of those states and, more importantly, would they be able to return to it if employed abroad on a temporary basis? As some refugee lawyers have mooted, would they be at risk of being deported to their country of origin, and thereby be at risk of persecution, if their country of first asylum refused to readmit them? And if they were readmitted to their country of first asylum, would they have full access to the labour market there, or find themselves returning to a refugee camp or informal urban settlement where only informal and low-income livelihoods opportunities exist?

    With respect to privately sponsored resettlement, there is some evidence, especially from Canada, that refugees who arrive by this route fare better than those who are admitted by means of state-sponsored programmes. But there are also risks involved, especially in emergency situations where the citizens of resettlement countries are, for good humanitarian reasons, eager to welcome refugees into their homes and neighbourhoods, and where the state is only too happy to devolve responsibility for refugees to members of the community.

    A particular case in point is to be found in the UK’s sponsorship scheme for Ukrainian refugees, in which some of the new arrivals have found themselves matched with inappropriate sponsors in isolated rural locations and with few affordable options available with respect to their long-term accommodation.
    State manipulation

    Third, the establishment and expansion of safe and legal routes could have adverse consequences if misused by destination countries. With respect to resettlement, for example, UNHCR has always insisted that refugees should be selected on the basis of their vulnerability, and not in terms of what the organisation describes as their “integration potential”.

    That principle might prove more difficult to uphold in a context where alternative pathways are being discussed, specifically targeted at people on the basis of their skills, qualifications, language abilities, family connections and value to the labour market. Rather than expanding their refugee resettlement programmes, as UNHCR would like them to do, will destination countries prefer to make use of pathways that enable them to cherry-pick new arrivals on the basis of perceived value to the economy and society?

    At the same time, there is a risk that states will use the establishment of organised pathways as a pretext for the exclusion of asylum seekers who arrive in an independent manner and by irregular means. That has long been the approach adopted by Australia, whose policy of interception at sea and relocation to remote offshore processing facilities is justified by the government on the grounds that the country has a substantial refugee resettlement programme. Rather than taking to boats and “ jumping the queue”, the authorities say, refugees should wait their turn to be resettled from their country of asylum, however difficult that might be in practice.

    Taking its cue from Australia, the UK is in the process of establishing a formalised two-tier asylum system. On one hand, “bespoke” admissions programmes will be established for refugees from countries in which the UK has a particular geopolitical interest, most notably Afghanistan and Ukraine. On the other hand, the asylum claims of people arriving in the UK in an irregular manner, such as by boat across the English Channel (including those from Afghanistan and Ukraine) are now deemed inadmissible, and many of those arriving in this way are detained and liable to deportation to Rwanda without the possibility of returning to the UK, even if their refugee claim is recognised by the authorities in Kigali. At the time of writing, however, there is no evidence that this policy will have its intended effect of deterring irregular arrivals, nor indeed whether it will ever be implemented, given the legal challenges to which it is being subjected.
    Regularisation

    Finally, while much of the recent discourse on irregular migration has focused on the extent to which its scale and impact can be minimised by the establishment of safe and legal pathways, it must not be forgotten that many destination countries already have substantial populations of people who are officially not authorised to be there: so-called “illegal immigrants”, unsuccessful asylum seekers, and foreign nationals who have overstayed their visas, to give just three examples.

    No serious attempt to address the issue of irregular migration can avoid the situation and status of such people, although questions relating to their regularisation, whether by means of amnesties or by other measures. have not featured at all prominently in the recent discourse on international mobility.

    Interestingly, the GCM avoids the issue completely, presumably because it is deemed to be a matter that lies within the jurisdiction of sovereign states. If an attempt had been made to include the question of regularisation in the compact, it would almost certainly have been endorsed by fewer states. Nevertheless, any discussion of irregular migration must involve a consideration of those people who are living and working in countries where they do not have a legal status, as countries such as Spain, Ireland, and Italy have started to recognise. It is an issue that warrants much more attention at the national and multilateral levels, irrespective of its controversial nature.
    Conclusion

    A strong case can be made for the introduction and expansion of safe and legal migratory routes, as has been recognised by a plethora of recent initiatives relating to the governance of international mobility. But expectations of them should be modest.

    While such routes may have a limited role to play in reducing the scale and impact of mixed and irregular movements, they appear unlikely to have the transformative effect that some participants in the migration discourse have suggested they might have. Such routes are also likely to be a contentious matter, with some states using the notion of safe and legal routes as a pretext for the introduction of draconian approaches to the issue of irregular migration, and with migrant advocates employing the same concept as a means of avoiding the more controversial slogan of “open borders”.

    As indicated in the introduction, this essay has focused to a large extent on mixed and irregular migration from the global South to the global North, as it is those movements that have prompted much of the recent discourse on safe and legal routes. But it should not be forgotten that most migratory movements currently take place within the global South, and that some 85 percent of the world’s refugees are to be found in low and middle-income countries.

    Looking at the migration and refugee scenario in the developing world, there are perhaps greater grounds for optimism than can be found by focusing on the industrialised states. With some exceptions (South Africa being a prime example), countries in the global South are less exercised by the issue of irregular migration.

    Two regions—South America and West Africa—have established rather successful freedom-of-movement arrangements for their citizens. And despite some restrictive tendencies, encouraged in many instances by the externalisation policies of the global North, developing countries have kept their borders relatively open to refugees, as demonstrated by the presence of so many Rohingya refugees from Myanmar in Bangladesh, South Sudanese in Uganda, Syrians in Jordan and Lebanon, and Venezuelans in a host of neighbouring and nearby states.

    In an ideal world, the cross-border movement of people would indeed take place in an exclusively voluntary, safe, and orderly manner. But that scenario cannot be envisaged in an era that is characterised by failures of global governance, widespread armed conflict, growing regional inequalities, intensifying environmental disasters, and the climate crisis, not to mention the general unwillingness of politicians and the public to countenance large-scale immigration and refugee arrivals. Looking to the future, there is every reason to believe that large numbers of people will have to move out of necessity rather than choice, in an unpredictable and irregular manner.

    https://mixedmigration.org/articles/unpicking-the-notion-of-safe-and-legal-routes

    #migrations #asile #réfugiés #voies_sures #voies_légales #frontières #1980s #menace #2015 #externalisation #refugee_compact #pacte_migratoire #global_compact_for_safe_orderly_and_regular_migration #global_compact_on_refugees #global_compact #relocalisation #régularisation #ouverture_des_frontières #Jeff_Crisp #safe_routes #legal_routes

    • Journées d’Action à Dakar : #72h_Push_Back_Frontex

      L’organisation de la société civile sénégalaise Boza Fii a organisé une action de 72 heures dans la banlieue de Dakar au début du mois. Par cette action, ses membres dénoncent la présence de Frontex dans le pays et, plus largement, le régime mondial de mobilité asymétrique. Ici, nous publions le discours prononcé lors de la conférence de presse qui a ouvert les journées d’action. Vous pouvez le regarder en ligne ici.

      "Vous surveillez les frontières, nous vous surveillons

      Nous BOZA FII, nous nous engageons dans le domaine de la fuite et de la migration. Nous soutenons les migrants de retour volontaire, les migrants qui ont été expulsés vers leur pays d’origine et confrontés à un manque total d’assistance. Ainsi que les amis et familles de ceux qui sont disparus en mer méditerranée et aux frontières, dans leur douloureuse quête de réponses. Mais aussi promouvoir le droit à l’identité et à la dignité pour toutes les victimes de nos frontières, et le droit de leurs familles à savoir. Nous voulons œuvrer au meilleur respect des droits de ces personnes, non seulement fragilisées par les drames de la migration mais aussi souvent stigmatisées dans leur propre communauté. Nous souhaitons également encourager la production de connaissances et promouvoir l’objectivité du débat sur les migrations et les échanges internationaux afin d’affronter ensemble les réalités mondiales.

      Nous nous engageons pour lutter contre les politiques frontalières et pour la liberté de circulation de tout un chacun.

      Depuis la création de l’association en septembre 2020 nous avons beaucoup fait des recherches sur le déploiement de frontex au Sénégal. C’est en juin 2022 que nous avons senti l’intérêt de créer des synergies de lutte contre frontex au Sénégal et notre 1ère action 72h PUSH BACK FRONTEX était en fin septembre 2022. L’idée était d’abord de sensibiliser la population sénégalaise du danger de l’agence meurtrière des contrôles des frontières de l’UE (FRONTEX). C’est vrai qu’au Sénégal personne ne parle de Frontex et ne connaissent peut-être pas cette agence que nous considérons criminelle. Nous avons senti cette ignorance de la population dans les politiques migratoires du Sénégal et nous voyons important de faire savoir à notre gouvernement que nous ne sommes pas d’accord pour le déploiement de frontex au Sénégal et de leur faire savoir que nous connaissons ce que frontex fait dans la Méditerranée, dans la mer Egée et dans les frontières.

      Depuis quelques années, des plans de restrictions du droit à la libre circulation sont en phase de briser le tissu socio-économique des communautés à travers une intelligence dénommée " Frontex " savamment déployée en Afrique à travers une certaine cellule dite " des gestions de risques liés à la migration irrégulière " et une présence d’officiers de liaison. La mission de l’équipe conjointe d’investigation composée des éléments de la police espagnole " Guardia Civil ", française et de la gendarmerie nationale sénégalais. Un tels dispositif déployé en Afrique de l’Oouest et particulièrement au Sénégal depuis 2017 avec tout ce qu’il compte comme moyens de dissuasion, de contrôle voire de répression entretenu par un budget faramineux et d’une armée propre composée de milliers d’hommes étrangers à celle du Sénégal dans un tout proche avenir, ne constituent ‘il pas en lui-même la source de tous les risques imaginables ?

      Le programme des journées d’action

      Le renforcement du contrôle aux frontières (mer, terrestre, aérienne) au Sénégal et entre les états de la CEDEAO à travers le système MIDAS (Migration Information and Data Système) spécialisé dans le partage des informations sur la surveillance territoriale à travers des données biométriques initié par l’organisation internationale pour les migrants (OIM) ne saurait etre sans conséquences sur la liberté de circulation, que beaucoup de pays ne font pas partis et le déploiement des garde-côtes nourrissent les débats dans le cercle de la société civile active dans la question du droit à la mobilité des personnes. Cette logique n’a pas laissé indifférent le gouvernement du Sénégal en le poussant à restructurer des ministères et mettre en place des institutions de défense et de promotion des humains tels que le ministère de la justice, la commission nationale des droits des hommes qui bafouent chaque jours les droits des citoyens sénégalais.

      Projection de films à Keur Massa

      Si nous avons inscrit dans notre agenda la question de la libre circulation dans l’espace CEDEAO, ce n’est nullement un fait de hasard. BOZA FII interpelle les consciences de tous les mouvements et les forces vives qui militent pour un monde juste et respectueux des valeurs humains telles que contenues dans les instruments de protection et de la valorisation de l’êtres humains (Loi n°1981/47 du 2 juillet 1981 au Sénégal, la charte africaine des droits de l’homme, les textes de la CEDEAO, le droit à la libre circulation article 12.1, le principe respect de l’égalité dans la procédure d’expulsion article 12.4, l’interdiction de l’expulsion collective non-nationaux article 12.5, de l’Union africaine, de la déclaration universelle des droits de l’homme, et bien d’autres). En dépit de l’existence de tout cet arsenal juridique et institutionnel, au mois de juillet le Sénégal refoule illégalement des ressortissants guinéens. Ce pendant les activités de Frontex au Sénégal impactent depuis des années par un certain nombre de constats qui mettent à rude épreuve la liberté de circulation des personnes à l’intérieure du Sénégal, de ses frontières de manières générale. Les départs au Sénégal vers le nord via le Sahara et par la mer sont une parfaite illustration et les événements du 24 juin 2022 dans les enclaves de Melilla constituent une alerte sans précédent, celle du 14 juin 2023 dans les eaux du Grèce et récemment les naufrages répétitifs du mois de juillet au Sénégal.

      A partir de 2022 pèse la menace d’un accord entre l’Union européenne et la République du Sénégal qui permettrait à l’agence européenne de surveillance des frontières, Frontex, de s’implanter définitivement dans le pays. Il s’agit d’une avancée importante dans le processus d’externalisation des frontières par la Forteresse Europe, qui concernerait pour la première fois un pays non frontalier. Le premier pas dans cette direction a été fait en février 2022 quand, lors d’une visite à Dakar, YIVA JOHANSON Commissaire européenne chargée des Affaires intérieures, a proposé le déploiement au Sénégal de Frontex pour contrôler le « trafic d’êtres humains » par les embarcations qui partent vers les Canaries. Dans sa déclaration elle affirme qu’avec l’accord du gouvernement sénégalais, l’agence pourrait envoyer des équipements de surveillance des frontières telles que des drones, des navires, et même du personnel frontex pour lutter contre les départs du Sahel.

      Liste des morts aux frontières

      Mais d’après une investigation que nous avons faite frontex a déjà commencé à opérer et exercer sur les côtés Sénégalaises.

      Nous avons questionné quelques personnes qui travaillent dans la marine ainsi que la police Sénégalaise et ils nous ont confirmé qu’il y a des opérations conjointes de Frontex ici.

      Malheureusement rien n’est écrit dans les médias locaux et même dans les plates-formes de communication du gouvernement.

      Frontex est présent au Sénégal (comme en Mauritanie) depuis presque vingt ans. Le 20 juin 2006 Frontex a communique à Madrid le début de l’opération Héra, qui a démarré en juillet de la même année. Sous la coordination de la Guardia Civil et de la Policia Nacional espagnoles, Héra a permis à Frontex de commencer à patrouiller et opérer dans les zones maritimes sénégalaises (comme du Cap-Vert et de la Mauritanie). Initialement, l’opération Héra I, qui avait un budget de 370.000 euros, visait simplement à identifier les départs au Sénégal en 2006 Barça ou Barzahk* et la nationalité des personnes arrivant en Espagne pour en faciliter les expulsions par des vols collectifs. C’est avec Héra II que la police frontalière a tôt amplifié son pouvoir : L’opération s’est dotée pour la première fois de 3 bateaux, un hélicoptère et deux avions, pour un budget bien plus significatif de 3.2 millions d’euros. C’est par cette manière qu’après sa création en 2004, Frontex s’est configuré et consolidé comme acteur qui, même en dehors de l’Europe, identifie, bloque, emprisonne et déporte les personnes qui cherchent à rejoindre l’Europe par la route atlantique. A l’époque, la France et l’Espagne avaient permis l’insertion de Frontex sur le sol sénégalais en s’offrant de l’héberger au niveau logistique dans les structures militaires françaises à Dakar.

      En 2017, Frontex a lancé le projet AFIC (Communauté du renseignement Afrique-Frontex) en 8 pays africains : Cote d’Ivoire, Gambie, Ghana, Mauritanie, Niger, Nigeria, Sénégal et Togo. Maintenant ce réseau compte la participation de 29 pays africains. Sous prétexte de « collecter et d’analyser des données sur la criminalité transfrontalière et soutenir les autorités impliquées dans la gestion des frontières. En 2019 au port de Dakar, dans le siège du Commissariat spécial de police du port de Dakar, frontex et le gouvernement du Sénégal ont inaugurés la cellule d’analyse des risques qui est censée collecter des données stratégiques pour la gestion de la sécurité des frontières. On sait très bien que les risques dont on parle ne sont pas les morts en mer, mais plutôt le fait que des citoyens africains puissent rejoindre le territoire européen.

      En plus, dès 2020, réside stablement auprès de l’Office de l’Union Européenne à Dakar une liaison officiée de Frontex. Et l’état du Sénégal continue de médiatiser le blocage de départs collectifs en pirogue grâce au dispositif Frontex.

      C’est d’ailleurs sur ces présupposées qu’ils ont mis en place un programme spécifique, qui s’est conclu à Décembre 2022

      Pour revenir à l’actualité, donc, le 7 juin 2022 la Commission européenne a rédigé une « Fiche action sur le Sénégal : renforcement de la coopération avec l’agence Frontex », qui préparait les directives pour négocier l’accord que le Consul d’Europe a soumis à l’Etat du Sénégal pour validation. Ces directives prévoient que les officiers de Frontex seront autorisés à porter des armes et à les utiliser. En outre, on voudrait garantir aux membres du corps de Frontex une immunité totale vis-à-vis de la juridiction pénale et civile de la République du Sénégal. C’est la police coloniale qui revient claire et nette en Afrique. Permettez-nous de vous rappeler certains points essentiels de l’accord avec frontex. Le déploiement de frontex au Sénégal est donc un risque et non une solution pour le pays. En fait, cette installation pourrait également empiéter sur la souveraineté d’un pays et entraînera encore plus de violations des droits des senegalais.

      Le déploiement de Frontex sur la façade maritime pourrait entraver ces libertés professionnelles aux pécheurs sénégalais et du CEDEAO acquises depuis 1979 sous prétexte de lutter contre le trafic de migrants. On peut également dire l’installation de Frontex sur la route du Sahara à partir du Sénégal et de la Mauritanie afin de compléter le contrôle sur les zones territoriales d’Afrique du Nord. Cela semble être une suite logique du cadre opérationnel de la stratégie d’externalisation des frontières de l’Union européenne. Ces mécanismes d’intervention de la part de l’Union européenne ne sont pas nouveaux. La lutte contre la pêche illégale a déjà été utilisée comme prétexte. Les accords entre le Sénégal et l’union Européenne ont substantiellement modifié le modèle de pêche artisanale et ont diminué les captures et les revenus des pêcheurs artisanaux qui représentent 17% de la population active sénégalaise. Ce sont les bateaux de l’Union européenne et de la Chine qui semblent profiter aujourd’hui des ressources de cette côte. Cela pousse de nombreux pêcheurs sénégalais à se rendre en Mauritanie et en Guinée Bissau dans des situations qui entrainent souvent des conflits entre communautés. Il faut se demander comment Frontex, dans ce contexte, pourrait- il intervenir face à ces différents acteurs. Il y a un fort risque de push back contre les pêcheurs artisanaux au motif qu’ils transportent des migrants. On court également le risque que Frontex devienne une sorte de « bras armé » pour les bateaux de pêche de l’Union européenne.

      Commémor’action (prières)

      Depuis 2021, la Guardia Civil espagnole a déployé des navires et des hélicoptères sur les côtes du Sénégal et de la Mauritanie, dans le cadre de l’opération « Hera » mise en place dès 2006 (l’année de la « crise des pirogues ») grâce à des accords de coopération militaire avec les deux pays africains, et en coordination avec Frontex.

      Ainsi nous comptons faire cet événement chaque année au Sénégal jusqu’à l’abolition définitive de Frontex.

      Nous ferons jaillir la lumière, au grand jour que la politique migratoire de Frontex en Afrique et particulièrement au senegal n’est que la face cachée de l’iceberg.

      Cette campagne a pour but de faire comprendre aux populations que l’agence européenne des soi-disant garde-côtes (Frontex) se déploie au Sénégal et de dénoncer comment l’UE collabore avec nos régimes complices tuant les personnes dans la méditerranée et dans les pays de transits."

      *Barça ou Barzahk (Barçelone ou la Mort) était le slogan des migrant*es lors de la « crise des pirogues » de 2006
      https://migration-control.info/fr/blog/journee-daction-a-72h-push-back-frontex

      #commémoraction #commémoration #mémoire #morts_aux_frontières #Dakar

    • OPEN PRESS DEPLOIEMENT DE FONTEX AU SENEGAL

      Boza fii était à sa deuxième édition du Push Back Frontex. Un évènement qui s’est déroulé du 10 au 12 aout à la commune de Dalifort Foirail (Dakar) sous le thème de : Laisser les personnes mourir ou les tuer ne doit pas être un moyen de #dissuasion.
      Au cours de ces 72h, un programme bien défini a été mis en place par l’association Boza fii, dans le cadre de sa lutte contre le déploiement Frontex au Sénégal et les formes d’externalisation des frontières de l’UE. Ce programme a débuté le jeudi 10 aout par une conférence de presse à laquelle la presse nationale et internationale ainsi que beaucoup d’organisation œuvrant pour le respect des droits de l’homme ont été conviés. Lors de cette conférence de presse plusieurs sujets sur la migration ont été abordés, notamment l’agence européenne de gardes-frontières et de gardes côtes FRONTEX. L’ordre du jour était de discuter des questions concernant Frontex et son déploiement au Sénégal et d’apporter des éclaircissements depuis son implantation dans le pays jusqu’à nos jours.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gwL9FgjDxiM


      #Boza_fii

    • #Commission_LIBE, janvier 2024 :

      Victoire ! Adoption en Commission LIBE du rapport qui récuse le déploiement de Frontex au Sénégal.
      Le Sénégal ne veut pas de cet accord, mais l’UE veut le contraindre pour mener à bien son abject projet d’Europe forteresse. Une nouvelle atteinte grave aux droits des exilé•es.

      https://nitter.cz/DamienCAREME/status/1752763595144757520

  • Bulgaria – Let somebody die is killing. Chronicle of a failure to render aid on the Bulgarian-Turkish border.

    The facts refer to the night of 19-20 July 2023. In order to protect the people involved, we are releasing this report after a few weeks. After this first intervention, as Collettivo Rotte Balcaniche we continue to deal with similar emergencies, acting in first person in the search and rescue of people stranded in the woods along the Bulgarian-Turkish border.

    1:00 am. The telephone of our collective rings. “We got a pregnant woman on Route 79”; it’s a person living in Harmanli camp that we met some weeks before, he is a friend of the woman’s husband. He is helped by a translator, who is also living in the camp. He fears to be accused of smuggling, so he asks us if we can call an ambulance. Route 79 is one of the most patrolled by the border police, as most of the people who cross the Turkish border need to pass by here to go to Sofia. With the help of the interpreter we call the woman: she is eight months pregnant and she is alone in the “jungle” with her two children. They were exhausted so they have been left near the street by the group they were walking with, waiting for rescue. She gives us her location: 42.12.31.6N 27.00.20.9E. We explain to her that the ambulance number is the same of police, so she risks to be illegally pushed-back to Turkey. She knows that and she tells us to call anyway.

    2:00 am. We call 112 for the first time. We record this call and all the following ones. No questions about the health conditions of the woman and the children, but the call lasts 11 minutes in order to explain how we got in contact with the woman, how she crossed the border, where she is from, who we are, what we are doing in Bulgaria. They suspect a case of trafficking and we are forced to give them the number of the person who put us in contact with her. We feel under interrogation. “In a couple of minutes our units are gonna be there to search for the woman”, it’s 02:06 am. We realize that we didn’t speak with a rescuer but with a policeman.

    03:21 am. One hour passed but nothing happened: we call 112 again. We ask if they called the woman and they answer: “we tried contacting but we can’t reach the phone number”. The woman tells us that she has never received any telephone call. We give them again her location: 42.12.37.6N 27.00.21.5E. We add that it is very near to the street but they answer: “not exactly, it’s more like inside of the woods”, “it’s exactly like near the border, and it’s inside of a wood region, it’s a forest, not a street”. In order to dispel any doubts, we ask: “do you confirm that the coordinates are near to route 79?”. They make us wait and they answer: “they are near a main road. Can’t exactly specify if it’s 79″. We say to them that the woman fainted. “Can she dial us? Can she call so we can get a bit more information?”. We don’t understand which other information they need, we are incredulous: “She’s not conscious so I don’t think she’ll be able to make the call”. They suggest that the translator should contact them. We suspect that they want us to be out of the issue. Other 18 minutes passed, the call has been a farce. Before we feared the consequences of the police arrival, now we are afraid that nobody will arrive. We decide to go there, we have to travel 1 hour and 40 minutes.

    04:42 am. Third call. They ask us again for all the information, and again we give the geographical coordinates. We tell them that we are going there and we insist: “Are there any news on the research?”. “I can’t tell this”. Through the interpreter we keep constantly in touch with the woman. She confirms that no searching unit has arrived. The farce is becoming a tragedy.

    06:18 am. Fourth call. We are at the location but the street is empty. We want to be irreproachable and let them know that we arrived. We repeat again that we are calling for a pregnant woman in bad conditions. The conversation is absurd, they start again with the questions: “which month?”, “which baby is this? First? Second?”, “how old does she look like?”, “how do you know she’s there? she called you or what?”. We tell them that we are about to start to look for her and they answer: “we are looking for her also”. We say: “Well, where are you because there is no one here, we are on the spot and there is no one”. They justify themselves: “you have new information because obviously she is not at the one coordinates you gave”, “the police went three times to the coordinates and they didn’t find the woman, the coordinates are wrong”. Once again we understand that they are lying.

    We will make another call at 06:43 am, when we have already found her. They will ask again for the coordinates and they will tell us to wait for them along the street.

    Our research lasts a few minutes. The woman sends us the location again: 42.12′.36.3N 2700.43.3E. She is 500 meters far from the previous coordinates but nearer to the street. We shout “hello” and we follow the voices we hear: we find her 2 meters far from the street, on a gentle slope, lying down under a tree with her two children by her side. They come from Syria, the children are 4 and 7 years old. She is too weak to stand up. We have only some water and bread for them. There is also a boy with them, probably he is underage. He found them and he stopped to help them. We warn him that the police will arrive soon. He doesn’t want to be pushed-back to Turkey, so he goes away, alone and without a backpack. We look around: in reality, the so-called “forest” is a little wooded area of some meters, which divides the street from the fields.

    Some minutes later a border police patrol passes by and stops. They approach us with the hand on the gun. They have not been warned about the situation: they assail us with thousands of questions without any interest for the woman and the children. They take our telephones and they delete the photos taken at the police arrival. We decide to call a local lawyer that we met some days before: she answers that it’s normal that the rescuers are late in the “jungle” and she suggests us to go away in order to let the police work. Meanwhile, the gendarmerie and the local police arrive. It’s missing the only essential and requested thing: the ambulance, which will never arrive.

    07:45 am. The police escort us to the nearest village (Sredets) and assure us that there is a hospital there. They try to divide the woman and the children in two different cars. We ask to bring them all together in our car. In Sredets we are brought to the border police station nevertheless. We see many border policemen dressed in camouflage, armed with machine guns, leaving in groups with military vehicles. We see two Dutch Frontex agents and also a Bulgarian policeman with a fascist T-shirt of Predappio gatherings. We are constrained at the end of a corridor, standing, with only one chair for the woman, surrounded by five policemen. The youngest one shouts at us that we will be detained “because you are making illegal migrants cross the border”. We ask for some water and a toilet for the woman and the children, at the beginning they deny them. We keep waiting, then they tell us that they can’t go to the hospital because they are undocumented and that they are arrested.

    09:00 am. Finally the doctor arrives. He speaks only Bulgarian, he visits the woman in the corridor without any privacy, asking her to uncover the belly in front of five policemen. We call once again the lawyer, we want to demand a doctor’s office and an interpreter for the woman. We are not listened.After 5 minutes the doctor finishes the visit, suggesting only to drink a lot of water.

    09:35 am. They give us back our id cards and they invite us to go away. It’s the last time that we see the woman and the two children. The police will confiscate her telephone. They are not given the possibility to apply for asylum and they are brought to the pre-removal detention centre in Lyubimets. Before leading us to the exit, a certain inspector Palov asks us to sign three papers, which justify the hours we spent in the police station as a conversation held with him after an official summons. We reject.

    On the way back, we drive again on the Route 79, it’s patrolled by a lot of police. We think about all the people who die every night without the possibility to ask for help. We think about the few people who ask for it in vain. On the land borders as on the sea ones, the failure to render aid is a strategy planned by authorities.

    The following day we meet the friend of the woman’s husband. He knows that he will not be able to do such things anymore because he will be accused of smuggling and he will lose all the possibilities to build a new life in Europe. Instead, we can and have to go on as independent activists: we have much less to lose. It’s clear to us the urgency to act first-hand and to disobey to who kills letting people die.

    After 20 days we manage to meet the woman with the children, who finally have been transferred to the Harmanli camp. They stayed in the pre-removal detention centre in Lyubimets for 19 days. The woman tells us that, during their stay, she had never been brought to the hospital for a visit, in order to check her pregnancy. She has been visited only by the doctor of the centre: a very superficial and hasty check-up, a treatment very similar to the one received in the Sredets police station. She also gives us her approval to share this report.

    https://www.meltingpot.org/en/2023/08/bulgaria-let-somebody-die-is-killing
    #Bulgarie #frontières #migrations #réfugiés #Turquie #Harmanli

  • Questo fine settimana sulle Alpi la polizia ha ammazzato una persona, ma per la stampa l’unica vittima è un campo da golf.

    De #Lorenzo_D'Agostino

    🧵20 tweet per ristabilire la realtà dei fatti.

    Venerdì scorso sono andato a Claviere, l’ultimo paese italiano della Val di Susa sul confine francese, per partecipare al campeggio itinerante «Passamontagna». Mi avevano invitato a raccontare le mie inchieste sull’antimafia in una serie di dibattiti sulle politiche di frontiera.

    In questi giorni centinaia di persone stanno attraversando il passo di frontiera del Monginevro, spesso di notte per sentieri pericolosi. L’idea del campeggio era attraversare il confine con una grande marcia tutti insieme, in sicurezza, persone migranti e solidali.

    Sabato dopo pranzo, smantellato l’accampamento, ci siamo messi in marcia. Lentamente senza lasciare nessuno indietro. Nel gruppo c’erano persone stremate da un lungo viaggio, donne con bambini piccoli, qualche anziano. L’atmosfera era allegra. Ma appena passata la frontiera...

    ...ci siamo trovati davanti uno schieramento di gendarmi francesi in antisommossa. Occupando le alture, ci hanno bloccati su un viottolo molto scosceso. Un gesto violento, un lancio di gas, avrebbe provocato una caotica e pericolosissima fuga all’indietro del gruppo.

    Io che non ho esperienza di queste cose pensavo che il blocco si potesse forzare: eravamo dieci volte più numerosi. A 1800 metri d’altezza, lontani da ambulanze e ospedali, la gendarmerie era veramente disposta a rischiare decine di feriti, forse ammazzare qualcuno?
    Chi ha a che fare ogni giorno con la polizia francese però non ha avuto dubbi: con tante persone vulnerabili e inesperte nel gruppo, bisognava evitare lo scontro a ogni costo. I gendarmi hanno annunciato l’uso imminente della forza, e il gruppo si è dato lentamente indietro.
    Rientrando al campo base, abbiamo costeggiato un campo da golf. Un enorme spazio privatizzato a cavallo della frontiera, dove i turisti ricchi si muovono liberamente tra Italia e Francia. Il contrasto con il trattamento riservato a migranti e solidali era lacerante.

    Un piccolo gruppo si è staccato dal corteo, ha divelto le recinzioni e ha danneggiato il campo da golf. Non tutti hanno ritenuto opportuna quest’azione, ma la rabbia che esprimeva è la rabbia che sentivamo tutti.

    Rientrati a Claviere, si è ragionato sul da farsi. L’idea di agevolare il passaggio di frontiera delle persone in transito con una grande marcia è stata archiviata: era chiaro che la gendarmerie non avrebbe lasciato passare nessuno, finché durava il Passamontagna.
    I migranti avrebbero passato la frontiera come hanno sempre fatto: di notte, a piccoli gruppi, per i sentieri più impervi, nascondendosi da droni e visori termici della polizia. Il campeggio forniva, almeno, una base sicura dove dormire e a cui tornare in caso di respingimento.
    Quella sera ragionavo con una compagna: se a qualcuno succedesse qualcosa di brutto passando la frontiera, di chi sarebbe la colpa? A mio avviso, certamente della polizia: bloccando la possibilità di un attraversamento in sicurezza, si è assunta ogni eventuale conseguenza.
    Non è una discussione oziosa: l’ordinamento giuridico contempla la figura del «dolo eventuale». In Italia si usa per accusare di omicidio scafisti veri o inventati. Si dà quando chi agisce accetta il rischio che le proprie azioni causino un evento nefasto non direttamente voluto. Cassazione penale, sez. I, sentenza 15/03/2011 n ° 10411: "Il fondamento del dolo indiretto o eventuale va individuato nella rappresentazione e nell’accettazione, da parte dell’agente, della concreta possibilità, intesa in termini di elevata probabilità, di realizzazione dell’evento accessorio allo scopo perseguito in via primaria. Il soggetto pone in essere un’azione accettando il rischio del verificarsi dell’evento, che nella rappresentazione psichica non è direttamente voluto, ma appare probabile. In altri termini, l’agente, pur non avendo avuto di mira quel determinato accadimento,...

    Malgrado la delusione e la rabbia, il sabato sera è trascorso in festa. Stornelli anarchici intorno al fuoco, e un dj-set di musica africana organizzato dalle persone in transito. Io ho dormito in un tendone con una ventina di persone che si preparavano a passare il confine.

    Domenica, smantellato di nuovo il campeggio, ognuno ha preso la sua strada. Alcuni hanno deciso di sfilare in corteo verso la Francia, per creare qualche piccolo, momentaneo disagio alla circolazione su una frontiera che lascia passare i ricchi e ammazza i poveri. Li ho seguiti.
    La reazione della gendarmerie è stata immediata: dalle alture, alla cieca, una fitta pioggia di gas lacrimogeni è stata sparata sul corteo pacifico e disarmato. Io, del tutto impreparato a uno scenario del genere, sono scappato via. Per me il Passamontagna è finito così.
    Lunedì mattina, al passo del Monginevro, un ciclista ha trovato il corpo esanime di un giovane guineano. Sopravvissuto al Sahara, al Mediterraneo, ucciso tra Italia e Francia. Voglio pensare che le sue ultime ore siano state di festa, circondato dai volti amici del Passamontagna.

    Allo stesso tempo sono partite le veline ai giornali per travisare la realtà. I dibattiti e le conferenze a cui ho partecipato non ci sono stati, assicura la sindaca di Claviere. La grande marcia del sabato, bloccata dalla gendarmerie, mai esistita. L’attacco al campo da golf...

    L’attacco al campo da golf collocato falsamente nella notte tra venerdì e sabato: non più una risposta alla violenza della polizia, ma un atto di vandalismo immotivato. Il lancio di gas della domenica? Inevitabile risposta al lancio di inesistenti «bombe carta» degli anarchici...

    E alla fine l’unica vittima è la turista Raffaella. Che ha sotto il naso un’implacabile strage di stato, ma vede soltanto «una tendopoli abusiva» e 400 scalmanati che «pietre alla mano, in virtù di non so bene quale ideale protestano contro non so quale ingiustizia»

    https://twitter.com/lorenzodago/status/1689600891605716993
    https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1689600891605716993.html

    #victime #golf #tourisme #passamontagna #manifestation #Hautes-Alpes #Val_de_suse #Italie #frontières #migrations #France #inégalités

    • Sur le campement à travers la frontière « passamontagna » du début août ; un autre mort à la frontière

      La pratique du Passamontagna n’a pas fonctionné. Après des années, plusieurs camps et de nombreuses manifestations qui nous ont amenés à passer la frontière ensemble, sans que personne -le temps d’une journée - ne risque sa vie pour franchir cette ligne imaginaire qu’est la frontière, cette fois-ci, le #passage_collectif a échoué.

      versione italiana in seguito

      english version below

      Samedi 5 août plus de 500 personnes ont quitté le campement installé à Claviere pour rejoindre la prochaine étape, en France. La gendarmerie en tenue anti-émeute, déployée sur tous les chemins, a bloqué notre passage. Des #gaz_lacrymogènes et des #grenades_assourdissantes étaient déjà positionnés en amont du #cortège. Près de trente camions et voitures anti-émeutes du côté français, plus ceux positionnés du côté italien. Il a été décidé de ne pas aller jusqu’à l’affrontement qui aurait été nécessaire pour tenter de passer, afin d’éviter un très probable massacre. La police française a changé ses pratiques au fil des ans, augmentant de temps en temps son niveau de #violence et l’utilisation d’#armes. On s’est pas voulu - dans cette situation - risquer des blessures graves.
      Comme tous les jours, ce week-end a vu passer des centaines de personnes en route pour la France. Le camp a été un bon moment pour partager des réflexions, des discussions, des danses et des bavardages. Bien que le passage collectif ait échoué, les personnes exilées de passage sont néanmoins reparties, comme chaque jour sur cette frontière maudite. Plus de 100 personnes sont arrivées à Briançon dans le week-end.

      Une trentaine de refoulements.

      La rage conséquent au refoulement de masse a provoqué quelques réactions.
      Samedi aprés-midi, un cortège s’est mis en route en direction de la frontière, surprenant certains officiers italiens qui ont dû courir, et bloquant la frontière pendant plus d’une heure.
      Le lendemain, dimanche, un autre cortège s’est formé sur la route de #Claviere à #Montgenèvre, pour tenter d’atteindre la PAF, le quartier général des gardes-frontières. Un important dispositif de gendarmes, avec des camionettes et un canon à eau, a barré la route. Les gardes mobiles ont tiré de nombreux gaz lacrymogènes et quelques grenades assourdissantes et #flashballs. Sur les chemins d’en haut, les gendarmes qui tentaient de se rapprocher ont été tenus à distance pendant un bon moment.
      Pendant plus de deux heures, la frontière est restée fermée. Si personne ne passe, personne ne passe. Les marchandises et les touristes ne passent pas non plus, de sorte que ce point de passage de frontière devient inopérent.

      Si, ces jours-ci, quelqu’un - soit-disant - a "osé" gâcher le #terrain_de_golf en écrivant ou en binant, cela ne nous semble pas être une tragédie, bien au contraire. La privatisation de cette montagne dans l’intérêt de quelques riches et de touristes fortunés conduit également à sa militarisation. Protéger cet imaginaire, le paysage des villages de montagne où l’on peut jouer au golf en toute tranquillité sur le "golf transfrontalier 18 trous" appartenant à #Lavazza et à la commune de Montgenèvre et skier sur les pistes "sans frontières". Ou encore se balader à vélo électrique sur les mêmes sentiers que ceux empruntés par des dizaines d’exilés chaque jour, mais plus souvent la nuit, justement parce qu’ils ne sont pas visibles. Une destination pour touristes fortunés ne peut pas être une zone de transit pour migrants, ça gache trop le décor. Ils construisent également deux "#réservoirs_d’eau", en volant l’eau de l’environnement, pour être sûrs de pouvoir tirer de la neige en hiver sur ces pistes. Privatisation, exploitation et militarisation des montagnes vont de pair.

      Le camp de Passamontagna a également été un moment de rencontre, de discussion et de réflexion sur le monde qui nous entoure et sur les mécanismes d’exploitation et d’exclusion. Des réunions ont été organisées pour parler de l’extractivisme néocolonial qui pousse les gens à migrer, à quitter des territoires massacrés au nom du profit. De l’externalisation des frontières et de la création d’ennemis intérieurs. Des nouveaux mécanismes de répression étatiques et européens à l’égard des exilées et des autres. De luttes contre les CPR/CRA (centres de rétention administrative).
      Parce que dans une société qui nous veut de plus en plus individualistes et séparés, nous devons de plus en plus nous connaître, nous reconnaître, nous confronter, nous unir pour combattre un système de plus en plus totalisant et totalitaire.

      A Briançon, ville de première destination pour tous celleux qui franchissent cette frontière, le centre d’hébergement solidaire Les Terrasse est surchargé. Les arrivées sont trop nombreuses et les places toujours insuffisantes. C’est aussi pour cela qu’un nouveau lieu a été ouvert et rendu public lundi. Une occupation qui se veut aussi un lieu d’accueil et de rencontre pour ceux qui luttent contre cette frontière, chacun à sa manière. Il y a besoin de soutien et de matériel !

      L’adresse est 34A Avenue de la République, hôpital les jeunes pousses SSR, Briançon.

      Un chaleureux merci à toutes les cuisines solidaires qui ont nourris des centaines des personnes pendant ces trois jours et à toutes les personnes qui y ont participé et rendu possible le camp.

      -- -

      Mais le lendemain on a appris une terrible nouvelle. Le lundi 7 aout, un jeune exilé a été retrouvé mort sur la route militaire reliant Montgenèvre à Briançon. Son nom était Moussa. Il était guinéen. Face contre terre, trouvé par un touriste à vélo. On n’en sait toujours pas plus.
      Un autre mort. Une victime de plus de cette frontière qui est de plus en plus marquée par la présence de la police aux frontières (PAF), déployée sur les chemins jour et nuit.
      Le onzième, le douzième, le vingtième, qui sait. Les chiffres ne sont pas clairs car tous les décès ne sont pas rendus publics. Officiellement, dix corps ont été retrouvés depuis 2018.
      Comme pour les autres décès, c’est clair qui sont les responsables. Il ne s’agit pas d’une mort aléatoire. Ce n’est pas de la malchance. Ce n’est pas un touriste qui meurt. C’est un "migrant" de plus, jeté des bus et des trains à la frontière, obligé de marcher la nuit pour échapper aux contrôles, pourchassé par les flics parce qu’il est catégorisé comme migrant et sans papiers, généralement parce que pauvre. Sur ces chemins, la PAF mène une chasse constante et raciste à tous ceux qui ne sont pas blancs et ne ressemblent pas à des touristes prêts à dépenser leur argent sur des terrains de golf ou des pistes de ski transformées en terrain de jeu pour vélos électriques en été.
      Et c’est à vélo, à pied ou en voiture que la PAF rôde sur les pistes à la recherche de ceux qui n’ont pas les bons papiers pour les traverser. Une nouvelle force militaire vient d’arriver à Montgenèvre avec pour objectif de limiter encore plus les entrées indésirables. Il y a des centaines de flics qui protègent cette frontière. Mais le flux de personnes ne s’arrête pas, car aucun filet, mur ou garde ne pourra jamais bloquer complètement le désir de liberté et la recherche d’une vie meilleure.
      Mais la paix est difficile à trouver aujourd’hui.
      Peut-être que si nous avions pu marcher ensemble, cela ne serait pas arrivé. Peut-être que si le Passamontagna avait fonctionné, ce garçon ne serait pas mort.
      Tous les flics présents sur ces chemins samedi et dimanche ont du sang sur les mains. Tout comme le préfet de Gap, qui avait rendu illégales toutes les manifestations et tous les campements pendant le week-end, et qui a donné l’ordre d’entraver le passage de toutes les manières possibles, a du sang sur les mains.

      Chaque policier est une frontière. Le bras armé d’un Etat qui continue à diviser, sélectionner et tuer au gré de ses intérêts politiques et économiques.
      Que les responsables paient cher, ici, à Montgenèvre, à Briançon, partout en France.

      Un pensée vient obscurcir notre esprit. Nous avons du mal à perdre de vue que le corps a été retrouvé sur la route militaire, qui peut être empruntée à pied mais aussi avec une voiture 4x4, que les gardes utilisent pour effectuer leurs patrouilles. Il est difficile de mourir par accident sur cette route, d’autant plus en été.
      Trop de personnes sont déjà mortes à la frontière, en fuyant la police. Rappelons Blessing Matthew, une jeune Nigériane de 20 ans, morte en 2018 dans la Durance en tentant d’échapper aux gendarmes qui la poursuivaient. Ou encore Fahtallah, retrouvé mort dans le barrage près de Modane, où il s’était aventuré après avoir été refoulé. Ou Aullar, 14 ans, mort écrasé par le train qu’il n’avait pu prendre à Salbertrand, en direction de la frontière. Ou encore tous ceux qui sont morts de froid ou sont tombés après avoir été refoulés à la frontière et s’être aventurés sur les sentiers les plus élevés.
      La militarisation de ces montagnes tue.

      La PAF, les gendarmes, l’Etat français, l’Europe. Ici les responsables de cette mort.

      La frontière est partout, dans chaque frontière à l’intérieur et à l’extérieur de l’Europe, là où elle est peut-être la plus reconnaissable, mais elle est aussi dans chaque rue, place ou gare où la police contrôle les papiers, elle est dans les centres de rétention administrative (CRA), elle est dans chaque bureau Frontex disséminé en Europe, elle est dans chaque usine d’armement ou dispositif de surveillance qui est produit en Europe et remis à la police des frontières.
      D’où une invitation à agir chacun à sa manière, chacun à sa place, contre les frontières.

      CONTRE TOUTES LES FRONTIÈRES, LES ÉTATS QUI LES CRÉENT ET LES UNIFORMES QUI LES PROTÈGENT.
      Quelques participants au camping Passamontagna
      Considerazioni sul campeggio passamontagna 2023. Un altro morto di frontiera.

      La pratica del Passamontagna non ha funzionato. Dopo anni, vari campeggi e numerose manifestazioni che ci hanno portato ad attraversare il confine assieme, senza che nessunx - per un giorno - rischiasse la vita per superare questa linea immaginaria chiamata frontiera, questa volta il passaggio collettivo é fallito.

      Sabato più di 500 persone sono partite dall’accampamento allestito a Claviere per arrivare alla prossima tappa, in Francia. I gendarmi in antisommossa, schierata su tutti i sentieri, hanno bloccato il passaggio. Lacrimogeni e bombe stordenti alla mano, posizionati già a monte rispetto al corteo. Quasi una trentina tra camionette e macchine sul lato francese, più quelle posizionate sul lato italiano. E’ stato scelto di non arrivare allo scontro che sarebbe stato necessario per tentare di passare, per evitare un probabile massacro. La polizia francese ha cambiato pratica in questi anni, aumentando di volta in volta il suo livello di violenza e uso delle armi. Non si è voluto - in quella situazione - rischiare feriti gravi.

      Come ogni giorno, anche in questo week end erano centinaia le persone di passaggio dirette in Francia. Il campeggio é stato un bel momento per condividere riflessioni, discussioni, balli e racconti. Nonostante il passaggio collettivo sia fallito, le persone di passaggio si sono comunque messe in cammino successivamente, come avviene ogni giorno su questa maledetta frontiera. Più di 100 persone sono arrivate a Briaçon nel weekend. Una trentina i push-back.

      La rabbia conseguente al respingimento di massa ha provocato alcune reazioni. Sabato pomeriggio un piccolo corteo é partito in direzione della strada sul confine, cogliendo di sorpresa qualche agente che si é ritrovato a dover correre, e bloccando la frontiera per più di un’ora.
      Domenica un altro corteo é stato fatto sulla strada che da Claviere porta a Monginevro, nel tentativo di arrivare alla caserma della PAF, la sede delle guardie che proteggono il confine. Un dispositivo importante di gendarmi, con camionette e un idrante sbarravano la strada. Le guardie hanno sparato lacrimogeni e qualche bomba stordente e priettili di gomma. Sui sentieri sopra la strada sono stati tenuti a distanza i gendarmi che cercavano di avvicinarsi.
      Per più di due ore la frontiera é rimasta chiusa.
      Se non passano tutti, non passa nessuno. Nemmeno le merci e i turisti, per cui questa frontiera di solito non esiste.

      Se in queste giornate qulcunx - dicono - ha "osato" rovinare i campi da golf con qualche scritta o zappata, non ci sembra una tragedia. La privatizzazione di questa montagna per gli interessi di pochi ricchi e dei turisti benestanti é anche ciò che porta alla sua militarizzazione. È anche per proteggere quest’immaginario, lo scenario dei paesini di montagna dove giocare a golf in tranquillità sulle "18 buche transfontaliere" di proprietà Lavazza e del Comune di Monginevro e sciare sulle piste "senza confine”, che vengono militarizzati i sentieri di queste montagne. Una meta per il turismo ricco non può essere zona di passaggio per migranti. A Monginevro stanno anche costruendo due "bacini idrici", che sottrarranno acqua all’ambiente circostante, per assicurare di avere neve artificiale nei caldi inverni a venire.
      Privatizzazione, sfruttamento e militarizzazione della montagna sono parte dello stesso meccanismo.

      Il campeggio Passamontagna è stato anche un momento di incontro, discussione, ragionamento sul mondo che ci circonda e sui dispositivi di sfuttamento ed esclusione. Ci sono stati incontri dedicati all’estrattivismo neocoloniale che spinge le persone a migrare, ad andarsene da territori massacrati in nome del profitto. Si è discusso di esternalizzazione delle frontiere e della creazione dei nemici interni. Di scafismo e DIA . Dei nuovi meccanismi legilsativi di guerra verso i/le migranti e solidali. Di lotte ai CPR/CRA.
      In una società che ci vuole sempre più individualisti e separati, dobbiamo incontrarci, conoscerci, riconoscerci, confrontarci e unirci per lottare un sistema sempre più totalitario.

      A Briançon, prima città di arrivo per tuttx coloro che attraversano questo confine, il rifugio solidale Les Terrasse é sovraccarico. Troppe le persone che arrivano, e i posti sono insufficienti. Anche per questo un nuovo spazio é stato aperto e reso pubblico lunedì 7 agosto. Un’occupazione che vuole essere anche un luogo di ospitalità e di incontro per chi questa frontiera la combatte, ognuno a suo modo. C’é bisogno di sostegno e materiali !
      L’indirizzo é 34A Avenue de la République, hopital les jeunes pousses SSR, Briançon.

      Un ringraziamento enorme và a tutte le cucine solidali che hanno nutrito centinaia di persone in questi tre giorni e tutte le persone che hanno partecipato e reso possibile il campeggio.

      -- -

      Ma nei giorni successivi viene data una notizia terribile. Lunedì 7 agosto, un giovane "migrante" é stato trovato morto sulla strada militare che da Monginevro arriva a Birançon. Faccia a terra, ritrovato da un turista in bicicletta. Il suo nome era Moussa. Arrivava dalla Guinea.
      Per il momento non si sà molto di più.
      Un’altra morte. Un’altra vittima di questo confine che prende le sembianze dalla polizia di frontiera (PAF) schierata sui sentieri giorno e notte.
      La undicesima, dodicesima, ventesima, chissà. I numeri non sono chiari perché non tutte le morti vengono rese pubbliche. Ufficialmente, dal 2018 ad oggi, son stati ritrovati dieci cadaveri. E non é una morte casuale. Non é la sfortuna.
      A morire è l’ennesimo "migrante", buttato giù dai bus e treni in frontiera, obbligato a camminare di notte per fuggire in controlli, inseguito dalle guardie per il suo essere senza documenti, tendenzialmente perché povero. Come per le altre morti, i responsabili sono chiari. Su questi sentieri la PAF effettua una caccia costante, razzista, verso chi non é bianco e non sembra un turista pronto a spendere i suoi soldi sui campi da golf o sulle piste da sci che diventano parco giochi per bici elettriche d’estate.
      Ed é in bicicletta, a piedi, su quad o in macchina che si apposta la PAF sui sentieri alla ricerca di chi non ha il buon pezzo di carta per attraversarli. Dotata di droni, sensori e visori notturni, una nuova forza militare é arrivata recentemente a Monginevro con lo scopo di limitare ancora di più gli ingressi indesiderati. Centinaia di guardie proteggono questo confine. Ma il flusso di persone non si ferma, perché nessuna rete, muro o guardia riuscirà mai a bloccare il desiderio di libertà e la ricerca di una vita migliore.
      Ma é difficile oggi trovare pace.
      Forse, se il Passamontagna avesse funzionato, quel ragazzo non sarebbe morto.
      Ogni sbirro presente su quei sentieri sabato e domenica ha le mani sporche di sangue. Così come ha le mani sporche di sangue il Prefetto di Gap, che ha reso illegale ogni manifestazione e campeggio nel week end, e che ha dato ordine di impedire con ogni mezzo necessario il passaggio.
      Ogni sbirro é una frontiera. Braccio armato di uno stato che divide, seleziona e uccide a seconda dei propri interessi politici ed economici.
      Che la paghino cara i responsabili, qui, a Monginevro, a Briançon, ovunque.

      Un pensiero ci offusca la mente. Ci rimane difficile non pensare al fatto che il corpo é stato trovato sulla strada militare, percorribile a piedi e anche con una macchina 4x4, che infatti usano le guardie per effettuare i loro pattugliamenti. Difficile morire per caso su quella strada.
      Già troppi i morti in frontiera, in fuga dalla polizia. Ricordiamo Blessing Matthew, giovane ventenne nigeriana morta nel 2018 nel fiume Durance mentre cercava di scappare dai gendarmi che la inseguivano. O Fahtallah, trovato morto nella diga vicino a Modane, dove si era avventurato dopo essere stato respinto. O il 14enne Aullar, morto stritolato dal treno che non poteva prendere a Salbertrand, diretto al confine. O tutti gli altri morti di freddo o caduti dopo esere stati respinti alla frontiera ed essersi inespicati sui sentieri più alti.
      La militarizzazione di quste montagne uccide.
      La PAF, i gendarmi, lo stato francese, l’europa. Qui i responsabili di questa morte.

      La frontiera è ovunque, in ogni confine interno ed esterno all’europa, dove forse è più riconoscibile, ma è anche in ogni strada, piazza o stazione dove la polizia controlla i documenti, è nei centri di detenzione per il rimpatrio, è in ogni ufficio di Frontex sparso sul territorio europeo, è in ogni fabbrica di armi o di dispositivi di sorveglianza che prodotti in europa vengono regalati alle polizie di confine.
      Da qua un invito, di agire ognunx a suo modo, ognunx nel proprio luogo, contro le frontiere.

      CONTRO OGNI FRONTIERA, GLI STATI CHE LE CREANO, E LE DIVISE CHE LE PROTEGGONO
      Alcunx partecipanti al campeggio Passamontagna
      Considerations on the camping against the borders passamontagna. Another border death.

      The Passamontagna’s practice did not work. After years, various camps and numerous demonstrations that led us to cross the border together, without anyone - for one day - risking their life to cross this imaginary line called border, this time the collective crossing failed.

      On Saturday 5th, in fact, more than 500 people left the campsite set up in Claviere to reach the next stop, in France. The gendarmerie in riot gear, deployed on all the paths, blocked our passage. Tear gas and stun grenades were already positioned upstream from the procession. Almost thirty trucks and riot cars on the French side, plus those positioned on the Italian side. It was decided not to go to the clash that would have been necessary to try to pass, to avoid a very likely massacre. The French police have changed their practice over the years, increasing their level of violence and use of weapons from time to time. We did not want - in that situation - to risk serious injuries.
      Like every day, this weekend there were hundreds of people passing through on their way to France. The camp was a good time to share reflections, discussions, dancing and chatting. The people passing through nevertheless left, as happens every day on this cursed border. More than 100 people arrived in Briançon this weekend. Around thirty push-backs.

      The anger at not being able to cross the border to continue camping in France provoked some reactions.
      On the same day, Saturday, a march started in the direction of the road, catching some Italian officers by surprise as they had to run, and blocking the border for more than an hour.
      The next day, Sunday, another march took place on the road from Claviere to Montgenèvre, in an attempt to reach the PAF, the headquarters of the guards protecting the border. An important device of gendarmes, with small trucks and a water cannon barred the road. The guards fired many tear gas and some stun grenades and flashballs. On the paths above, the guards that tried to get closer went keeped far.
      For more than two hours the border remained closed. If no one passes, no one passes. Neither do goods or tourists, so in practice this border does not exist.
      If these days someone - they say - has ’dared’ to spoil the golf course with some writing or hoeing, it does not seem like a tragedy, quite the contrary. The privatisation of this mountain for the interests of the rich few and wealthy tourists is what also leads to its militarisation. To protect this inmaginary, the scenery of the mountain villages where one can play golf in peace on the ’18-hole cross-border golf course’ owned by Lavazza and the Montgenèvre municipality and ski on the ’borderless’ slopes. Or whizzing on electric bicycles on the same trails travelled by dozens of migrants every day but more often at night, precisely because they cannot be seen. A destination for wealthy tourists cannot be a transit area for migrants. They are also building two ’water reservoirs’, stealing water from the surrounding environment, to make sure they can shoot snow in winter on these trails. Privatisation, exploitation and militarisation of the mountains go together.

      The Passamontagna camp was also a time for meeting, discussion, and reasoning about the world around us and the devices of exploitation and exclusion. There were meetings that spoke of neo-colonial extractivism that pushes people to migrate, forced to leave territories massacred in the name of money. Of externalisation of borders and the creation of internal enemies. Of scafism and DIA (anti-mafia investigative directorate). Of new state and European repression mechanisms towards migrants and others. Of confrontation in the CPR/CRA struggles.
      Because in a society that wants us to be increasingly individualistic and separate, we must increasingly know each other, recognise each other, confront each other, unite to fight an increasingly totalising and totalitarian system.

      In Briançon, town of initial destination for all those who cross this border, the solidarity shelter Les Terrasse is overloaded. Too many people arrive, and places are always running out. This is also why a new place was opened and made public on Monday. An occupation that also wants to be a place of hospitality and a meeting place for those who fight this border, each in their own way. Support and materials are needed !
      The address is 34A Avenue de la République, hopital les jeunes pousses SSR, Briançon.

      A huge thank you goes to all the solidarity kitchens that fed hundreds of people over these three days and all the people who participated and made the camp possible.

      -- -

      But we learn a terrible news in the next days. Monday 7 agust, a young migrant was found dead on the military road from Montgenèvre to Briançon. Face down on the ground, found by a tourist on a bicycle. We still don’t know anything more.
      Another death. Another victim of this border that takes the shape of the border police (PAF) deployed on the paths day and night.
      The 11th, 12th, 20th, who knows. The numbers are unclear because not all deaths are made public. Officially, ten bodies have been found since 2018.
      As with the other deaths, it’s clear who is responsible. It is not a random death. It is not bad luck. It is not a tourist who dies. It is yet another "migrant", thrown off buses and trains at the border, forced to walk at night to escape through controls, chased by guards for being a migrant and undocumented, tending to be poor. On these paths the PAF carries out a constant, racist hunt towards anyone who is not white and does not look like a tourist ready to spend his money on golf courses or ski slopes turned into playground for electric bikes in summer.
      And it is by bicycle, on foot or by car that the PAF lurks on the trails looking for those who do not have the good papers to cross them. A new military force has recently arrived in Montgenèvre with the aim of limiting unwanted entry even further. Hundreds guards protect this border. But the flow of people does not stop, because no net, wall or guard will ever be able to completely block the desire for freedom and the search for a better life.
      But peace is difficult to find today.
      Perhaps if we had been able to walk together this would not have happened. Perhaps if the Passamontagna had worked that boy would not have died.
      Every cop on those paths on Saturday and Sunday has blood on his hands.
      So too has blood on his hands the Prefect of Gap, who made all demonstrations and camping illegal over the weekend, and who gave orders to prevent the passage in every way.
      Every cop is a border. The armed arm of a state that continues to divide, select and kill according to its political and economic interests.
      Let those responsible pay dearly, here, at Montgenèvre, at Briançon, everywhere in France.

      Another thought clouds our minds. We find it hard not to think about the fact that the body was found on the military road, which can be travelled on foot and also with a 4x4 car, which the guards use to carry out their patrols. It is difficult to die by accident on that road.
      Already too many have died on the border running the police. Recall Blessing Matthew, a young 20-year-old Nigerian woman who died in 2018 in the Durance River while trying to escape from the gendarmes who were chasing her. Or Fahtallah, found dead in the dam near Modane, where he had ventured after being turned back. Or 14-year-old Aullar, who died crushed by the train he could not catch in Salbertrand, bound for the border. Or all the others who froze to death or fell after being turned back at the border and venturing onto the highest paths.

      Militarisation kills on these montains.
      The PAF, the gendarmes, the French state, Europe. Here the responsible for this death.

      The border is everywhere, in every border inside and outside Europe, where perhaps it is most recognisable, but it is also in every street, square or station where the police check documents, it is in the detention centres for repatriation, it is in every Frontex office scattered across Europe, it is in every arms factory or surveillance device that is produced in Europe and given to the border police.
      Hence an invitation, to act each in his own way, each in his own place, against borders.

      AGAINST ALL BORDERS, THE STATES THAT CREATE THEM AND THE UNIFORMS THAT PROTECT THEM
      Some participants of the Passamontagna camp

      https://valleesenlutte.org/spip.php?article606

  • Luigi Ferrajoli sul processo a Lucano e la costituzione della terra

    «L’importante è abbandonare la logica del nemico. Cancellare la parola nemico dal lessico della politica interna e dalla politica internazionale. Non esistono nemici. Certamente non esistono tra i popoli. Sono delle creazioni artificiali allo scopo di legittimare politiche aggressive. Non esistono nemici. Non c’è nessuna ragione per cui ucraini e russi siano nemici. Statunitensi e cinesi, europei o africani. Sono i confini che dobbiamo contestare e superare, che non sono i baluardi delle nostre libertà, come una volta pensavamo, ma sono i muri nei quali i popoli sono imprigionati e che vanno precisamente abbattuti quanto più possibile, andando incontro ad una cittadinanza universale, o alla soppressione della cittadinanza. La identificazione fa la figura del cittadino e della persona. So bene che questa è una perspettiva di lunghissimo periodo, ma è l’unica alternativa che abbiamo a un futuro di catastrofi.»

    (à partir de la minute 13’03)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R27vShLSmUw


    #frontières #logique_de_l'ennemi #citoyenneté #citoyenneté_universelle #citation #ennemi #liberté #murs #emprisonnement #contre_les_murs

  • #High-Altitude_Pseudo-Satellites : A technological assessment report

    Do high-altitude pseudo-satellites, also known as #HAPS, have the potential to enhance law-enforcement operations, border surveillance and communication? Frontex has just released a technological assessment report that tackles these questions.

    Frontex’s research into HAPS

    Frontex is currently leading a research study on HAPS, flying devices mirroring closely the capacity and operability of satellites. While this technology is still in the early stages of development, it represents significant potential uses in the context of surveillance, internal security, and border control.

    As part of the research, the agency has been working on a technological assessment of the platforms. Throughout nine months, the study aimed to explore whether HAPS can potentially be used in law enforcement operations to further enhance existing surveillance, communications, and navigation capabilities.

    What are HAPS?


    HAPS are advanced unmanned flying aircraft systems that operate in the stratosphere at an altitude typically between 18-22 km (59,000-72,000 ft). Given the high altitude, HAPS must withstand harsh stratospheric conditions, such as temperatures falling down to minus 90°C, high solar, UV and cosmic radiation and low atmospheric pressure. While this environment poses an enormous challenge for aircraft engineers, the potential applications and use cases are highly promising not only for commercial operators and service providers, but also for institutional stakeholders, such as security agencies, that would be able to leverage the new technology and its associated applications and services.

    Main findings of the report

    The report looks at the technological readiness, assessing the technology of HAPS as such, but also its potential use to help tackle challenges faced by Frontex and other members of the EU Innovation Hub for Internal Security.

    The authors of the report looked at particular case studies to see how HAPS can be used in such activities as earth observation, telecommunication and navigation, search and rescue missions, remote sensing and operations and provision of ad-hoc telecom and satellite navigation (GNSS).

    The study includes the following elements:

    – an overview of balloons and airships (LTA – lighter-than-air) and with fixed-wing aircraft (HTA - heavier-than-air);
    - an analysis of individual HAPS technologies, including a comparison of the platforms, payload analysis, technological challenges, infrastructure demands, and regulatory barriers.

    Innovation hub platform

    The project is carried out under the EU Innovation Hub for Internal Security, a cross-sectorial EU platform which ensures collaboration between internal security innovation actors, formed by the EU Justice and Home Affairs agencies, European Commission (Directorate-General for Migration and Home Affairs and Directorate-General for Joint Research Centre), the Council General Secretariat and the EU Counter Terrorism Coordinator.

    https://frontex.europa.eu/innovation/eu-research/news-and-events/high-altitude-pseudo-satellites-a-technological-assessment-report-ypR

    Pour télécharger le rapport (#assessment) :
    https://frontex.europa.eu/assets/EUresearchprojects/2023/FX_HAPS_WP2_-_Technological_Assessment_Consolidated.pdf

    #Frontex #frontières #surveillance #technologie #contrôles_frontaliers #Frontex #satellites #stratosphère #EU_Innovation_Hub_for_Internal_Security #lighter-than-air (#LTA) #heavier-than-air (#HTA)

  • “Ogni giorno ci sono migranti respinti al confine dalla Francia. Spesso famiglie”. Viaggio in Valsusa nel rifugio costretto alle brandine in corridoio

    Il confine alpino tra l’Italia e la Francia passa in mezzo a un campo da golf. Non si vede ma c’è. Una pallina può attraversarlo, ma una bambina di un anno no. Viene fermata dalla polizia francese mentre insieme ai suoi genitori prova a passare la frontiera camminando sui sentieri a oltre 1700 metri d’altitudine. Vorrebbero chiedere asilo in Francia ma la polizia li intercetta nei boschi e li rispedisce indietro. Un destino che riguarda sempre più persone.

    Da qualche settimana il numero dei migranti lungo la rotta alpina che passa da Claviere è aumentato. “Siamo arrivati a contare anche 150 persone in una sola notte” racconta Elena, una delle operatrici del Rifugio Fraternità Massi di Oulx. Un “porto sicuro” nato nel dicembre 2021 grazie a tante realtà come Talitá kun, Rainbow4Africa, la diaconia valdese, On Borders, Medu, Croce Rossa e grazie a 170 volontari che si alternano per garantire un aiuto alle persone in transito. Nel solo mese di luglio più di mille migranti sono stati ospitati qui. Il 10 per cento sono minori stranieri non accompagnati che per il diritto europeo dovrebbero poter passare il confine, ma non gli viene consentito.

    “Rispetto agli anni scorsi, nel 2023 abbiamo visto che la maggior parte delle persone proviene non più dalla rotta balcanica ma direttamente da Lampedusa – spiega l’antropologo Piero Gorza di On Borders – non più afghani e iraniani, ma arrivano per lo più dall’Africa Subsahariana e sono sbarcati in Italia da poche settimane”. Un cambio che comporta delle nuove difficoltà per queste persone. “Non sono abituati a camminare in montagna sui sentieri di notte e per di più continua la ‘caccia all’uomo’ da parte della polizia di frontiera francese”. Il risultato è che la rotta alpina diventa sempre più difficile per i migranti che per evitare i gendarmi si spingono su sentieri sempre più in alto. E i rischi aumentano. “Siamo partiti in sei ma quando abbiamo visto la polizia siamo scappati sparpagliandoci tra i boschi – racconta un ragazzo che ha poco più di vent’anni e che proviene dalla Costa d’Avorio – mi sono perso, ero in mezzo alla neve e presto le mani mi si sono congelate. Non riuscivo più a camminare. Ho avuto paura di morire”. Ma è riuscito a chiamare la Croce Rossa che lo ha salvato riportandolo al rifugio.

    L’elenco di chi non ce l’ha fatta a salvarsi continua però ad allungarsi. Lunedì mattina il corpo di un migrante morto è stato trovato sui sentieri tra Monginevro e Briancon, sul lato francese. L’ennesima vittima che si aggiunge a quelle degli scorsi anni. “Non siamo di fronte ad un fatto tragico ed eccezionale, ma ad una concreta eventualità che si ripropone ogni giorno ad ogni respingimento”, spiega l’associazione On borders che ha contato dieci morti accertati negli ultimi anni. Persone a cui è difficile dare un volto e un nome. Nel 2018 Blessing è morta mentre scappava dalla polizia, nel 2022 Fahtallah è stato trovato morto nella diga vicino a Modane, nello stesso anno il 14enne Aullar è morto stritolato dal treno a Salbeltrand. “Non è la montagna che uccide ma il sistema di frontiera – scrive On Borders – i morti nel Mediterraneo, a Cutro, a Ventimiglia e sulle Alpi sono il risultato di una stessa pianificata politica dell’orrore”.

    Le attività di soccorso e accoglienza su questo confine non si fermano mai, neanche d’estate. E quando c’è bisogno di letti aggiuntivi perché il rifugio di Oulx è pieno, i corridoi del polo logistico Cri di Bussoleno si riempiono di brandine per ospitare le persone in transito. “In Valsusa viviamo il riflesso della situazione che sta vivendo l’Italia – racconta Michele Belmondo del Comitato della Croce Rossa di Susa facendo riferimento ai 2 mila sbarchi del mese di luglio – ma non si può parlare di emergenza perché quello della migrazione è ormai un fenomeno strutturale che va avanti da anni”. Piuttosto sul lato italiano si va “un pochino più in difficoltà quando la frontiera diventa impermeabile per le condizioni meteo avverse o per i maggiori controlli da parte della polizia di frontiera”. E i governi italiani che si sono succeduti continuano “a lavarsene le mani” come spiega Gorza. “I decreti Cutro, la legge 50 e gli accordi con la Tunisia finiranno solo con il rendere più pericoloso il cammino dei migranti – conclude l’antropologo – dunque il risultato sarà la clandestinizzazione di queste persone e l’arricchimento dei trafficanti oltre a un costo umano altissimo perché puoi bloccare un accesso, ma si apriranno nuove rotte più pericolose con più morti. La gente non può né tornare indietro né restare, l’unica possibilità per loro andare avanti”. La migrazione, del resto, come spiega il ragazzo ivoriano “è un fenomeno naturale e non si può fermare. Proprio per questo occorre cambiare le leggi”.

    https://www.ilfattoquotidiano.it/2023/08/09/ogni-giorno-ci-sono-migranti-respinti-al-confine-dalla-francia-spesso-famiglie-viaggio-in-valsusa-nel-rifugio-costretto-alle-brandine-in-corridoio/7254891

    #frontières #frontière_sud-alpine #Val_de_Suse #Italie #France #refoulements #Alpes #montagne #push-backs #migrations #asile #réfugiés #film #reportage #vidéo #Croix-Rouge #urgence #Oulx #rifugio_fraternità_massi #fraternità_massi #chasse_à_l'homme #danger

  • EU Commission gifts Egypt patrol boats to become a gatekeeper for migration, following Tunisian model

    The EU Commission wants to conclude a migration defense agreement with Egypt and is upgrading the country’s land and sea borders. However, hardly any refugee boats leave from Egyptian shores for Europe.

    The government in Cairo is to receive two new ships for its coast guard. A corresponding tender worth €23 million was published by the EU Commission in May. This was confirmed by Neighborhood Commissioner Olivér Várhelyi in a response to a question from MEP Özlem Demirel. Accordingly, the funds come from the NDICI fund, which is intended to provide financial support for the EU’s Neighborhood Policy. As a purpose, the Commission states border management and search and rescue operations. Egypt will also receive thermal imaging cameras, satellite tracking systems and other surveillance equipment.

    With the donations, the Commission wants to build Egypt into a new partner in migration defense. In 2021, the government had sent a “list” of border protection equipment to Brussels for this purpose. EU Migration Commissioner Ylva Johansson then traveled to the Egyptian capital to negotiate them, followed by a visit by Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in 2022.

    Before the end of this year, the Commission intends to conclude an “Operational Partnership to Combat People Smuggling” with Egypt. Tunisia recently became the first African country to sign such a deal with the EU. However, this “partnership” violates EU treaties. This is because the Commission should actually have obtained the approval of the 27 member states before concluding the contract with Tunisia.

    Egypt is also upgrading its land borders with EU funds. To this end, the Commission has promised the country a further €87 million – a significant increase on plans from last year, which still envisaged €57 million. For the “protection of refugees, asylum seekers and migrants,” the government in Cairo will receive an extra €23 million.

    In addition, 20 million will be used to take in people who have fled Sudan because of the civil war. Two months ago, however, the Egyptian government drastically tightened conditions for displaced Sudanese, who must now apply for a visa to cross the border. Since then, thousands have been stranded at the border in dire humanitarian conditions, writes the organization Human Rights Watch.

    The Egyptian government continues to oppose the stationing of Frontex in Egypt. As early as 2007, the EU states had commissioned their border agency to negotiate a working agreement with Cairo, but this has not yet come to pass. However, Frontex coordinates “Joint Return Operations” of rejected asylum seekers to Egypt.

    With about 108 million inhabitants, Egypt is one of the EU’s neighbors with the largest population. A third of them are under 24 years old. Many of them seek a better future in Europe and cross the Mediterranean Sea by boat to do so. According to the Commission, the number of these irregular entries into the EU increased sixfold in 2021 compared to the previous year.

    Most border crossings by Egyptian nationals take place in Italy. However, these depart mainly from Libya, the Commission confirms: not even one percent of the crossings started from Egyptian shores, according to the figures. This also applies to refugees from other countries after they have passed through Egypt as a transit country.

    However, the refugee route via Libya is also becoming increasingly closed: In recent years, Egypt has significantly strengthened its military border surveillance to the neighboring country. Refugees are therefore increasingly reliant on aid workers, who are also facing more persecution. The “Law No. 82 on Combating Illegal Migration and Smuggling of Migrants,” enacted in 2016 and strengthened in 2022, allows authorities to take tougher action against any kind of aid to escape.

    Refugees are also criminalized in this way, confirms human rights lawyer Muhammad Al Kashef, who is active in the Alarmphone project and the Abolish Frontex campaign: “Thousands of people have been arrested under Law No. 82 for trying to enter or leave the country irregularly.” Egypt’s poor human rights record is compounded by its new partnership with the EU, Al Kashef told “nd.”

    Not all migration from Egypt is unwanted in Europe. EU states want to benefit from skilled workers from Egypt and facilitate their entry. Egypt is therefore one of the priority countries to be won over for a so-called “Talent Partnership”. The Commission began negotiations on this in June.

    https://digit.site36.net/2023/08/08/eu-commission-gifts-egypt-patrol-boats-to-become-a-gatekeeper-for-migr

    #externalisation #asile #réfugiés #contrôles_frontaliers #frontières #Egypte #accord #gardes-côtes #aide_financière #militarisation_des_frontières #surveillance #matériel #Operational_Partnership_to_Combat_People_Smuggling #partenariat

    #modèle_tunisien

  • Conference on innovative technologies for strengthening the Schengen area

    On 28 March 2023, the European Commission (DG HOME), Frontex and Europol will jointly hold a conference on innovative technologies for strengthening the Schengen area.


    The conference will provide a platform for dialogue between policy decision-makers, senior technology project managers, and strategic industry leaders, essential actors who contribute to making the Schengen area more secure and resilient. The conference will include discussions on the current situation and needs in Member States, selected innovative technology solutions that could strengthen Schengen as well as selected technology use cases relevant for police cooperation within Schengen.

    The conference target participants are ‘chief technology officers’ and lead managers from each Member State’s law enforcement and border guard authorities responsible for border management, security of border regions and internal security related activities, senior policy-makers and EU agencies. With regards to the presentation of innovative technological solutions, a dedicated call for industry participation will be published soon.

    https://www.europol.europa.eu/publications-events/events/conference-innovative-technologies-for-strengthening-schengen-area

    Le rapport est téléchargeable ici:
    Report from the conference on innovative technologies for strengthening the Schengen area

    In March 2023, the European Commission (DG HOME), Frontex and Europol jointly hosted a conference on innovative technologies for strengthening the Schengen area. The event brought together policy makers, senior technology project managers, and strategic industry leaders, essential actors who contribute to making the Schengen area more secure and resilient. The conference included discussions on the current situation and needs in Member States, selected innovative technology solutions that could strengthen Schengen as well as selected technology use cases relevant for police cooperation within Schengen.

    https://frontex.europa.eu/innovation/announcements/report-from-the-conference-on-innovative-technologies-for-strengtheni
    Lien pour télécharger le pdf:
    https://frontex.europa.eu/assets/EUresearchprojects/2023/Conference_on_innovative_technologies_for_Schengen_-_Report.pdf

    #technologie #frontières #Frontex #Europol #conférence #Schengen #UE #EU #commission_européenne #droits #droits_fondamentaux #biométrie #complexe_militaro-industriel #frontières_intérieures #contrôles_frontaliers #interopérabilité #acceptabilité #libre-circulation #Advanced_Passenger_Information (#API) #One-stop-shop_solutions #données #EU_Innovation_Hub_for_Internal_Security #Personal_Identification_system (#PerIS) #migrations #asile #réfugiés #vidéosurveillance #ePolicist_system #IDEMIA #Grant_Detection #OptoPrecision #Airbus_Defense_and_Space #Airbus #border_management #PNR #eu-LISA #European_Innovation_Hub_for_Internal_Security

  • Fences and cemetery guards to stop migrants in Ventimiglia

    The Italian border city of Ventimiglia has stepped up measures to stem the flow of migrants by erecting fences along the banks of the Roya river. A private security group also stands guard over a cemetery.

    The Italian city of Ventimiglia, in Liguria, on the border with France, has stepped up measures to curb the flow of migrants by erecting heavy metal fences along the banks of the Roya river and through private security personnel standing guard over a cemetery.

    “The decision to close access is to prevent more bivouacking as well as for security reasons,” said Flavio Di Muro, mayor of the city and a member of the anti-migrant League party.

    “In the case of rain, there is the risk of a sudden rise in the river level, while in days of little rain like these there have been fires,” he added.
    Measures to stop creation of new tent cities

    The decision to use security guards at the Roverino cemetery was made after residents reported the presence of migrants camped out in the area and making use of bathrooms and fountains nearby.

    These gatherings of migrants had, according to the town council, led to “problems within the cemetery and a perception of danger for visitors.”

    “This is a sacred place, intended for prayer and the remembrance of the deceased,” said Di Muro when the security service was launched at the end of July. “(It is) not a place to camp out, urinate, move or destroy municipal property. We must restore dignity to our city, starting from places like this.”

    The guards patrol the cemetery every day from 9 am to 12 and then from 3 pm to 6 pm.

    The fence along the Roya river is intended to prevent access to the river in front of homes where residents have repeatedly reported seeing migrants moving through.

    “We want to prevent the creation of situations of widespread illegality and of new tent cities,” Di Muro said.

    City park also gets volunteer anti-migrant guards

    A similar situation was seen in the city park where, the mayor said, “we want to invest in the creation of minigolf facilities and work on the pond but where there is the need for internal guards.”

    On August 2, about 30 foreign nationals were stopped and identified within the Ventimiglia train station during checks: five were ordered to register at the police station, two were taken to the Turin repatriation center, and 20 were ordered to leave Italy.

    Three minors from Afghanistan were also tracked down by the security forces and entrusted to a special reception center.

    https://www.infomigrants.net/en/post/50848/fences-and-cemetery-guards-to-stop-migrants-in-ventimiglia
    #Ventimille #frontière_sud-alpine #migrations #militarisation_des_frontières #asile #réfugiés #frontières #barrières_frontalières #Italie #France #fleuve_Roya #Roya #personnel_de_sécurité #sécurité #Roverino #cimetière #barrières_frontalières #murs

  • Ventimiglia: persone bloccate e respinte alla frontiera franco-italiana

    #Vietato_Passare – La sfida quotidiana delle persone in transito respinte e bloccate alla frontiera franco-italiana” è il titolo del nostro nuovo rapporto pubblicato oggi sulle condizioni di centinaia di persone migranti in transito nella città di Ventimiglia, che cercano ogni giorno di attraversare il confine italo-francese e raggiungere altri paesi europei.

    Adulti e bambini sistematicamente respinti dalla polizia francese – talvolta con violenza, trattamenti inumani e privazione temporanea della libertà personale – e lasciati senza un’adeguata assistenza sul territorio italiano.

    Vietato passare in Francia

    Tra i 320 pazienti visitati tra febbraio e giugno 2023 durante le nostre attività di clinica mobile e le 684 persone in transito che hanno partecipato ad attività di promozione della salute e orientamento ai servizi socio-sanitari, il 79,8% ha dichiarato di aver tentato più di una volta di raggiungere la Francia e di essere stato respinto.

    Persone che dopo aver lasciato il loro paese di origine per sfuggire a violenze, morte, soprusi e povertà e dopo aver affrontato viaggi estremamente pericolosi, si ritrovano nuovamente esposte a violenze, umiliazioni e abusi nel cuore dell’Unione Europea.

    Molte delle persone in transito che abbiamo incontrato e assistito, hanno raccontato di violazioni da parte delle autorità francesi durante le procedure di notifica del refus d’entré (rifiuto d’ingresso), menzionando ad esempio trascrizioni imprecise dei dati personali, la fornitura imparziale o insufficiente di informazioni da parte delle autorità o l’assenza di mediatori interculturali.

    Tra loro ci sono anche persone vulnerabili, come minori non accompagnati, donne incinte o con bambini, anziani e individui con patologie mediche. Più di un terzo dei 48 minori non accompagnati ha riferito di essere stato respinto, mentre diverse persone hanno raccontato di essere state detenute arbitrariamente dalla polizia francese e trattenute in container durante la notte, in condizioni di promiscuità e senza alcuna protezione specifica per donne e minori.

    Secondo quanto riferito al nostro team, nelle notti trascorse nei container non sempre sono stati forniti cibo e acqua, l’assistenza medica è stata spesso negata, i servizi igienici ritenuti inadeguati e le persone sono state costrette a dormire a terra in spazi ridotti e spesso sovraffollati.

    Inoltre, solo nella prima metà dell’anno, abbiamo registrato almeno quattro casi di separazione familiare durante i respingimenti.

    Assistenza inadeguata sul territorio italiano

    Sul territorio di Ventimiglia, d’altro canto, le persone in transito hanno un accesso estremamente limitato ad alloggi adeguati, all’assistenza sanitaria, all’acqua potabile o ai servizi igienici, con conseguenze dirette sulle loro condizioni di salute.

    Tra i 320 pazienti che abbiamo assistito da febbraio a giugno, 215 persone hanno riportato problemi dermatologici, infezioni respiratorie e gastrointestinali, ferite e dolori articolari – condizioni causate o aggravate dalla vita in strada – mentre 14 soffrivano di malattie croniche come diabete e malattie cardiovascolari con necessità di terapia continuativa e a lungo termine.

    Nonostante siano stati recentemente aperti due nuovi PAD (Punto Assistenza Diffusa) dove i migranti più vulnerabili respinti dalla Francia possono trovare riparo per la notte, decine di persone in transito sono ancora costrette a dormire in strada o in accampamenti di fortuna. Due dei quattro PAD promessi dalle autorità locali non sono ancora operativi e i servizi essenziali come alloggi, assistenza sanitaria e legale vengono forniti dalle associazioni locali e dalla società civile.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QoMbUmD8yuM&embeds_referring_euri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.medicisenzafron

    https://www.medicisenzafrontiere.it/news-e-storie/news/ventimiglia-assistenza-migranti

    #Vintimille #asile #migrations #réfugiés #frontières #push-backs #refoulements #accès_aux_soins #rapport #MSF #Medici_senza_frontiere #frontière_sud-alpine #Alpes

    • “Vietato passare”: il report di Msf sui soprusi contro i migranti alla frontiera franco-italiana

      Bloccati e respinti dalla polizia francese -con violenza, trattamenti inumani e temporanea privazione della libertà-, centinaia di uomini, donne, bambini, persone vulnerabili si ritrovano a Ventimiglia senza un riparo adeguato e con un accesso limitato all’assistenza sanitaria. Il rapporto di Medici Senza Frontiere

      “Siamo stati fermati ieri a Nizza dalla polizia. Mia moglie è incinta. È stata portata in ospedale perché è svenuta mentre la ammanettavano. Io e mio figlio di due anni siamo stati condotti alla stazione di polizia di frontiera di Mentone. Abbiamo passato la notte al freddo e questa mattina siamo stati respinti e portati in Italia, ma non abbiamo notizie di mia moglie. Mio figlio piange, vuole la sua mamma e io non posso contattarla perché non ha il telefono”.

      La testimonianza di questa famiglia originaria della Costa d’Avorio è solo una delle storie di soprusi che si verificano quotidianamente al confine italo-francese di Ventimiglia (IM) e raccolte da Medici Senza Frontiere (Msf) nel nuovo report intitolato “Vietato passare” e pubblicato a inizio agosto 2023.

      “Vediamo persone estremamente vulnerabili che vengono respinte dalla polizia francese in maniera indiscriminata, senza che le loro specifiche condizioni individuali vengano adeguatamente valutate, per poi ritrovarsi sul territorio italiano senza un’adeguata assistenza da parte delle istituzioni”, spiega Sergio Di Dato, coordinatore del progetto di Msf nella cittadina ligure. “Molte delle persone in transito incontrate e assistite da Msf, hanno raccontato di violazioni da parte delle autorità francesi durante le procedure di notifica del refus d’entré (rifiuto d’ingresso), menzionando ad esempio trascrizioni imprecise dei dati personali, la fornitura imparziale o insufficiente di informazioni da parte delle autorità o l’assenza di mediatori interculturali”.

      Il rapporto si basa sui dati raccolti durante l’attività medica dell’équipe di Msf tra febbraio e giugno 2023 a cui si aggiungono 14 interviste semistrutturate con pazienti e membri del personale sanitario. Proprio all’inizio del 2023 l’organizzazione, già presente sul territorio di confine ligure nel 2016, ha deciso di tornare con il proprio staff in risposta al crescente numero di persone bloccate al confine.

      Delle 320 persone assistite la maggioranza proviene da Costa d’Avorio (28,1%), Guinea (27,5%) e Camerun (4,9%) ed è arrivata a Ventimiglia principalmente da Lampedusa (82,2%) e Trieste (5,3%). L’età media dei pazienti è di 23 anni con il gruppo più numeroso compreso tra i 16 e i 20: il 21% del totale, infatti, si è dichiarato minorenne al momento della visita. Oltre un terzo delle persone incontrate (37%) è donna.

      “Entrambi i miei genitori sono morti -racconta una di queste, originaria della Guinea-. Sono rimasta con mia zia che mi ha detto che era arrivato il momento di sposarmi. Avevo 15 anni. Non conoscevo l’uomo che avrei sposato; fu lei a trovarlo. Non ho scelto di sposarmi. L’uomo che è diventato mio marito ha iniziato a picchiarmi, ogni giorno. Era sempre violento con me. Sono finita in ospedale molte volte. Non avevo nessuno che mi proteggesse da lui. Sono passati quattro anni e ne porto ancora le cicatrici sul corpo […]. Ho deciso di andarmene per allontanarmi da quella vita”. Una storia di violenza non isolata. Quasi una persona su due di quelle visitate era infatti portatrice di “bisogni specifici e di estrema vulnerabilità a causa di caratteristiche o vissuti personali particolarmente complessi, correlati al genere, all’etnia, all’orientamento sessuale, alle convinzioni politiche o religiose e alle violazioni subite nei loro Paesi d’origine”.

      Il 38,8% ha impiegato più di un anno per raggiungere l’Italia, per alcuni il percorso è durato oltre cinque anni. Ma il “sogno europeo” sbatte contro l’ennesima frontiera sigillata.

      Su un campione di un migliaio di persone intercettate da Msf, l’80% ha dichiarato di aver già tentato di attraversare il confine tra Italia e Francia; il 25% riportava di essere stato respinto più di una volta “affrontando innumerevoli difficoltà ed esponendosi a rischi sempre maggiori fino a compromettere, a volte, la propria incolumità”, scrive Msf. E questo vale anche per le donne in gravidanza o che stanno allattando, per le persone anziane o gravemente malate e per i minori non accompagnati. Un terzo di quelli incontrati da Msf era stato respinto al confine, “tra cui due sopravvissuti a violenze e naufragi e una madre di 16 anni con un neonato”.

      Emblematica è la storia di A., 17 anni, originario di un Paese dell’Africa subsahariana. In Libia è stato rinchiuso in un centro di detenzione dove ha subito violenze e maltrattamenti di ogni tipo “che gli hanno lasciato cicatrici ancora visibili sulla schiena e un dolore cronico al ginocchio”. Ha deciso di raggiungere la Tunisia ma dopo i rastrellamenti operati dal presidente Kaïs Saïed ai danni delle persone migranti, ha deciso di partire per l’Europa.

      A 35 chilometri da Lampedusa un’imbarcazione, “probabilmente tunisina”, li ha abbordati pretendendo il loro motore. Li ha affiancati sempre di più, minacciandoli con toni aggressivi e creando forti onde che hanno fatto imbarcare acqua al piccolo natante, che alla fine è affondato. Nonostante le grida, le suppliche e le richieste di soccorso, l’altra nave ha abbandonato i passeggeri della barca di A. al loro destino. Lui, è tra i 22 tratti in salvo. “Da Lampedusa A. è arrivato a Ventimiglia. Vuole raggiungere la Francia perché parla francese e pensa che lì potrebbe avere più possibilità per costruirsi un futuro -si legge nel rapporto-. Tuttavia, è stato respinto due volte dalle autorità francesi, anche se è vittima di naufragio, ha subito innumerevoli violenze, si dichiara minore e non è accompagnato”.

      La condizione sanitaria delle persone incontrate dagli operatori presenti a Ventimiglia è pessima. “Tra le persone assistite, 215 pazienti (67,2%) hanno riportato una condizione acuta, tra cui malattie dermatologiche, patologie respiratorie, disturbi gastrointestinali, problemi muscoloscheletrici o lesioni -si legge nel report-. In totale, sono stati segnalati 31 episodi di traumi accidentali acuti, di cui il 90,3% (28) tra la popolazione di sesso maschile e tre (9,7%) tra i minori. Inoltre, 32 individui (10%) hanno presentato sintomi neurologici, la maggior parte dei quali riconducibili a mal di testa o emicrania (25, 78,1%), e per 14 persone (4,4%) sono state individuate patologie croniche con necessità di terapia continuativa e a lungo termine”.

      Sono stati raccolti dati anche rispetto alle vittime di violenza intenzionale (in totale 12, il 3,8%) e alle persone che presentavano sintomi associati a problemi di salute mentale (15, ovvero il 4,7%). Ma su queste stime gli operatori sottolineano la “difficoltà di stabilire relazioni di fiducia con pazienti transitanti che sono concentrati sul proseguimento del loro viaggio, sulla ricerca di sicurezza o sul soddisfacimento dei bisogni primari”.

      Anche la soddisfazione dei bisogni primari a Ventimiglia è un miraggio. “Con la chiusura del campo Roja nel 2020, che rappresentava l’unico centro ufficiale di accoglienza di emergenza nella zona, e gli sgomberi forzati effettuati nel maggio 2023 dalle autorità italiane presso l’insediamento informale sulle rive del fiume Roja -si legge nel rapporto- le persone in transito si trovano costrette a dormire per strada, in edifici abbandonati o in ripari di fortuna. Questa situazione le espone a marginalizzazione, soprusi, condizioni climatiche avverse, rischi per la salute privandole dell’accesso a servizi igienici, all’acqua pulita o a un riparo adeguato”.

      Molti bisogni restano, così, senza risposta. E lo staff di Msf che fornisce assistenza medica a Ventimiglia “misura quotidianamente” l’impatto della mancanza di alloggi e servizi igienici: “Malattie della pelle (48 persone; il 15,8%), infezioni gastrointestinali (25, il 18,2%), infezioni urinarie e del tratto respiratorio superiore (35, l’11,5%) sono solo alcuni dei disturbi che spesso derivano direttamente dalle pessime condizioni di vita e di marginalizzazione sociale in cui è costretta a vivere la popolazione in transito”.

      E di cui soffrono soprattutto donne e minori, i più vulnerabili. L’accesso alle cure per chi dichiara di avere meno di 18 anni è complesso: per richiedere la tessera sanitaria è necessario coinvolgere chi esercita la potestà genitoriale o il responsabile della struttura di accoglienza in cui sono ospitati i minori. Struttura da cui però, nella maggior parte dei casi, è scappato chi arriva a Ventimiglia desideroso di raggiungere altri Paesi europei. Anche per le donne e ragazze, “che presentano bisogni e rischi sanitari specifiche” l’accesso alle cure mediche ginecologiche è difficoltoso. “Sia perché sono riluttanti a interrompere il loro percorso migratorio, sia perché hanno sfiducia nei confronti del sistema sanitario”, spiegano i curatori del report. “Tutto questo si traduce in un’interruzione della continuità delle cure mediche e in un aumento dei rischi di complicazioni e morbilità durante la gravidanza”.

      Salute calpestata, diritti negati. Chi è respinto al confine è spesso vittima di violenza e detenzione arbitraria nei container in cui le persone, una volta intercettate, aspettano di essere riportate sul territorio italiano. Secondo i dati raccolti da Msf dalla prefettura di Nizza, più di 13.395 persone tra il primo gennaio e il 15 giugno 2023 sono state soggette a “respingimenti o trattenimenti al confine italo-francese, con un aumento del 30% rispetto all’anno precedente”. Una media di 80 persone al giorno costrette a tornare indietro, tra cui sempre più minori.

      Le raccomandazioni di Msf che chiudono il report sono così rivolte ai tre principali protagonisti di questa paradossale situazione: alle autorità di Ventimiglia e al governo italiano di garantire l’accesso ai servizi di base e un’accoglienza dignitosa per le persone che transitano dal confine; alle autorità francesi di assicurare il rispetto delle garanzie procedurali durante i controlli di frontiera al confine italo-francese, proteggere i minori e porre fine alla detenzione arbitraria dei migranti. Infine, all’Unione europea, di “impedire i respingimenti alle frontiere interne” e “impedire le espulsioni collettive dagli Stati membri e stabilire meccanismi per valutare le situazioni individuali delle persone in transito”. Per provare a salvare quel che resta di quello spazio Schengen dove, a oggi, le merci attraversano più facilmente i confini di (alcune) persone.

      https://altreconomia.it/vietato-passare-il-report-di-msf-sui-soprusi-contro-i-migranti-alla-fro

  • #Texas prepares to deploy #Rio_Grande buoys in governor’s latest effort to curb border crossings

    Texas began rolling out what is set to become a new floating barrier on the Rio Grande on Friday in the latest escalation of Republican Gov. Greg Abbott’s multibillion-dollar effort to secure the U.S. border with Mexico, which already has included bussing migrants to liberal states and authorizing the National Guard to make arrests.

    But even before the huge, orange buoys were unloaded from the trailers that hauled them to the border city of Eagle Pass, there were concerns over this part of Abbott’s unprecedented challenge to the federal government’s authority over immigration enforcement. Migrant advocates voiced concerns about drowning risks and environmentalists questioned the impact on the river.

    Dozens of the large spherical buoys were stacked on the beds of four tractor trailers in a grassy city park near the river on Friday morning.

    Setting up the barriers could take up to two weeks, according to Lt. Chris Olivarez, a spokesperson for the Texas Department of Public Safety, which is overseeing the project.

    Once installed, the above-river parts of the system and the webbing they’re connected with will cover 1,000 feet (305 meter) of the middle of the Rio Grande, with anchors in the riverbed.

    Eagle Pass is part of a Border Patrol sector that has seen the second highest number of migrant crossings this fiscal year with about 270,000 encounters — though that is lower than it was at this time last year.

    The crossing dynamics shifted in May after the Biden administration stopped implementing Title 42, a pandemic era public health policy that turned many asylum seekers back to Mexico. New rules allowed people to seek asylum through a government application and set up appointments at the ports of entry, though the maximum allowed in per day is set at 1,450. The Texas governor’s policies target the many who are frustrated with the cap and cross illegally through the river.

    Earlier iterations of Abbott’s border mission have included installing miles of razor wire at popular crossing points on the river and creating state checkpoints beyond federal stops to inspect incoming commercial traffic.

    “We always look to employ whatever strategies will be effective in securing the border,” Abbott said in a June 8 press conference to introduce the buoy strategy.

    But the state hasn’t said what tests or studies have been done to determine risks posed to people who try to get around the barrier or environmental impacts.

    Immigrant advocates, including Sister Isabel Turcios, a nun who oversees a migrant shelter in Piedras Negras, Mexico, which sits just across the river from Eagle Pass, have remained vigilant about the effects of the new barrier on migration. Turcios said she met with the Texas Department of Public Safety in the days leading up to the arrival of the buoys and was told the floating barrier would be placed in deep waters to function as a warning to migrants to avoid the area.

    Turcios said she is aware that many of the nearly 200 migrants staying in her shelter on any given day are not deterred from crossing illegally despite sharp concertina wire. But that wire causes more danger because it forces migrants to spend additional time in the river.

    “That’s more and more dangerous each time ... because it has perches, it has whirlpools and because of the organized crime,” Turcios said.

    Texas Department of Public Safety Director Steven McCraw addressed the danger that migrants may face when the buoys are deployed during the June press conference when Abbott spoke: “Anytime they get in that water, it’s a risk to the migrants. This is the deterrent from even coming in the water.”

    Less than a week ago — around the Fourth of July holiday — four people, including an infant, drowned near Eagle Pass as they attempted to cross the river.

    The federal International Boundary and Water Commission, whose jurisdiction includes boundary demarcation and overseeing U.S.-Mexico treaties, said it didn’t get a heads up from Texas about the proposed floating barrier.

    “We are studying what Texas is publicly proposing to determine whether and how this impacts our mission to carry out treaties between the US and Mexico regarding border delineation, flood control, and water distribution, which includes the Rio Grande,” Frank Fisher, a spokesperson for the commission, said in a statement.

    On Friday morning, environmental advocates from Eagle Pass and Laredo, another Texas border city about 115 miles (185 kilometers) downriver, held a demonstration by the border that included a prayer for the river ahead of the barrier deployment.

    Jessie Fuentes, who owns a canoe and kayaking business that takes paddlers onto the Rio Grande, said he’s worried about unforeseen consequences. On Friday, he filed a lawsuit to stop Texas from using the buoys. He’s seeking a permanent injunction, saying his paddling business is impacted by limited access to the river.

    “I know it’s a detriment to the river flow, to the ecology of the river, to the fauna and flora. Every aspect of nature is being affected when you put something that doesn’t belong in the river,” Fuentes said.

    Adriana Martinez, a professor at Southern Illinois University who grew up in Eagle Pass, studies the shapes of rivers and how they move sediment and create landforms. She said she’s worried about what the webbing might do.

    “A lot of things float down the river, even when it’s not flooding; things that you can’t see like large branches, large rocks,” Martinez said. “And so anything like that could get caught up in these buoys and change the way that water is flowing around them.”

    https://apnews.com/article/buoys-texas-immigration-rio-grande-mexico-522e45febd880de1453460370043a25f

    https://twitter.com/clemrenard_/status/1679018421449637888

    #mur_flottant #frontières #migrations #asile #réfugiés #USA #Etats-Unis #barrières_frontalières #barrière_flottante

    En #Grèce...
    Grèce. Le « #mur_flottant » visant à arrêter les personnes réfugiées mettra des vies en danger
    https://seenthis.net/messages/823621

    • Gov. Abbott is destroying the Rio Grande for a fearmongering photo-op.


      Miles of deadly razor-wire have been deployed to ensnare & impale border crossers. Bobcats, bear, mule deer & other wildlife will also be cut off from their main source of water.

      https://twitter.com/LaikenJordahl/status/1691158344361480194

      #fil_barbelé #barbelé

    • Un mur flottant équipé de « scies circulaires » à la frontière américano-mexicaine

      Des vidéos diffusées sur les réseaux sociaux le 8 août 2023 permettent d’observer de plus près la barrière frontalière flottante installée par le gouverneur du Texas, Greg Abbott, et destinée à empêcher les migrants clandestins d’entrer aux États-Unis. Ces installations controversées, près desquelles un corps a récemment été retrouvé, sont équipées de disques métalliques pointus fabriqués par Cochrane Global.

      Quand le gouverneur du Texas, Greg Abbott, a annoncé le 6 juin 2023 l’installation d’une « barrière marine flottante » pour dissuader les migrants de franchir illégalement la frontière sud des États-Unis, un détail important a été omis : entre les bouées orange qui composent l’ouvrage se trouvent des lames de scie circulaire aiguisées, qui rendent le franchissement presque impossible sans risque de se blesser.

      Des représentants de l’association Congressional Hispanic Caucus (CHC) se sont rendus le 8 août 2023 à Eagle Pass, au Texas, et ont partagé de nombreuses vidéos sur leur compte X (anciennement Twitter).

      Les vidéos montrent de plus près les installations et ces disques métalliques tranchants entre les #bouées_flottantes.

      La petite ville d’#Eagle_Pass est devenue l’un des points de passage les plus dangereux de la frontière américano-mexicaine, marquée à cet endroit par le fleuve Rio Grande : les noyades de migrants y sont devenues monnaie courante.

      Le CHC a déclaré que ses membres étaient venus au Texas pour « tirer la sonnette d’alarme sur ces tactiques inhumaines mises en place par le gouverneur Abbott ».

      Une vidéo de 12 secondes, partagée par l’élue à la Chambre des représentants Sylvia Garcia, a été visionnée plus de 25 millions de fois.

      Appalled by the ongoing cruel and inhumane tactics employed by @GovAbbott at the Texas border. The situation’s reality is unsettling as these buoys’ true danger and brutality come to light. We must stop this NOW ! pic.twitter.com/XPc4C8Tnl0
      — Rep. Sylvia Garcia (@RepSylviaGarcia) August 8, 2023

      Le 21 juillet 2023, le ministère américain de la Justice a déposé une plainte contre le gouverneur Greg Abbott au sujet de la barrière frontalière flottante. L’action en justice qualifie d’"illégale" la mise en place d’une telle barrière et vise à forcer le Texas à l’enlever pour des raisons humanitaires et environnementales.

      « Ils traitent les êtres humains comme des animaux »

      La militarisation de la frontière sud des États-Unis avec le Mexique fait partie de l’#investissement de plusieurs milliards de dollars déployé par le gouverneur du Texas Greg Abbott pour stopper « de manière proactive » les arrivées de migrants par cette zone frontalière.

      La clôture flottante n’est qu’un seul des six projets de loi crédités en tout de 5,1 milliards de dollars de dotation et qui ont été annoncés le 6 juin 2023.

      La politique migratoire stricte du Texas, qui consiste notamment à transporter des personnes par car vers les États démocrates du Nord et à autoriser la Garde nationale à procéder à des arrestations, a incité d’autres États républicains à prendre des mesures similaires pour freiner l’immigration illégale.

      Contacté à plusieurs reprises par la rédaction des Observateurs, le bureau du gouverneur Abbott ne nous a pas répondu.

      Everyone needs to see what I saw in Eagle Pass today.

      Clothing stuck on razor wire where families got trapped. Chainsaw devices in the middle of buoys. Land seized from US citizens.

      Operation Lone Star is barbaric — and @GovAbbott is making border communities collateral damage. pic.twitter.com/PzKyZGWfds
      — Joaquin Castro (@JoaquinCastrotx) August 8, 2023

      « Je veux que vous regardiez ici le dispositif de type tronçonneuse qu’ils ont caché au milieu de ces bouées. Et quand vous venez ici, vous pouvez voir au loin tous ces fils de fer barbelés près du fleuve », a commenté le membre du Congrès américain Joaquin Castro, qui a également participé à la visite du CHC au Texas.

      « Le gouvernement de l’État [du Texas, NDLR] et Greg Abbott traitent les êtres humains comme des animaux », a-t-il ajouté dans une vidéo publiée le 8 août 2023 sur son compte X.

      Une frontière flottante fabriquée par Cochrane Global

      Texas began installation of its marine barrier near Eagle Pass. One pro-illegal immigration activist I met taking video elsewhere was outraged, saying it’ll never work. But… if she believes that, why get so verklempt ?Just shrug, smirk and go away. But they must think it’ll work ! pic.twitter.com/4fzdHdNJw8
      — Todd Bensman (@BensmanTodd) July 11, 2023

      Dans la vidéo de 12 secondes de Sylvia Garcia, on entend une personne dire : « Quelqu’un a fait beaucoup d’efforts ridicules pour concevoir ces installations. »

      Sur les bouées, on peut lire le mot « #Cochrane ». #Cochrane_Global est une multinationale spécialisée dans les « barrières [...] de haute sécurité » destinées à l’usage de gouvernements, d’entreprises ou de particuliers.

      Sur son site web, Cochrane Global indique que « la barrière flottante brevetée est composée de plusieurs bouées interconnectées qui peuvent être étendues à n’importe quelle longueur et personnalisées en fonction de l’objectif ».

      Le 4 août 2023, un corps a été retrouvé près du mur flottant installé sur le fleuve, en face d’Eagle Pass, au Texas.

      Il n’est pas clair à ce stade si l’ajout de lames de scie circulaire aux bouées orange a été pensé et fabriqué par Cochrane Global ou s’il a été fait à la demande des autorités de l’État.

      La rédaction des Observateurs a contacté Cochrane Global pour obtenir un commentaire, sans succès. Nous publierons sa réponse dès que nous l’aurons reçue.

      https://observers.france24.com/fr/am%C3%A9riques/20230811-un-mur-flottant-%C3%A9quip%C3%A9-de-scies-circulaires-%

      #business

    • The Floating Barrier and the Border Industrial Complex

      The Texas water wall gives a glimpse into rapidly proliferating border enforcement worldwide and the significant profit to be made from it.

      When I first came across Cochrane International, the company that built the floating barrier deployed in Eagle Pass, Texas, I watched a demonstration the company gave with detached bemusement. I was at a gun range just outside San Antonio. It was 2017, three months after Donald Trump had been sworn in and the last day of that year’s Border Security Expo, the annual gathering of Department of Homeland Security’s top brass and hundreds of companies from the border industry. Among industry insiders, the optimism was high. With Trump’s wall rhetoric at a fever pitch, the money was in the bank.

      All around me, all morning, Border Patrol agents were blasting away body-shaped cutouts in a gun competition. My ears were ringing, thanks in part to the concussion grenade I had launched—under the direction of an agent, but with great ineptitude—into an empty field as part of another hands-on demonstration. The first two days of the expo had been in the much-posher San Antonio convention center, where companies displayed their sophisticated camera systems, biometrics, and drones in a large exhibition hall. But here on the gun range we seemed to be on its raw edge.

      So when a red truck with a camo-painted trailer showed up and announced its demonstration, it wasn’t too much of a surprise. The blasting bullets still echoed all around as if they would never cease. Two men jumped out of the truck wearing red shirts and khaki pants. They frantically ran around the camo trailer, like mice scurrying around a piece of cheese trying to figure out the proper angle of attack. Then the demo began. One of the men got back in the truck, and as it lurched forward, coiling razor wire began to spill out of its rear end as if it were having a bowel movement. As the truck moved forward, more and more of Cochrane’s Rapid Deployment Barrier spilled out until it extended the length of a football field or more. It was like a microwavable insta-wall, fast-food border enforcement.

      Little did I know that six years later, this same company, Cochrane, would give us the floating barrier, with its wrecking ball–sized buoys connected side by side with circular saws. The floating barrier, as the Texas Standard put it, is the “centerpiece of #Operation_Lone_Star,” Texas governor Greg Abbott’s $4.5 billion border enforcement plan. For this barrier, which has now been linked to the deaths of at least two people, the Texas Department of Public Safety awarded Cochrane an $850,000 contract.

      While the floating wall is part of Abbott’s right-wing fear-fueled border operations, it is also a product of the broader border buildup in the United States. It embodies the deterrence strategy that has driven the buildup—via exponentially increasing budgets—for three decades, through multiple federal administrations from both sides of the aisle. In this sense, Cochrane is one of hundreds upon hundreds of companies that have received contracts, and made revenue, from border enforcement. Today, the Biden administration is giving out border and immigration enforcement contracts at a clip of 27 contracts a day, a pace that will top that of all other presidents. (Before Biden, the average was 16 contracts a day.)

      And there is no sign that this will abate anytime soon. Take the ongoing Homeland Security appropriations debate for fiscal year 2024: a detail in a statement put out by House Appropriations chair Kay Granger caught my eye: $2.1 billion will be allocated for the construction of a “physical wall along the southern border.” (This is something readers should keep a keen eye on! Cochrane certainly is.) At stake is the 2024 presidential request for CBP and ICE, at $28.2 billion. While that number is much higher than any of the Trump administration’s annual border enforcement budgets, it is less than the 2023 budget of $29.8 billion, the highest ever for border and immigration enforcement.

      But the $1.6 billion difference between 2023 and 2024 might soon disappear, thanks to supplemental funding requested by the White House, funding that would include nearly $1 billion in unrestricted funds for CBP and ICE enforcement, detention, and surveillance, and more funds for “community-based residential facilities,” among other things. While these “residential facilities” might sound nice, the National Immigrant Justice Center says they will “essentially reinstate family detention.” In other words, the White House aims to build more prisons for migrants, probably also run by private companies. The prison initiative has the support of the Senate Appropriations Committee, which has indicated that it will craft a bill that ensures the supplemental funding’s enactment.

      The tributaries of money into the broader border industrial complex are many, and all indications are that Operation Lone Star, which is drawing money from all kinds of different departments in the Texas state government, will continue as long as Abbott remains at the helm. Moreover, the Department of Homeland Security supplies local and state governments with border enforcement funding via a program called Operation Stonegarden. Under this program, Texas received $39 million in 2022, the equivalent of 47 floating barriers. Or more ambitiously the potential $2.1 billion mentioned above by Granger would amount to 2,470 of Cochrane’s water walls.

      As Cochrane project manager #Loren_Flossman testified (the Department of Justice is suing the state of Texas for building the floating barrier), the water barrier was first contracted by CBP in 2020 but shut down when Biden took office. At the time, the new president said that the administration would not build any more wall (although it has and is). Flossman would know, because he himself came to Cochrane after 17 years working in acquisitions at CBP, as he stated in his testimony. There is a trend in which CBP high brass cruise through the proverbial public-private revolving door, and Flossman is the newest well-connected former government employee peddling barriers across the globe in a world where there is a “rapid proliferation of border walls,” and there exists a border security market projected to nearly double in a decade.

      Cochrane has certainly jumped into this with full force. Besides the floating barrier, its products include an invisible wall known as ClearVu, the “finest fence you’ve never seen.” The same brochure shows this “invisible” wall around a Porsche dealership, an American Airlines building, and the Egyptian pyramids, and it says that the company’s walls can be found “across six continents” and “100 countries.” And that’s not all; such walls can be enhanced with accessories like the Cochrane Smart Coil, Electric Smart Coil, and Spike Toppings. The Smart Coil’s description reads like a menu at a fine-dining restaurant: composed of “a 730mm high Ripper Blade smart Concertina Coil, produced from the finest galvanized steel available on the market.” The “smart” part is that it will provide an “intrusion alert,” and the electric part means a potentially deadly electric current of 7,000 volts. From this menu, CBP has one contract with Cochrane from 2020 for “coil units,” but the contract doesn’t specify if it is “smart,” “electric,” or both.

      When I first saw Cochrane back in 2017 among the ear-ringing gunfire on the last day of the Border Security Expo, I had a feeling I might see them again. No matter how ludicrous the rapid barrier deployment camo truck seemed to me then, there was, indeed, plenty of money to be made.

      https://www.theborderchronicle.com/p/the-floating-barrier-and-the-border
      #complexe_militaro-industriel

  • A #Briançon, l’accueil des migrants de plus en plus compliqué : « Ce n’est plus gérable »

    « Beaucoup marché dans le désert… C’est pas facile… Police tunisienne courir derrière moi… Marcher cinq jours, pas d’eau, pas d’ombre… » Il ne s’arrête plus. Sans qu’on ne lui ait posé la moindre question, Issouf (les personnes citées par leur prénom n’ont pas souhaité donner leur nom), s’est mis à parler du parcours migratoire qu’il a engagé il y a presque six mois depuis le Burkina Faso, aux côtés de son père Abdoul.

    Le garçon de 10 ans montre ses jambes, couvertes de cicatrices. Des cailloux sur lesquels il serait tombé, souvent. « J’ai vu des cadavres, des gens mourir. Le Sahara a tué les gens, demande à papa ! Je dis la vérité » , poursuit-il, agitant ses bras.

    Après avoir traversé le Mali, l’Algérie et la Tunisie, Issouf et son père ont franchi la Méditerranée jusqu’à l’île italienne de Lampedusa. « Ma maman ne voulait pas qu’on traverse, elle avait peur, elle disait : “Retournez-vous”. On a risqué la vie. Tout le monde rit maintenant. Ils sont contents. »

    Fin juillet, Issouf et Abdoul ont passé à pied le col alpin de Montgenèvre, près de la frontière entre l’Italie et la France. Une route privilégiée depuis la fin de l’année 2016 et la recrudescence des contrôles policiers dans les Alpes-Maritimes. Issouf et Abdoul ont été refoulés une première fois par la police française, avant de réussir leur passage et de gagner Briançon (Hautes-Alpes), à une quinzaine de kilomètres.

    On les rencontre aux Terrasses solidaires, un ancien sanatorium de la ville, racheté 1 million d’euros en 2021 par une poignée de fondations et d’associations telles que Refuges solidaires, Médecins du monde ou Tous migrants et au sein duquel sont désormais accueillis les migrants en transit.

    « J’étais dos au mur »

    « Inchallah, on va trouver les documentset on va faire venir maman en France » , nous dit Issouf, volubile. Son père, Abdoul, est dans le dur. Il a laissé sa femme et deux de ses enfants dans un Burkina Faso « invivable », en proie à l’ « insécurité » et à la « crise » économique. Il vivait à Koudougou, la troisième ville du pays, sous la férule de groupes djihadistes. « Tout saute, raconte-t-il, en pleurs. J’aurais pu devenir djihadiste, j’étais dos au mur. Si tu n’es pas fort d’esprit, tu peux faire n’importe quoi pour t’en sortir. »

    De sa route vers la France, il raconte chaque étape, les nuits passées cachés dans des champs d’oliviers à attendre les passeurs, sans bruit, les francs CFA acquittés à chaque étape, les pick-up et les marches harassantes, les nombreux refoulements de la Tunisie vers l’Algérie, les petits boulots comme aide-maçon payés 30 dinars (8,80 euros) la journée, les gens « de bonne foi » qui lui offraient à boire et à manger, ou ceux, effrayants, qui raflaient « les Noirs »et les envoyaient vers le désert.

    Depuis le mois de mai, à Briançon, on constate un afflux de personnes aux Terrasses solidaires, en lien avec l’augmentation des départs depuis la Tunisie, un pays en proie à une crise économique et à une montée des violences envers les migrants subsahariens. La nuit, ils peuvent être soixante-dix à arriver au refuge. Ces derniers jours, le nombre de personnes hébergées sur place est monté à plus de 200, des hommes presque exclusivement, alors que les normes de sécurité limitent la capacité d’accueil du lieu à une soixantaine de personnes.

    Des tentes ont été montées à l’extérieur du bâtiment ; le réfectoire est devenu un vaste dortoir où une quarantaine de lits de camp ont été alignés. Les personnes s’y reposent, un œil sur leur téléphone quand elles ne dorment pas, le visage enfoui sous une couverture.

    « Nos stocks de nourriture s’épuisent »

    Les bénévoles ont toujours connu les variations saisonnières des arrivées. A l’hiver 2021, tout juste après avoir été inauguré, le lieu avait fermé ses portes plusieurs semaines alors que quelque 230 personnes s’y trouvaient.

    « On est saturé, alerte aujourd’hui encore Luc Marchello, membre du conseil d’administration des Terrasses solidaires. Ce n’est plus gérable, ni par rapport à la dignité de l’accueil ni par rapport aux tensions que cela génère. » « On demande à la préfecture d’ouvrir un centre d’hébergement mais elle nous laisse sans réponse » , se désole Alfred Spira, professeur de médecine à la retraite et également membre du conseil d’administration du refuge.

    Sollicités sur le sujet, les services de l’Etat dans le département assurent dans un mail au Monde que les demandes d’hébergement faites auprès du 115 – le Samusocial – « restent conformes au nombre constaté les années précédentes à la même époque ».

    « Nos stocks de nourriture s’épuisent, les dons arrivent de façon ponctuelle. On a trois veilleurs de nuit salariés, on en voudrait bien quatre » , explique pour sa part Jean Gaboriau, administrateur de l’association Refuges solidaires. Les seuls deniers publics seraient ceux de l’agence régionale de santé, qui consacrerait environ 40 000 euros par an à la prise en charge de la blanchisserie.

    Du reste, une quinzaine de bénévoles s’activent chaque jour sur place. « On est complètement accaparés par la gestion de l’accueil, témoigne Luc Marchello . En général, les personnes restent entre trois et cinq jours mais une partie ne sait pas où aller ou attend un [transfert d’argent] Western Union pour pouvoir acheter un billet de train. »

    Abdoul et Issouf sont de ceux que personne n’attend. « Il nous faut des indices pour nous orienter. On ne connaît personne en France, confie le père, qui souhaite déposer une demande d’asile. On se mettra dans les mains des gens qui sont gentils. » Quelques jours plus tard, il partira vers Strasbourg.

    Mounir, lui, veut aller à Paris pour travailler dans la pâtisserie. Au Maroc, dont il est originaire, le salaire qu’il pouvait espérer n’atteint pas les 300 euros. « Et puis tu n’es pas déclaré et tu te fais dégager du jour au lendemain » , dit-il. Le jeune homme de 25 ans s’inquiète de la possibilité de travailler en France alors qu’il n’a pas de titre de séjour et se renseigne sur les démarches à faire pour être régularisé. Avec ses quelques compagnons de route, originaires des villes de Marrakech, Ouarzazate, Midelt ou Tiznit, il a d’abord pris un avion vers la Turquie avant de remonter la route dite des Balkans. La plupart ont l’Espagne en ligne de mire. Pour y faire de la soudure, de l’électricité, de la coiffure ou de l’agriculture, qu’importe. Là-bas, ont-ils compris, obtenir les papiers ne prendrait « que » deux ans et demi.

    https://www.lemonde.fr/article-offert/effyfhbwvptb-6184494/a-briancon-l-accueil-des-migrants-de-plus-en-plus-complique-ce-n-est-plus-ge

    #asile #migrations #réfugiés #accueil #Briançonnais #Hautes-Alpes #frontière_sud-alpine #Alpes #hébergement #mise_à_l'abri #terrasses_solidaires #refuge_solidaire #refuges_solidaires #frontières #Italie #France #Montgenèvre #115

    –—

    Juin 2023 :
    Nouveau cri d’alarme du #Refuge_solidaire
    https://seenthis.net/messages/1004387

    • Migranti, emergenza in Val di Susa: centri di accoglienza al limite per i profughi diretti in Francia

      I controlli alla frontiera sempre più stringenti, in pochi giorni arrivate a #Oulx più di 150 persone.

      Al #Rifugio_Fraternità_Massi di Oulx la parola emergenza è ormai scomparsa dal lessico quotidiano. Il flusso costante di uomini, donne e bambini che ogni giorno cercano di attraversare il confine ha perso da tempo i caratteri dell’eccezionalità, evolvendosi in un fenomeno sempre più sistemico, ma non per questo meno tragico.

      A dimostrarlo sono i numeri registrati dalle associazioni impegnate nel progetto #MigrAlp; un bilancio impietoso che vede il rifugio di don Luigi Chiampo ospitare ogni notte un centinaio di persone, malgrado i posti disponibili all’interno della struttura siano soltanto una settantina.

      Ad inizio agosto in un paio di occasioni si è arrivati addirittura a raggiungere le 150 presenze e da allora la necessità ha finito per trasformare in abitudini consolidate quelle che un tempo erano soluzioni emergenziali. Non fanno più notizia le brandine allestite in sala mensa, né i viaggi intrapresi ogni sera dalla Croce Rossa per trasportare al polo logistico di Bussoleno quanti non trovano posto ad Oulx.

      La situazione, intanto, resta grave anche al confine francese, come testimoniano i quasi 300 migranti accolti lo scorso 13 agosto al centro delle Terrasses Solidaires di Briançon. «La militarizzazione della frontiera non fa che incentivare la clandestinità e mettere a rischio la vita dei più deboli - spiega Piero Gorza, antropologo e referente Medu per il Piemonte – dal 2018 ad oggi sulle nostre montagne sono morte 10 persone, l’ultima soltanto una manciata di giorni fa. L’aumento dei flussi e il mutamento della loro composizione ha visto moltiplicarsi le vulnerabilità di quanti affrontano il cammino». Gli iraniani, afghani e curdi che fino allo scorso ottobre rappresentavano il 70% delle persone in transito ad Oulx sono ora soltanto una minoranza.

      «Quanti provengono dalla rotta balcanica scelgono di passare da Como o dalla Svizzera, dove ottengono un foglio di via che consente loro di arrivare più facilmente in Germania», spiega Paolo Narcisi, presidente dell’associazione Rainbow for Africa. Ad affrontare le montagne dell’alta Val Susa sono ormai perlopiù i migranti dell’Africa subsahariana.

      Sono molte le donne, spesso incinte o con al seguito i bambini talvolta frutto delle violenze subite nei campi di transizione libici. Tanti, troppi, i minori non accompagnati. «Da gennaio ne abbiamo accolti un centinaio al polo logistico di Bussoleno – sottolinea Michele Belmondo, responsabile delle emergenze della Croce Rossa di Susa – un dato allarmante se paragonato ai 90 di cui ci siamo occupati nel corso dell’intero 2022».

      Recano sul corpo i segni delle torture e di un cammino di cui spesso ignorano le insidie, basti pensare ai due ragazzi recuperati l’altro giorno dal Soccorso Alpino sopra Bardonecchia, a 2mila metri di altitudine, con ai piedi un paio di ciabatte.

      Ad accrescere la preoccupazione in vista dell’autunno contribuisce inoltre la carenza di risorse economiche. «Se la situazione rimarrà invariata, entro fine settembre avremo terminato i fondi stanziati per il 2023 dalla Prefettura per la gestione del progetto MigrAlp - precisa Belmondo - 550 mila euro a fronte dei 750 mila richiesti da associazioni e istituzioni. Arriveranno a consuntivo soltanto a fine anno».

      https://www.lastampa.it/torino/2023/08/23/news/migranti_emergenza_alta_val_di_susa-13007663
      #Val_Suse #Suisse #Côme #Chiasso #Tessin

    • "Combien de temps on va tenir ?" : les Terrasses de Briançon dépassées par l’afflux inédit de migrants venant d’Italie

      Pour la première fois depuis son ouverture en 2021, les Terrasses solidaires, lieu associatif de Briançon à la frontière franco-italienne, a accueilli plus de 300 migrants pendant deux jours. « On navigue à vue », raconte un administrateur du lieu, d’une capacité d’accueil maximum de 81 places.

      La situation aux Terrasses solidaires de Briançon empire. Les 13 et 14 août, le lieu associatif a accueilli plus de 300 personnes. « Une première », indique Jean Gaboriau, l’un des administrateurs du lieu, à InfoMigrants. Et depuis, l’accueil ne faiblit que légèrement. Ce mercredi, 220 personnes étaient admises, là où il n’y a qu’environ 80 places.

      D’ordinaire, les associatifs et citoyens solidaires voient plutôt arriver « entre 5 et 30 personnes par jour » à Briançon, décrit Luc Marchello, responsable de la sécurité des Terrasses Solidaires. Mais le week-end dernier par exemple, une centaine d’exilés, pour la quasi-totalité originaire d’Afrique subsaharienne, sont arrivés en une nuit.

      Des matelas sont posés à même le sol où c’est possible, des tentes sont installées sur les terrasses extérieures… « On n’a pas le choix, on pousse les murs », raconte Jean Gaboriau. Et d’ajouter : « Le réfectoire est devenu un dortoir. Les gens dorment par terre ». À l’étage, normalement condamné, un petit espace a été aménagé afin d’accueillir le plus calmement possible les populations vulnérables comme les femmes enceintes ou les enfants.
      Appel à l’aide de l’État

      Ici, le va-et-vient est quotidien. Chaque jour, de nouveaux exilés viennent remplacer ceux qui partent. « Depuis le mois de mai, la situation est très compliquée. On tourne à minimum 150 personnes (soit plus de deux fois la capacité d’accueil, ndlr) », raconte l’administrateur.

      Et les nouveaux arrivants, la plupart du temps, arrivent fortement impactés par la traversée des Alpes entre l’Italie et la France, qui se fait aujourd’hui en grande partie par le Col de Montgenèvre. « Cela varie, mais beaucoup arrivent blessés aux chevilles, genoux… Ou sont en état de déshydratation, complète Jean Gaboriau. Il y a aussi beaucoup de femmes enceintes, dont certaines sont très, très proches du terme. »

      Ce passage peut aussi engendré la mort. Le corps d’un exilé y a été retrouvé le 7 août dernier. Selon des informations d’Infomigrants, il s’agit d’un Guinéen âgé de 19 ans. Une enquête est toujours en cours et l’autopsie n’a pas permis de découvrir les causes de la mort mais elles sont « non suspectes et certainement pas d’origine traumatiques », selon le procureur de la République de Gap, Florent Crouhy.

      Ainsi, les bénévoles du lieu en appellent à l’État et regrettent, dans un communiqué publié mardi, qu’"aucune réponse n’a jamais été apportée par l’État aux situations de crise rencontrées dans ce lieu d’hébergement". Après plusieurs courriers envoyés à la préfecture des Hautes-Alpes, des signalements effectués aux pompiers, ils demandent aux autorités « l’ouverture d’un dialogue » ainsi que « la création d’un centre d’hébergement d’urgence mobile ». « La seule réponse que l’on a obtenue de la préfecture, c’était le 31 juillet, et c’était une lettre qui rappelait la loi et l’interdiction d’aider des personnes en situation irrégulière à rentrer en France », se désole Jean Gaboriau.

      Contactée par Infomigrants, la préfecture indique que « les difficultés de l’association gestionnaires des Terrasses Solidaires ont bien été entendues par la Préfecture, qui leur a répondu ». Mais « cette situation n’a pas vocation à durer ». Et d’ajouter : « La seule solution efficace aux difficultés rencontrées par les associations et, plus largement, les territoires impactées par ce triste phénomène, est le renforcement progressif du dispositif de lutte contre l’immigration illégale. »
      "On navigue à vue"

      Et la situation ne va pas aller en s’arrangeant, s’inquiètent les bénévoles, « au vu de l’importance du nombre de personnes qui arrivent en Italie depuis le début de l’année ». L’Italie enregistre en effet un record d’arrivées par la mer avec 101 386 migrants débarqués depuis le début de l’année, selon les données du ministère de l’Intérieur, contre 48 940 pour la même période de 2022. Et les exilés sont nombreux à prendre la route de la France pour y demander l’asile ou se rendre vers d’autres pays d’Europe.

      La hausse des prix des transports en commun « aggrave aussi la situation », estime Jean Gaboriau car les prix des TGV vers les grandes métropoles françaises descendent rarement sous la barre des 100 euros, surtout en cette période de vacances scolaires. « Donc forcément, les gens restent plus longtemps et attendent que les prix baissent », ajoute-t-il.

      Jusqu’à présent, les Terrasses solidaires s’adaptent en augmentant les stocks de nourriture et grâce aux dons qui se multiplient. « Combien de temps va-t-on tenir ? » s’interroge l’administrateur. « On navigue à vue », admet-il. Et les bénévoles, eux aussi, sont exténués. « Moi, je me suis mis au vert quelques jours pour revenir efficace mais pour ceux qui viennent de loin et qui restent plusieurs semaines, il faut aussi les préserver », raconte-t-il, précisant qu’une « responsable des bénévoles » veille à la situation.

      https://www.infomigrants.net/fr/post/51145/combien-de-temps-on-va-tenir--les-terrasses-de-briancon-depassees-par-

      signalé aussi ici par @cy_altern :
      https://seenthis.net/messages/1013811

  • #Search-and-rescue in the Central Mediterranean Route does not induce migration : Predictive modeling to answer causal queries in migration research

    State- and private-led search-and-rescue are hypothesized to foster irregular migration (and thereby migrant fatalities) by altering the decision calculus associated with the journey. We here investigate this ‘pull factor’ claim by focusing on the Central Mediterranean route, the most frequented and deadly irregular migration route towards Europe during the past decade. Based on three intervention periods—(1) state-led Mare Nostrum, (2) private-led search-and-rescue, and (3) coordinated pushbacks by the Libyan Coast Guard—which correspond to substantial changes in laws, policies, and practices of search-and-rescue in the Mediterranean, we are able to test the ‘pull factor’ claim by employing an innovative machine learning method in combination with causal inference. We employ a Bayesian structural time-series model to estimate the effects of these three intervention periods on the migration flow as measured by crossing attempts (i.e., time-series aggregate counts of arrivals, pushbacks, and deaths), adjusting for various known drivers of irregular migration. We combine multiple sources of traditional and non-traditional data to build a synthetic, predicted counterfactual flow. Results show that our predictive modeling approach accurately captures the behavior of the target time-series during the various pre-intervention periods of interest. A comparison of the observed and predicted counterfactual time-series in the post-intervention periods suggest that pushback policies did affect the migration flow, but that the search-and-rescue periods did not yield a discernible difference between the observed and the predicted counterfactual number of crossing attempts. Hence we do not find support for search-and-rescue as a driver of irregular migration. In general, this modeling approach lends itself to forecasting migration flows with the goal of answering causal queries in migration research.

    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-38119-4

    #appel_d'air #migrations #réfugiés #frontières #sauvetage #pull-factor #facteur_pull #chiffres #statistiques #rhétorique #afflux #invasion #sauvetage_en_mer #démonstration #déconstruction #fact-checking

    –—

    ajouté à la métaliste qui réunit des fils de discussion pour démanteler la rhétorique de l’#appel_d'air en lien avec les #sauvetages en #Méditerranée :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/1012135

    • Sur les #données et le #code qui ont servi à l’étude :

      We document the various data sources used in Table S1 in Supplementary Materials. Though most data sources
      are publicly available—with the exception of the Sabre data on air traffic, we are unable to upload our data set
      to a repository due to data-usage requirements and proprietary restrictions. The data that support the findings
      of this study are available from various sources documented in Table S1 in Supplementary Materials but restrictions
      apply to the availability of these data, which were used under license for the current study, and so are not
      publicly available. Data are however available from the authors upon reasonable request and with permission of
      the various third party owners of the data. The code to construct the data set and perform the various statistical
      analyses is available at https://github.com/xlejx-rodsxn/sar_migration

      https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-38119-4.pdf

    • Migranti, il pull factor non esiste. La prova del nove in uno studio scientifico

      Attraverso l’uso di tecniche statistiche avanzatissime e del machine learning quattro ricercatori hanno incrociato migliaia di dati relativi al decennio 2011-2020 dimostrando che le attività di ricerca e soccorso, istituzionali o delle Ong, non fanno aumentare le partenze dai paesi nordafricani. Come sostenuto per anni dalle destre e non solo.

      Le attività di ricerca e soccorso nel Mediterraneo centrale non costituiscono un fattore di attrazione per i migranti, cioè non li spingono a partire. Lo dimostra uno studio pubblicato sulla rivista Scientific Reports, dello stesso gruppo editoriale di Nature sebbene non si tratti della più nota e importante collega. Per la prima volta allo scopo di verificare l’esistenza di questo presunto pull factor sono state utilizzate tecniche statistiche particolarmente avanzate e sistemi di machine learning capaci di far interagire molte banche dati.

      I ricercatori Alejandra Rodríguez Sánchez, Julian Wucherpfennig, Ramona Rischke e Stefano Maria Iacus hanno raccolto informazioni sul decennio 2011-2020 provenienti da diversi ambiti – tassi di cambio, prezzi internazionali delle merci, livelli di disoccupazione, conflitti, condizioni climatiche – e le hanno usate per identificare i fattori che meglio prevedono le variazioni numeriche delle partenze da Tunisia e Libia. La loro attenzione si è concentrata su tre fasi che riflettono cambiamenti sostanziali di natura politica, legale e operativa del fenomeno analizzato: la vasta operazione di salvataggio messa in campo dall’Italia tra il 18 ottobre 2013 e il 31 ottobre dell’anno seguente, cioè Mare Nostrum; l’arrivo delle navi umanitarie delle Ong, a partire dal 26 agosto 2014; l’istituzione della zona Sar (search and rescue) libica e la collaborazione tra Tripoli e Unione Europea, dal 2017, in funzione anti-migranti.

      «Abbiamo comparato il fenomeno delle partenze prima e dopo l’inizio delle attività di ricerca e soccorso, il nostro modello predittivo dice che sarebbe andata allo stesso modo anche se le seconde non fossero intervenute», spiega Rodríguez Sánchez. Il modello è di tipo contro-fattuale: mostra cosa sarebbe successo modificando un certo fattore. In questo caso le operazioni Sar, che dunque non fanno aumentare le traversate.

      La forza del metodo statistico usato è di permettere di investigare non soltanto il terreno della correlazione tra due fenomeni, ma anche quello della presunta causalità di uno rispetto all’altro. La conclusione è che le navi di soccorso non sono il motivo delle traversate, o anche solo del loro aumento, ma esattamente l’opposto: costituiscono una risposta a esse. Sono altri i fattori che spingono le persone a migrare e rischiare la vita nel Mediterraneo, sono estremamente variegati e complessi, riguardano la povertà, la disoccupazione, le persecuzioni politiche, gli effetti del cambiamento climatico.

      Lo studio ha poi rilevato un altro elemento: la cooperazione Libia-Ue ha effettivamente ridotto le traversate, che dal 2017 sono state meno di quelle che si sarebbero dovute verificare secondo il modello predittivo. I ricercatori però avvertono che questo ha avuto un altissimo costo umano e che, in ogni caso, le politiche di esternalizzazione «non incidono sui fattori strutturali che influenzano un certo flusso e potrebbero forzare i potenziali migranti a seguire rotte ancora più pericolose». Se anche producono dei risultati in termini di deterrenza, insomma, ciò avviene esclusivamente a stretto giro, spostando il problema solo un po’ più in là.

      «Questa importante ricerca mostra a livello strutturale che le politiche di salvataggio, anche le più grandi e organizzate, non sembrano far aumentare le traversate. Noi stiamo indagando l’effetto puntuale: cioè se la presenza di singole navi Ong davanti alle coste libiche incida sulle persone che partono», commenta Matteo Villa, ricercatore dell’Istituto per gli studi di politica internazionale (Ispi). Villa nel 2019 ha pubblicato il primo studio scientifico che smentiva la tesi delle navi Ong come fattore di attrazione. Tra qualche mese uscirà un aggiornamento con una base dati molto più ampia. «Conferma quanto avevamo osservato quattro anni fa – anticipa Villa al manifesto – L’unica correlazione che abbiamo trovato riguarda i mesi più freddi: tra dicembre, gennaio e febbraio ci sono più partenze se le Ong sono in missione. Ma parliamo di numeri irrilevanti: lo scorso anno 300 persone sulle 50mila arrivate dalla Libia».

      La tesi del pull factor è nata nel 2014 quando l’allora direttore di Frontex, l’agenzia europea per il controllo delle frontiere esterne, Gil Arias-Fernández iniziò a sostenere pubblicamente che le navi di Mare Nostrum stavano facendo aumentare i flussi dal Nord Africa. In una Risk Analysis della stessa agenzia relativa al 2016 l’accusa è stata spostata sulle Ong, intervenute nel frattempo a colmare il vuoto lasciato dalla chiusura dell’operazione italiana. Da allora questa teoria è stata un cavallo di battaglia delle destre ed è tornata in voga dopo l’insediamento del governo Meloni. Lo scorso autunno il ministro dell’Interno Matteo Piantedosi e quello degli Esteri Antonio Tajani, tra gli altri, hanno più volte citato un misterioso rapporto di Frontex che avrebbe ribadito lo stesso assunto per il 2021.

      Di quel rapporto non si è mai saputo nulla, ma ora abbiamo uno studio scientifico che smentisce il pull factor per l’ennesima volta. Intanto questa retorica ha influenzato le scelte dell’attuale esecutivo e anni di politiche migratorie basate sulla criminalizzazione delle Ong e sul disimpegno istituzionale dalla ricerca e dal soccorso davanti alle coste libiche. C’è da sperare che nuove ricercje facciano luce su quante vittime hanno causato simili norme e prassi, slegate da qualsiasi rapporto con la realtà e basate soltanto sulla propaganda.

      https://ilmanifesto.it/il-pull-factor-non-esiste-la-prova-del-nove-in-uno-studio-scientifico

      #propagande

    • Sea rescue operations do not promote migration, study finds

      Rescue operations do not incentivise migrants try to cross the Mediterranean, a recent study has found. Instead conflicts, economic hardship, natural and climate disasters, and the weather are reportedly key drivers of migration.

      Irregular migrant departures from the coasts of North Africa to Europe are not encouraged by search and rescue missions in the Central Mediterranean, a recent study has found. Instead, factors such as conflicts, economic hardship, natural disasters, and weather conditions drive migration.
      Rescue operations are not a ’pull factor’

      The study was published in Scientific Reports by an international research group led by Alejanda Rodríguez Sánchez from the University of Potsdam (Germany). The scientists looked at the number of attempts to cross the Central Mediterranean between 2011 and 2020.

      Through various simulations, the researchers tried to identify factors that can best predict changes in the number of sea crossings. The factors that they looked at included the number of search and rescue missions — both by state authorities and NGOs, as well as the currency exchange rates, the cost of international raw materials, unemployment rates, conflicts, violence, the rates of flight travel between Africa, the Middle East and Europe and meteorological conditions.
      Libya: Pushbacks reduced migration, increased human rights violations

      The study also looked at the increased activities of the Libyan coast guard since 2017, intercepting migrant boats and returning migrants to Libya. Researchers found that this had caused a reduction in the number of departure attempts and might have discouraged migration.

      The authors pointed out that, however, this has coincided with the reports of a worsening of human rights for migrants in Libya — particularly in the detention centers where migrants are being held after being stopped at sea.

      The researchers looked at migration on an “aggregate-level” and did not look at “micro-motives of migrants and smugglers”, they pointed out in the study. They recommended that future studies should do an in-depth analysis of the impact of search and rescue missions at sea on the decisions of individual migrants and human traffickers.

      https://www.infomigrants.net/en/post/50875/sea-rescue-operations-do-not-promote-migration-study-finds

  • North Africa a ’testing ground’ for EU surveillance technology

    The EU is outsourcing controversial surveillance technologies to countries in North Africa and the Sahel region with no human rights impact assessments, reports say.

    Controversial surveillance technologies are being outsourced by the European Union to countries in North Africa and the Sahel region with no transparency or regulation, according to two new reports.

    Funding, equipment and training is funnelled to third countries via aid packages, where autocratic governments use the equipment and techniques to surveil the local population.

    Beyond the borders of Europe, the movements of asylum seekers are being policed and eventually used to assess their asylum applications.

    Antonella Napolitano, author of a report for human rights group EuroMed Rights, told Middle East Eye that the implementation of these projects is opaque and lacks proper consideration for the rights of civilians and the protection of their data.

    “There aren’t enough safeguards in those countries. There aren’t data protection laws,” Napolitano said. “I think the paradox here is that border externalisation means furthering instability [in these countries].”

    The complex web of funding projects and the diversity of actors who implement them make the trails of money difficult to track.

    “This enables states to carry out operations with much less transparency, accountability or regulation than would be required of the EU or any EU government,” Napolitano told MEE.

    The deployment of experimental technologies on the border is also largely unregulated.

    While the EU has identified AI regulation as a priority, its Artificial Intelligence Act does not contain any stringent provision for the use of the technologies for border control.

    “It’s creating a two-tiered system,” Napolitano told MEE. “People on the move outside the EU don’t have the same rights by design.”
    Asylum claims

    The surveillance of migrants on the move outside of Europe is also brought to bear back inside Europe.

    A Privacy International report published in May found that five companies were operating GPS tagging of asylum seekers for Britain’s Home Office.

    “It’s been massively expanded in the past couple of years,” Lucie Audibert, legal officer at Privacy International, told MEE.

    Other, less tangible forms of surveillance are also deployed to monitor asylum seekers. “We know, for example, that the Home Office uses social media a lot… to assess the veracity of people’s claims in their immigration applications,” Audibert told MEE.

    According to the reports, surveillance equipment and training is supplied by the EU to third countries under the guise of development aid packages.

    These include the EU Emergency Trust Fund for Africa (EUTF for Africa) and now the Neighbourhood, Development and International Cooperation Instrument.

    The reports cite multiple instances of how these funding instruments served to bolster law enforcement agencies in Algeria, Egypt, Libya and Tunisia, furnishing them with equipment and training that they then used against the local population.

    The EUTF for Africa allocated 15 million euros ($16.5m USD) in funding to these countries to train up a group of “cyber specialists” in online surveillance and data extraction from smart devices.

    A Privacy International investigation into the role of CEPOL, the EU law enforcement training agency, revealed that it had supplied internet surveillance training to members of Algeria’s police force.

    The investigation highlights a potential connection between these tactics, which contravened the EU’s own policies on disinformation, and the wave of online disinformation and censorship driven by pro-regime fake accounts in the aftermath of the 2019 Hirak protests in Algeria.
    A dangerous trend

    For journalist Matthias Monroy, the major development in border surveillance came after the so-called migration crisis of 2015, which fuelled the development of the border surveillance industrial complex.

    Prior to that, Europe’s border agency, Frontex, was wholly dependent on member states to source equipment. But after 2015, the agency could acquire its own.

    “The first thing they did: they published tenders for aircraft, first manned and then unmanned. And both tenders are in the hands of private operators,” Monroy told MEE.

    Frontex’s drones are now manned by the British company Airbus. “The Airbus crew detected the Crotone boat,” Monroy told MEE, referring to a shipwreck off the coast of Crotone, Italy, in February.

    “But everybody said Frontex spotted the boat. No, it was Airbus. It’s very difficult to trace the responsibility, so if this surveillance is given to private operators, who is responsible?”

    Almost 100 people died in the wreck.

    Since 2015, with the expansion of the border surveillance industrial complex, its digitisation and control has been concentrated increasingly in the hands of private actors.

    “I would see this as a trend and I would say it is very dangerous,” Monroy said.

    https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/eu-north-africa-surveillance-technology-testing-ground

    #surveillance #technologie #test #Afrique_du_Nord #Sahel #asile #migrations #réfugiés #frontières #intelligence_artificielle #IA #EU_Emergency_Trust_Fund_for_Africa (#EUTF_for_Africa) #développement #Emergency_Trust_Fund #Algérie #Egypte #Tunisie #Libye #complexe_militaro-industriel #contrôles_frontaliers #Frontex #Airbus #drones #privatisation

    ping @_kg_

    • The (human) cost of Artificial Intelligence and Surveillance technology in migration

      The ethical cost of Artificial Intelligence tools has triggered heated debates in the last few months. From chatbots to image generation software, advocates and detractors have been debating the technological pros and societal cons of the new technology.

      In two new reports, Europe’s Techno-Borders and Artificial Intelligence: The New Frontier of the EU’s Border Externalisation Strategy, EuroMed Rights, Statewatch and independent researcher Antonella Napolitano have investigated the human and financial costs of AI in migration. The reports show how the deployment of AI to manage migration flows actively contribute to the instability of the Middle East and North African region as well as discriminatory border procedures, threatening the right to asylum, the right to leave one’s country, the principle of non-refoulement as well as the rights to privacy and liberty.

      European borders and neighbouring countries have been the stage of decades-long efforts to militarise and securitise the control of migration. Huge sums of public money have been invested to deploy security and defence tools and equipment to curb arrivals towards the EU territory, both via externalisation policies in countries in the Middle East and North Africa and at the EU’s borders themselves. In this strategy of “muscling-up” the borders, technology has played a crucial role.

      EuroMed Rights’ new reports highlight how over the decades, surveillance technology has become a central asset in the EU’s migration policies with serious impacts on fundamental rights and privacy. In Artificial Intelligence: The New Frontier of the EU’s Border Externalisation Strategy we analyse how surveillance technology has been a crucial part of the European policy of externalisation of migration control. When surveillance technologies are deployed with the purpose of anti-smuggling, trafficking or counterterrorism in countries where democracies are fragile or there are authoritarian governments, they can easily end up being used for the repression of civic space and freedom of expression. What is being sold as tools to curb migrant flows, could actually be used to reinforce the security apparatus of repressive governments and fuel instability in the region.

      At the same time, Europe’s Techno-Borders highlights how this security obsession has been applied to the EU’s borders for decades, equipping them with ever-more advanced technologies. This architecture for border surveillance has been continuously expanding in an attempt to detect, deter and repel refugees and migrants. For those who manage to enter, they are biometrically registered and screened against large-scale databases, raising serious concerns on privacy violations, data protection breaches and questions of proportionality.

      Decades of “muscling-up” the EU’s borders keep showing the same thing: military, security, defence tools or technology do not stop migration, they only make it more dangerous and lethal. Nonetheless, the security and surveillance apparatus is only expected to increase: more and more money is being invested to research and develop new tech tools to curb migration, including through Artificial Intelligence.

      In a context that is resistant to public scrutiny and accountability, and where the private military and security sector has a vested interest in expanding the surveillance architecture, it is crucial to keep monitoring and denouncing the use of these technologies, in the struggle for a humane migration policy that puts the right of people on the move at the centre!

      Read our reports here:

      - Artificial Intelligence: the new frontier of the EU’s border externalisation strategy: https://euromedrights.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Euromed_AI-Migration-Report_EN-1.pdf
      - Europe’s Techno-Borders: https://euromedrights.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/EuroMed-Rights_Statewatch_Europe-techno-borders_EN-1.pdf

      https://euromedrights.org/publication/the-human-cost-of-artificial-intelligence-and-surveillance-technology
      #rapport #EuroMed_rights

  • Immigration : après la #Tunisie, l’Union européenne viserait des #partenariats_migratoires avec l’#Egypte et le #Maroc

    L’#Union_européenne souhaite négocier avec l’Égypte et le Maroc des partenariats similaires à celui qu’elle vient de conclure avec la Tunisie, portant sur la lutte contre l’immigration irrégulière.

    L’UE et la Tunisie ont signé ce dimanche 16 juillet à Tunis un protocole d’accord pour un « #partenariat_stratégique », qui concerne aussi le développement économique du pays et les énergies renouvelables.

    Sur le volet migratoire, il prévoit une aide européenne de 105 millions d’euros destinée à empêcher les départs de bateaux de migrants vers l’UE depuis les côtes tunisiennes et lutter contre les passeurs.

    Mais aussi à faciliter les retours dans ce pays de Tunisiens qui sont en situation irrégulière dans l’UE, ainsi que les retours depuis la Tunisie vers leurs pays d’origine de migrants d’Afrique subsaharienne.

    La présidente de la Commission européenne Ursula von der Leyen a dit souhaiter que ce partenariat soit un #modèle pour de futurs #accords avec les pays de la région.

    L’Égypte et le Maroc sont deux pays qui pourraient être concernés, a indiqué un haut responsable européen s’exprimant sous couvert de l’anonymat, soulignant les bénéfices de ce type de partenariat pour les deux rives de la Méditerranée.

    Mais cet accord avec Tunis a aussi suscité des critiques en raison du traitement des migrants d’Afrique sub-saharienne dans ce pays du Maghreb. Des centaines de migrants ont été arrêtés en Tunisie puis « déportés » par la police, selon les ONG, vers des zones inhospitalières aux frontières avec Algérie et Libye.

    https://information.tv5monde.com/afrique/immigration-apres-la-tunisie-lunion-europeenne-viserait-des-pa

    #externalisation #migrations #asile #réfugiés #frontières #partenariat #modèle_tunisien

    –—

    ajouté à la métaliste sur le #memorandum_of_understanding avec la Tunisie :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/1020591

    ping @_kg_

  • Group of 45 people stranded on an islet in the wider #Soufli - #Tychero area (22.07.2023)

    🆘 near #Lagyna, #Evros river, #Greece


    We are in contact with a group of 45 people stranded on an islet in the wider #Soufli - #Tychero area. They report being there 9 days already. @hellenicpolice
    are informed & claim to have searched for them but that they could not find them.

    #limbe #zone_frontalière #île #Evros #asile #migrations #réfugiés #frontières #fleuve_Evros #Turquie #Grèce #Thrace #îlots

    –-

    ajouté à la métaliste sur #métaliste sur des #réfugiés abandonnés sur des #îlots dans la région de l’#Evros, #frontière_terrestre entre la #Grèce et la #Turquie :
    https://seenthis.net/messages/953343

    • Même groupe ?
      (16.07.2023)

      🆘 in the #Evros region! 25 people are stranded on an islet near the town of #Soufli. They reported to be there since 10 days & seem currently under attack by #Greek authorities. Stop the violence & evacuate them from the islet!

      https://twitter.com/alarm_phone/status/1680530020425424900

    • Evros: the brutal face of the European border regime

      A group has been stuck for over three weeks on a small islet of the Evros river. Their story includes countless distress-calls, physical attacks, sexual violence, non-assistance when immediate medical aid was needed, and the complete disregard for a European Court of Human Rights ruling, which granted the group interim measures and ordering the Greek state to provide them with assistance. It is another clear example of the brutal reality that people endure at the land border between Türkiye and Greece.

      On the 21st of July 2023, a group of people reached out to Alarm Phone. The 52 people – among them several children and elderly people with severe health conditions – told us how they were stuck on a small islet near the village of Lagyna on Greek territory in the middle of the Evros river, which borders Greece and Türkiye. When reaching out to Alarm Phone and calling for help, the people informed us they had already been stuck on the islet for eight days. At 14:19 CEST of the same day, Alarm Phone alerted Greek authorities, as well as Frontex, UNHCR and various NGOs via email about the people in distress, sharing their location and their request for immediate and urgent assistance.

      At this point, we did not know that this would be the start of an odyssey lasting over two weeks, with no end in sight, which would include countless emails and calls to authorities, public outcries via social media to mobilise for evacuation, an ignored decision of the European Court of Human rights and ongoing barbaric violence by Greek forces against the group.

      On the day after the alert, Greek authorities informed Alarm Phone about joint efforts, together with Frontex, to search for the group, “[…]we would like to inform you that after extensive searches by the Greek Authorities and Frontex join patrols in the location indicated by the coordinates area and also more widely, no human presence was found”. This would not be the last time that Greek authorities claimed to have been unable to find the group despite conducting “extensive searches” for them.

      Several days later, on July 26th, the people told us how they had heard car noises the previous day on the Greek side of the river, but that they were still waiting for urgently needed assistance. At the same time, their condition worsened with every day: they reported injuries and various health issues, as well, they told us how everyone’s mental health was rapidly deteriorating in light of the ongoing difficulties they were facing. The violent act of leaving people for days being stuck on an islet not only risks physical injuries, but is a mental torment in and of itself that traumatises people. Already by this point, the non-assistance from Greek authorities and Frontex was causing damage to the people calling for help – but the situation would continue to deteriorate over the coming days.

      On July 27th, 08:18 CEST, Greek authorities again claimed to have searched for the people: “[…]we would kindly like to inform you that after extensive searches by the Greek Authorities and Frontex patrol in the location indicated by the coordinates and also more widely, no human presence was found”. This is despite the Evros region being a highly militarized border area, where the EU has invested hundreds of millions of euros into fortifying the border. The technologies deployed in the area include sensors, thermal cameras and drones – but in spite of this, the Greek authorities and Frontex state they are unable to find a group with a clearly indicated location? How embarrassing. While it is clear that their statement is a blatant lie, it is remarkable that Greek authorities and Frontex have reached a point where such obvious untruths have become implicit to their operational activities. To have reached this point, these strategies have to be widely accepted within their ranks and as such demonstrate how the brutal means of deterrence used at the borders of Greece have become normalised, from overt and brutal violence to misinformation and non-assistance. This is particularly true in the Evros region, as demonstrated over the next days in the developments we witnessed for this case.

      A day later, on July 28th, the group told us again about activities on the Greek side of the river: the people had spotted a black car parked “on the Greek side” and a drone that was flying over them. Shortly after, they reported being attacked by police and what they described as “mercenaries”: “Police and mercenaries stormed us. They started to hit the world. And now we’re in the water”. They sent us several videos showing the cruel attack.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A6L5M3Gwiqs&source_ve_path=Mjg2NjY&feature=emb_logo

      We immediately informed the authorities about the attack. It is clear: in this highly militarised and controlled border zone, no such attack could have happened without some level of coordination from the authorities – the very same authorities who had been claiming for days that they could not locate the group. After the attack, the people told us how they were shocked and devastated. However, this attack did not signal the end of their suffering. The group told us that after the attack, they were forced back to the same islet as before by Turkish authorities.

      Together with the Rule39 Initiative, an application for Interim Measures at the European Court of Human Rights was handed in on August 1st. By this point, we had been in contact with the people for 11 days. Throughout this entire period, the authorities had been aware of the group and their calls for assistance. Despite this, the group’s calls for assistance remained ignored. Moreover, instead of receiving help, the people were violently attacked.

      https://twitter.com/alarm_phone/status/1684815225608949760

      During the morning of August 2nd, the response by the European Court of Human Rights arrived: the court had granted the Interim Measures and ordered Greece to provide food, water and medical assistance. We immediately informed authorities, including Frontex and UNHCR about the decision and reiterated the urgent need of assistance for the group.

      https://twitter.com/alarm_phone/status/1686756260085936129

      During the morning of the 3rd of August, Greek authorities sent another email, claiming once again to have searched for, but not found, the people. At the same time, the people shared videos with us showing themselves loudly screaming for help. In desperation, the group decided to cross the river themselves. This is extremely dangerous – every year dozens of people die in the Evros river, which has strong undercurrents that can drown people. Luckily, they managed to cross the river and arrived safely on the Greek riverbank, which they documented with several videos that they sent to Alarm Phone. They reported talking to two people wearing shirts with “police” written on it. This is when an incredibly violent chapter of their journey started.

      https://twitter.com/alarm_phone/status/1687059265427496961

      Following the news that the group were talking with “police”, Alarm Phone shift teams once again called various border guard and police stations, including the ones at Soufli, Alexandroupolis and Thrace. All our calls went unanswered. In the meantime, the people reported they were put into cars and told us that they feared they would be brought back to Türkiye. The position they shared showed them near Soufli:

      We continued to call the authorities, however, they either did not pick up, rejected responsibility – claiming it was outside of their jurisdiction, or refused to give any information.

      https://twitter.com/alarm_phone/status/1687135993235750912

      Shortly after midnight on August 4th, the people reached out to Alarm Phone again. They were pushed back to Türkiye and severely beaten. A woman from the group explained what had happened to them after they were taken in the car:

      She told us how, after half an hour in the car, the young men and even some women were severely beaten. The attackers stripped the women of all their clothes and forced the young men’s eyes open to look the undressed women. They then beat the men badly. The woman said the group was worried that two among the attacked men were beaten to death. The attackers even beat the elderly women and told them to return to their country. The group was, again, forced back onto the islet, and reported that there were now several people missing, among them the two men who had been heavily beaten.

      The people told us how they were left severely shaken and outraged, desperate to know what happened to their friends who went missing who they fear died. They reported that amongst their group are three year old babies who are understandably extremely psychologically distressed and traumatised by the violent assault of the Greek police. “Please please can we help them. Turkey and Greece have left them in the middle. Do we know where the people who went missing are?”.

      https://twitter.com/alarm_phone/status/1687373994909921281

      We want to know: what has happened to the missing? Who is responsible for the brutal attack and the sexual violence? And what was the role of Frontex in this whole story? How can orders of the European Court of Human Rights just be ignored? And why has help been repeated denied for people who are in urgent need of it?

      Not only have the attacks subjected people to overt violence, but the continuous non-assistance has led to many medical emergencies – this includes three elderly people with diabetes in need of medical assistance, an elderly person with circulatory problems in the leg, which were purple on both sides, a pregnant woman who suffered from contractions and was bleeding, and several children who were weak, mentally distressed and badly bitten by mosquitoes. It should also be noted that the group told us how they ran out of food and water days ago and are forced to drink water from the river, which carries with it a risk of poisoning.

      Unfortunately, this is not an isolated incident, but instead sees the recurrence of an all too familiar pattern. The incredible level of violence used – which can only be understood as systematized forms of torture and brutalisation– against people on the move is abhorrent. It is illustrative of the dehumanisation implicit to the racist European migration regime. Furthermore, it demonstrates an obvious dysfunctionality of European institutions, where decisions of the European Court of Human Rights are easily ignored by Greece, without consequence. Instead of being forced to take action, Greek authorities merely responded to both Alarm Phone and the ECHR that the people could not be located. And once again, we see how Frontex is involved in a situation which resulted in a brutal pushback.

      On August 6th, the people were still stuck on the islet. There were also still in very distressed condition – and one that continues to deteriorate. They expressed their shock and disbelief that an ECHR decision obviously does not count in Greece. They themselves have called 112 over 50 times and written emails to Frontex and Greek authorities – but instead of receiving much needed assistance, have been subject to repeated and vicious attacks.

      https://twitter.com/alarm_phone/status/1687425346285494273

      In the early hours of the morning on August 7th, the group reached out to us again to report another attack, telling us that “Mercenaries came upon us while we were asleep [on the islet], and we were sent back to Turkey”. They then told us how they were picked up by the Turkish army, who is forcing them back into Greece. The group was incredibly distressed, commenting that they have “become a football between Greek and Turkish army.” As the situation continues with no end in sight, and the people, who are in dire need of urgent medical assistance, are pushed back and forth across the river by Greek and Turkish forces, we again make it clear, these attacks must end and the people be given the help they so urgently need.

      We, along with the group currently stranded on the islet, are shocked and outraged – even though we witness such crimes and attacks against people on the move almost daily, and with increasing intensity. We will continue to fight against the normalisation of such violence and will never forgive the ones responsible for it. While Greece tries to cover up the mass murder of Pylos, for which the Hellenic Coast Guard is responsible, the real and merciless face of the Greek border regime remains clearly visible in the Evros region, as too does the complicity of the EU.

      https://alarmphone.org/en/2023/08/07/evros-the-brutal-face-of-the-european-border-regime/?post_type_release_type=post