• Beim jüngsten Armutsbericht der Bundesregierung auch von einem Reic...
    https://diasp.eu/p/12803000

    Beim jüngsten Armutsbericht der Bundesregierung auch von einem Reichtumsbericht zu reden, sei verlogen, sagte der Sozialethiker und Wirtschaftswissenschaftler Friedhelm Hengsbach im DLF. Seit der Abschaffung der #Vermögenssteuer gebe es gar keine Daten mehr über Reichtum oberhalb von gewissen Vermögenslagen. https://www.deutschlandfunk.de/armuts-und-reichtumsbericht-mischung-aus-zutreffenden.694.de.html?dr

    • Publications de Friedhelm Hengsbach :
      https://www.perlentaucher.de/autor/friedhelm-hengsbach.html

      –---------------------

      45 Min., 2017 - Conversation sur la #justice_sociale et le rôle des #marchés_financiers #EU / #UE / #Europe et #Dublin_III

      https://www.br.de/fernsehen/ard-alpha/sendungen/alpha-forum/friedhelm-hengsbach-sendung-102.html
      https://cdn-storage.br.de/geo/b7/2017-10/26/b64f6e4aba7f11e7bca2984be109059a_X.mp4

      avec un script de pdf :
      https://www.br.de/fernsehen/ard-alpha/sendungen/alpha-forum/friedhelm-hengsbach-110.html

      [...]

      Es gibt verschiedene Vorstellungen über Gerechtigkeit. Der Dialogpartner von Sokrates, Thrasymachos, sagte: „Was ist schon Gerechtigkeit? Doch nur das, was die Mächtigen für gerecht halten.“ Es wird also seit Urzeiten über Gerechtigkeit und was sie ist gestritten. Es gab Anfang des Jahrtausends eine große Debatte unter den Parteien, in der es hieß, die Deutschen müssten sich verabschieden von den traditionellen Vorstellungen über Gerechtigkeit, Verteilungsgerechtigkeit sei „out“, ebenso Bedarfsgerechtigkeit. Stattdessen müssten wir in einer Leistungsgesellschaft darauf Wert legen, dass Leistung sich wieder lohnt. Das bedeutet, Gerechtigkeit wird als Leistungsgerechtigkeit definiert und am besten als Marktgerechtigkeit. Das ist meiner Meinung nach selbstverständlich eine Verkümmerung dessen, was Gerechtigkeit sein
      soll. Denn man kann ja auch fragen, ob Gerechtigkeit nicht etwas zu tun hat mit der Anerkennung eines jeden Menschen als Person. Und dann könnte man sagen, Gerechtigkeit hat in erster Linie etwas mit Gleichheit zu tun. Das heißt, in einer demokratischen Gesellschaft oder in einer egalitären Gesellschaft – das ist vielleicht ein Zirkelschluss – gestehen sich die Mitglieder wechselseitig zu, das gleiche Recht zu haben und als gleiche Personen anerkannt zu werden. Das ist etwa der Kantische Imperativ: Der andere Mensch darf nie nur als Instrument zum eigenen Vorteil benutzt werden, sondern er muss immer auch als Zweck in sich selbst wahrgenommen werden. Das wäre eine Form der Gerechtigkeit, denn man könnte das sehr wohl noch verschärfen. Gerechtigkeit in einer ungleichen Gesellschaft, also in einer Gesellschaft, die von sehr ungleichen Machtverhältnissen bestimmt ist, müsste eigentlich definiert werden als das Recht auf Rechtfertigung. Und wer hat dieses Recht? Nicht die, die die gesellschaftlichen Verhältnisse verursacht haben, also die Mächtigen, sondern diejenigen, die davon betroffen sind.

      [...]

      à min.11 : « Was ist los mit Dir, Europa ? » / Qu’est-ce qu’il va pas avec toi, Europe ?
      https://www.westendverlag.de/buch/was-ist-los-mit-dir-europa

      [...]

      Ich denke, die Krise in Griechenland und auch in anderen, von der Finanzkrise in besonderem Maße betroffenen Staaten ist nicht in erster Linie individualistisch zu deuten. Das, was da mit diesen Legenden betrieben wird, ist gleichsam ein individualistischer Fehlschluss, wenn es heißt, dieses oder jenes Land hätte schlecht gewirtschaftet. Der Europäische Rat hat einmal festgestellt, dass die Finanzkrise und die Verschuldungskrise dieser Peripheriestaaten nicht in erster Linie diesen Staaten zuzurechnen sind, sondern dass diese Krisen systemisch bedingt sind. Ich denke auch: Die Banken haben die Krise verursacht und haben dann nach dem Staat gerufen, der sie retten sollte. Der Staat hat sie gerettet und sich dabei selbst hoch verschuldet. Und hinterher sagen die Banken, der Staat müsse seine Verschuldung abbauen, und zwar schnell, indem er die Sozialleistungen kürzt und die schwächeren Staaten sanktioniert. Das hat man getan, aber ich denke, dass das der falsche Weg ist. Es muss in erster Linie dafür gesorgt werden, dass die Arbeitslosigkeit der Jugendlichen beseitigt wird und nicht in erster Linie, dass die Gläubiger-Schuldner-Verhältnisse neu geregelt werden. Das sieht selbst Herr Schäuble ein: dass irgendwas geschehen muss mit Griechenland, dass die Gläubiger beteiligt werden müssen am Überwinden der Krise, die einzelne Länder in besonderer Weise betrifft.

      [...]

  • Trapped in Dublin

    ECRE’s study (https://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/STUD/2020/842813/EPRS_STU(2020)842813_EN.pdf) on the implementation of the Dublin Regulation III, has just been published by the Europpean Parliament Research Service which commissioned it.

    Drawing largely on statistics from the Asylum Information Database (AIDA) database, managed by ECRE and fed by national experts from across Europe, and on ongoing Dublin-related litigation, the study uses the European Commission’s own Better Regulation toolbox. The Better Regulation framework is designed to evaluate any piece of Regulation against the criteria of effectiveness, efficiency, relevance, coherence and EU added value.

    There are no surprises:

    Assessing the data shows that Dublin III is not effective legislation as it does not meet its own objectives of allowing rapid access to the procedure and ending multiple applications. The hierarchy of criteria it lays down is not fully respected. It appears inefficient – financial costs are significant and probably disproportionate. Notable are the large investments in transfers that do not happen and the inefficient sending of different people in different directions. The human costs of the system are considerable – people left in limbo, people forcibly transferred, the use of detention. The relevance and EU added value of the Regulation in its current form should be questioned. The coherence of the Dublin Regulation is weak in three ways: internal coherence is lacking due to the differing interpretations of key articles across the Member States+; coherence with the rest of the asylum acquis is not perfect; and coherence with fundamental rights is weak due to flaws in drafting and implementation.

    So far, so already well known.

    None of this is news: everybody knows that Dublin is flawed. Indeed, in this week’s hearing at the European Parliament, speaker after speaker stood up to condemn Dublin, including all the Member States present. Even the Member States that drove the Dublin system and whose interests it is supposed to serve (loosely known as the northern Member States), now condemn it openly: it is important to hear Germany argue in a public event that the responsibility sharing rules are unfair and that both trust among states and compliance across the Common European Asylum System is not possible without a fundamental reform of Dublin.

    More disturbing is the view from the persons subject to Dublin, with Shaza Alrihawi from the Global Refugee-led Network describing the depression and despair resulting from being left in limbo while EU countries use Dublin to divest themselves of responsibility. One of the main objectives of Dublin is to give rapid access to an asylum procedure but here was yet another case of someone ready to contribute and to move on with their life who was delayed by Dublin. It is no surprise that “to Dublin” has become a verb in many European languages – “dubliner” or “dublinare”, and a noun: “I Dublinati” – in all cases with a strong negative connotation, reflecting the fear that people understandably have of being “dublinated”.

    With this picture indicating an unsatisfactory situation, what happens now?

    Probably not much. While there is agreement that Dublin III is flawed there is profound disagreement on what should replace it. But the perpetual debate on alternatives to Dublin needs to continue. Dysfunctional legislation which fails the Commission’s own Better Regulation assessment on every score cannot be allowed to sit and fester.

    All jurisdictions have redundant and dysfunctional legislation on their statute books; within the EU legal order, Dublin III is not the only example. Nonetheless, the damage it does is profound so it requires attention. ECRE’s study concludes that the problems exist at the levels of design and implementation. As well as the unfair underlying principles, the design leaves too much room for policy choices on implementation – precisely the problem that regulations as legal instruments are supposed to avoid. Member States’ policy choices on implementation are currently (and perhaps forever) shaped by efforts to minimise responsibility. This means that a focus on implementation alone is not the answer; changes should cover design and implementation.

    The starting point for reform has to be a fundamental overhaul, tackling the responsibility allocation principles. While the original Dublin IV proposal did not do this, there are multiple alternatives, including the European Parliament’s response to Dublin IV and the Commission’s own alternatives developed but not launched in 2016 and before.

    Of course, Dublin IV also had the other flaws, including introducing inadmissibility procedures pre-Dublin and reduction of standards in other ways. Moving forward now means it is necessary to de-link procedural changes and the responsibility-sharing piece.

    Unfortunately, the negotiations, especially between the Member States, are currently stuck in a cul-de-sac that focuses on exactly this kind of unwelcome deal. The discussion can be over-simplified as follows: “WE will offer you some ‘solidarity’ – possibly even a reform of Dublin – but only if, in exchange, YOU agree to manage mandatory or expanded border procedures of some description”. These might be expanded use of current optional asylum procedures at the border; it might be other types of rapid procedures or processes to make decisions about people arriving at or transferred to borders. In any case, the effect on the access to asylum and people’s rights will be highly detrimental, as ECRE has described at length. But they also won’t be acceptable to the “you” in this scenario, the Member States at the external borders.

    There is no logical or legal reason to link the procedural piece and responsibility allocation so closely. And why link responsibility allocation and procedures and not responsibility allocation and reception, for instance? Or responsibility allocation and national/EU resources? This derives from the intrusion of a different agenda: the disproportionate focus on onward movement, also known as (the) “secondary” movement (obsession).

    If responsibility allocation is unfair, then it should be reformed in and of itself, not in exchange for something. The cry will then go out that it is not fair because the MS perceived to “benefit” from the reform will get something for nothing. Well no: any reform could – and should – be accompanied with strict insistence on compliance with the rest of the asylum acquis. The well-documented implementation gaps at the levels of reception, registration, decision-making and procedural guarantees should be priority.

    Recent remarks by Commissioner Schinas (https://euobserver.com/migration/147511) present nothing new and among many uncertainties concerning the fate of the 2016 reforms is whether or not a “package approach” will be maintained by either or both the co-legislators – and whether indeed that is desirable. One bad scenario is that everything is reformed except Dublin. There are provisional inter-institutional agreements on five files, with the Commission suggesting that they move forward. ECRE’s view is that the changes contained in the agreements on these files would reduce protection standards and not add value; other assessments are that protection standards have been improved. Either way, there are strong voices in both the EP and among the MS who don’t want to go ahead without an agreement on Dublin. Which is not wrong – allocation of responsibility is essential in a partially harmonised system: with common legal provisions but without centralised decision-making, responsibility allocation is the gateway to access rights and obligations flowing from the other pieces of legislation. Thus, to pass other reforms without tackling Dublin seems rather pointless.

    While certainly not the best option, the best bet (if one had to place money on something) would be that nothing changes for the core legislation of the CEAS. For that reason, ECRE’s study also lists extensive recommendations for rights-based compliance with Dublin III.

    For example, effectiveness would be improved through better respect for the hierarchy of responsibility criteria, the letter of the law: prioritise family unity through policy choices, better practice on evidential standards, and greater use of Articles 16 and 17. Minimise the focus on transfers based on take-back requests, especially when they are doomed to fail. To know from the start that a transfer is doomed to fail yet to persist with it is an example of a particularly inhumane political dysfunction. Effectiveness also requires better reporting to deal with the multiple information gaps identified, and clarity on key provisions, including through guidance from the Commission.

    Solidarity among Member States could be fostered through use of Article 33 in challenging situations, which allows for preventive actions by the Commission and by Member States, and along with the Temporary Protection Directive, provides better options than some of the new contingency plans under discussion. The use of Article 17, 1 and 2, provides a legal basis for the temporary responsibility-sharing mechanisms which are needed in the absence of deeper reform.

    In perhaps the most crucial area, fundamental rights compliance could be significantly improved: avoid coercive transfers; implement CJEU and ECtHR jurisprudence on reasons for suspension of transfers – there is no need to show systemic deficiencies (CK, Jawo); make a policy decision to suspend transfers to the EU countries where conditions are not adequate and human rights violations are commonplace, rather than waiting for the courts to block the transfer. Resources and political attention could focus on the rights currently neglected: the right to family life, the best interests of the child, right to information, alternatives to detention. Evaluating implementation should be done against the Charter of Fundamental Rights and should always include the people directly affected.

    Even with flawed legislation, there are decisions on policy and resource allocation to be made that could make for better compliance and, in this case, compliance in a way that generates less suffering.

    https://www.ecre.org/weekly-editorial-trapped-in-dublin

    #asile #migrations #réfugiés #Dublin #Dublin_III #Better_Regulation #efficacité #demandes_multiples (le fameux #shopping_de_l'asile) #accélération_des_procédures #coût #transferts_Dublin #renvois_Dublin #coûts_humains #rétention #limbe #détention_administrative #renvois_forcés #cohérence #droits_humains #dépression #désespoir #santé_mentale #responsabilité #Dublin_IV #procédure_d'asile #frontières #frontière #mouvements_secondaires #unité_familiale #inhumanité #solidarité #Temporary_Protection_Directive #protection_temporaire #droits #intérêt_supérieur_de_l'enfant

    –—

    Commentaire de Aldo Brina à qui je fais aveuglement confiance :

    Les éditos de #Catherine_Woollard, secrétaire générale de l’#ECRE, sont souvent bons… mais celui-ci, qui porte sur Dublin, gagne à être lu et largement diffusé

    ping @karine4 @isskein

    • #Résolution du Parlement européen du 17 décembre 2020 sur la mise en œuvre du règlement #Dublin_III (2019/2206(INI))

      Extrait :

      Les procédures de transfert ont fortement augmenté en 2016-2017 et génèrent des coûts humains, matériels et financiers considérables ; déplore toutefois que les transferts n’aient été effectués que dans 11 % des cas, ce qui aggrave encore la surcharge souvent importante des régimes d’asile et confirme le manque d’efficacité du règlement ; juge essentiels les efforts visant à garantir l’accès à l’information et des procédures rapides pour le regroupement familial et les transferts de demandeurs d’asile

      https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2020-0361_FR.html

      #statistiques #chiffres

  • Il Regolamento “Dublino III” (UE n. 604/2013)

    Il Regolamento “Dublino III” si applica alle domande di asilo presentate dal 1° gennaio 2014 e le sue principali novità sono:
    – la modifica di definizione familiare;
    – la previsione dell’effetto sospensivo del ricorso giurisdizionale presentato avverso la decisione che individua lo Stato competente all’esame della domanda;
    – la previsione di termini per la conclusione della procedura di ripresa in carico;
    – la previsione del trattenimento del richiedente in caso di pericolo di fuga;
    – lo scambio di informazioni sanitarie a tutela del richiedente.

    http://viedifuga.org/regolamento-dublino-iii-ue-n-6042013

    #Dublin_III #asile #migrations #UE #Europe #réfugiés #Règlement_Dublin

  • Une véritable solidarité avec les victimes de la barbarie n’est toujours pas d’actualité
    http://www.bastamag.net/L-Europe-sera-t-elle-solidaire-pour-accueillir-les-refugies

    Quand un réfugié débarque en #Europe, après avoir affronté mille dangers, il doit faire sa demande d’asile dans le pays où il arrive. C’est le règlement dit de « Dublin III » qui le stipule. Résultat : les demandeurs sont concentrés dans les États servant de frontière extérieure à l’Union européenne et à son espace Schengen : Espagne, Grèce, Italie, Hongrie... Un rien débordés, les dits pays demandent régulièrement la révision de « Dublin III ». La très conservatrice Hongrie a même annoncé en début de semaine (...)

    En bref

    / #Migrations, #Solidarités_internationales, Europe

  • #Dublin_III Regulation on asylum and unaccompanied minors

    Unaccompanied minors are “third-country nationals or stateless persons below the age of 18, who arrive on the territory of the Member States unaccompanied by an adult responsible for them whether by law or custom, and for as long as they are not effectively taken into the care of such a person […][i]. In the last years Europe has been facing massive flows of this particular category of migrants; in the whole 2014, on the basis of data provided to Eurostat[ii] by the Ministries of Interior and official agencies, a total of 16,265 unaccompanied children has been registered as asylum applicants in the countries applying the EU Regulation No 604/2013[iii] – the 28 EU Member States, as well as the four third-countries participating in Schengen (Iceland, Norway, Switzerland and Denmark). These figures, however, could be not representative of the real situation because many of unaccompanied minors “do not register with the authorities either because they are unable or afraid to do so or because they have been advised by family members, peers or smugglers to keep on the move to another destination”[iv]. Furthermore, “others are not able to contact the authorities because they are being controlled by their traffickers and are destined for sexual, labour or other exploitation in Europe”[v].

    http://free-group.eu/2015/04/09/dublin-iii-regulation-on-asylum-and-unaccompanied-minors
    #MNAs #mineurs_non_accompagnés #asile #migration #réfugiés

  • Dublin Guide. Il Regolamento Dublino III articolo per articolo.
    –-> Guide Dublin. Le règlement Dublin III article par article (en italien)

    Il 29 giugno scorso sono stati pubblicati sulla Gazzetta Ufficiale dell’Unione Europea gli atti legislativi mancanti per completare la “revisione” di tutte le principali norme del Sistema europeo comune di asilo.

    In particolare, sono stati pubblicati:

    – il nuovo Regolamento Dublino, c.d. Regolamento Dublino III (Regolamento UE n° 604/2013)
    – il nuovo Regolamento Eurodac (Regolamento UE n° 603/2013)
    – la nuova Direttiva Accoglienza (Direttiva 2013/33/UE)
    – la nuova Direttiva Procedure (Direttiva 2013/32/UE)

    http://asiloineuropa.blogspot.it/2013/07/dublin-guide-il-regolamento-dublino-iii.html

    #Dublin #Dublin_III #asile #réfugiés #Eurodac #règlement