How Not to Welcome Refugees,
With its new immigration law, Denmark is once again sending
a blunt message to migrants. 1/27/16
On
Tuesday, the Danish parliament overwhelmingly passed a bill seemingly designed to solidify Denmark’s
reputation as Western Europe’s least attractive country for refugees—a
hard-earned title at a time when many of its neighbors are tightening border
controls as people continue to flee conflicts in the Middle East, North Africa,
and elsewhere. The law empowers Danish authorities to seize any assets
exceeding $1,450 from asylum-seekers in order to help pay for the migrants’
subsistence in the country (items of “sentimental value,” such as wedding
rings, are exempt). It also extends, from one year to three, the period that
those who are resettled must wait to apply for family members to join them in
Denmark.
While
Denmark has not traditionally been a magnet for immigration, it hasn’t
necessarily been an unwelcome place for migrants either. Over the course of the
20th century, the country of nearly 6 million became home to refugees and immigrants from the Soviet bloc, the Balkans, the
Middle East, and beyond. Today, immigrants and their descendants account for 10
percent of
the total population. Denmark has also been a prominent advocate for refugees
and asylum-seekers. It was one of the first countries to become a party to the 1951 UN Refugee
Convention, and the Danish Refugee Council—a
humanitarian group partly funded by the Danish government and the Danish
public—is actively involved in supporting refugees and internally displaced
peoples around the world.
But
the past year brought something different. In 2015, 21,000 people sought asylum in Denmark—up from 14,815 asylum applications in 2014 and 7,557 in 2013. (Denmark
happens to be sandwiched between the two most popular European destinations for
today’s migrants and refugees: Germany and Sweden.) These are numbers that the
Danish welfare state—which guarantees free health care and education, among
other benefits, to every citizen—is struggling to handle.
Danish
officials have responded with a series of steps, many rather dramatic, that appear to be aimed at dissuading migrants from coming to
Denmark in the first place. In August, the government cut social benefits to refugees and immigrants by 45
percent, in a move marketed as an “integration benefit.” To ensure the message was clearly
received, the Danish government proceeded to advertise the benefit cut, as well as other government policies
that asylum-seekers might find unappealing, in newspapers in Lebanon, which has
a large refugee population. More recently, the government proposed moving refugees from urban housing to camps outside
cities, an initiative that would “shift the focus of government immigration
policy to repatriation rather than integration,” according to Reuters. A Danish
city council mandated the placement of pork on municipal menus (observant Muslims
don’t eat pork), including at schools and daycare centers, while a Danish court fined a Danish man for driving five migrants through
Denmark, from Germany to Sweden.
Why
has the Danish government resorted to these rather passive-aggressive tactics,
instead of simply sealing off its borders or issuing some blanket ban on
granting asylum? As a member of the European Union and signatory to multiple UN
conventions on the subject, Denmark has “to offer ... an opportunity to
somebody who is coming to their borders ... to be heard. If they make an asylum
claim, the state has no choice but to adjudicate that claim,” explained
Demetrios Papademetriou, the president of the Migration Policy Institute’s
Europe center. “The issue is whether you’re offering them permanent protection
… with all the benefits … or whether you’re offering them temporary protection.
And then, whether you’re trying to sort of make it difficult and send messages
back to would-be newcomers that this is not really a friendly place for you to
come.” (According to a UNHCR report, the legislation Denmark passed this
week may still violate various UN conventions and EU law.)
“This
will open doors in other countries, perhaps not to go exactly where the Danes
are going, but to go half of the way.”
These
moves bear the imprint, in part, of the right-wing, populist, anti-immigrantDanish People’s Party (DPP), which has been Denmark’s
second-largest party since last year’s general election. While the DPP isn’t a formal member of
the ruling government, its support is essential for keeping the minority
Liberal Party in power. But Papademetriou told me that stringent immigration
policies and demands for newcomers to assimilate predate the DPP’s rise, and have
been present in Denmark for more than a decade. And these policies have considerable public support. One
recent poll showed that 37 percent of voters opposed offering more residence permits
to migrants—an increase of 17 percentage points since September. Another poll
indicated that 70 percent of voters felt the refugee crisis constituted the
most important issue on the political agenda.
Papademetriou
distilled the general Danish attitude as such: “I want to protect the fact that
my country, a small country, is an extremely wealthy country; that it provides
these exceptional benefits to its people; and I don’t want to compromise my
ability to receive those benefits simply because more and more people want to
come in.”
But
the people need to go somewhere. One upshot of the Danish government’s recent
actions is that they could encourage other European governments to adopt
similarly restrictive measures. Some refugees in Switzerland have had to hand over assets valued at
over 1,000 Swiss francs, and Germany’s southern states have similar laws on the books. Papademetriou believes
“this will open doors in other countries … it gives them additional license,
perhaps not to go exactly where the Danes are going, but to go half of the way,
or three-quarters of the way towards it.” Leaders
in countries such as Austria, Germany, and Sweden, who are bearing the brunt of
the refugee crisis, may note that Denmark executed its plan despite the
critics, and that the critics then moved on.
Denmark,
Papademetriou suggested, may not only be sending signals to would-be asylum-seekers:
Its policies could convey a “message that gradually will spread throughout the
few countries that matter.”
http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2016/01/denmark-refugees-immigration-law/431520/
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