In the
Netherlands, Empty Prisons Become Homes for Refugees As plunging crime rates close prisons
across the country, a government agency is using the space to house refugees. By Melody Rowell, 5/17/16, Associated Press
In an interesting take on reusing and recycling, a government agency in the Netherlands has opened empty prisons to accommodate the influx of migrants seeking asylum.
As the country’s crime rate and prison population have steadily declined for
years, dozens of correctional facilities have closed altogether. So when the number of
migrants started to rise—more than 50,000 entered the Netherlands last year alone—the Central
Agency for the Reception of Asylum Seekers (COA) saw a solution.
Photographer Muhammed Muheisen, two-time Pulitzer
Prize winner and Associated Press chief photographer for the Middle East, has
devoted the past few years to photographing the
refugee crisis as people move
across continents. “The question always in my head was, What happens next?” he
says. “The journey doesn’t stop the moment they enter a country.”
Last fall, Muheisen
started hearing rumors about the reuse of penitentiaries. “I didn’t exactly
understand,” he says. “I thought they feellike they are in prisons.” It
took six months to get permission to take photos inside of a prison. Eventually,
Muheisen spent 40 days visiting three different facilities, getting to know
residents and photographing them.
“We’re talking about
dozens of nationalities,” he says. “Dozens. The whole world is under this
dome.” The refugees—who will live in the centers for at least six months while
waiting to be granted asylum status—are free to come and go as they please.
Muheisen says that some have forged friendships with their Dutch neighbors.
In
an interesting take on reusing and recycling, a government agency in the
Netherlands has opened empty prisons to accommodate the influx of migrants
seeking asylum.
As
the country’s crime rate and prison population have steadily
declined for years, dozens of correctional facilities have closed altogether. So
when the number of migrants started to rise—more than 50,000 entered the
Netherlands last year alone—the Central
Agency for the Reception of Asylum Seekers (COA) saw a solution.
Refugees
are not allowed to work, but they practice speaking the Dutch language and
learn to ride bicycles (both skills are essential to life in the Netherlands).
The fact that they do so inside a prison doesn’t faze most of the residents.
Muheisen says when he asked what they thought about the arrangement, the
typical response was, “We are here under a roof, in a shelter, and we feel
safe.”
One
Syrian man told Muheisen that living in the prison gave him hope for his
future. “If a country has no prisoners to put in jail,” he said, “it means this
is the safest country that I want to be living in.”
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2016/05/160517-refugees-netherlands-prisons/
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