No One Wants Us: When Refugees' Germany Dream Dies
An exhibit in Dresden, a city that has seen protests and
violence against refugees, purports to gain sympathy for Germany's more than a
million new asylum seekers, some of whom are finding it so difficult that they
want to go back, July 7, 2016. (H. Murdo
"No country wants us
legally," says Mohammad, 41, in a shopping plaza in the eastern German
city of Dresden. "My family is in Syria and I wanted to bring them here,
but it's been almost a year and I still have no information."
In the meantime, he adds, his four
children, all under the age of 7, need a father to protect them if they are
going survive a war zone. Like many parents in Germany, he says if he can't
bring them here, he will have to go back.
Earlier this year, the German
parliament passed laws that will mean asylum seekers like Mohammad — a victim
of the Syrian war, but not "personally persecuted" — will have to
wait two years to even apply to bring their families to Europe.
On the road to Germany in September,
the former auto mechanic spent six hours in the sea when his first rubber boat
collapsed. The next day, his new boat made it to Greece and he spent thousands
of dollars getting to Germany. Like many travelers at the time, the goal was to
get to a safe place, and then send for his more vulnerable family members; like
the toddlers he didn't want to make the sometimes deadly journey.
While this plan appears to have
failed, Mohammad says returning to Syria may not be a good answer, as borders
with Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey — the three countries that are bearing the bulk
of the Syrian refugee crisis — are virtually shuttered to new refugees.
The International Organization for
Migration says roughly half of the 70,000 asylum seekers that it helped return
to their home countries in 2015 came from Germany, with Iraqis making up one of
the largest groups of both arrivals and departures. Refugees say these numbers
are low, because many other people have left without applying for help.
A Syrian refugee at the Berlin Wall
looks at a photo gallery of the destruction of his country by war, June 30,
2016. Young Syrian men say they want to go home, but only after the war. (H.
Murdock/VOA)
Both refugees and the IOM agree,
however, that neither returning families to war zones nor helping them run away
will solve the European refugee crisis. The only way to stop refugees from
fleeing, they say, is to stop the wars they flee.
"Even though return in many
instances is currently the only viable option, it is no panacea," reads
the IOM 2015 year-end overview report. "The effective management of
international migration also depends upon making the option to remain in one's
country a viable one."
Stuck in limbo
Waiting for a friend on a nearby
picnic bench, Fakhry, 45, says he is planning to return to Turkey, where he and
his family fled after his home in Syria's northern countryside was bombed.
"My whole family is in
Turkey," he says, sighing. He has a wife and nine children between the
ages of 4 and 22. "Maybe I will join them in a month."
Turkey, he says, is relatively safe,
but without the legal right to work, he could barely feed his family when he
lived there. Between missing his family, growing anti-immigrant sentiment and
the long months or years it could take to return to his profession of driving a
taxi, he feels his European dream is over.
And he is not alone among people who
want to leave Europe and join their families in the countries they originally
fled to, Fakhry says. Lebanon has stiffened its visa requirements, keeping
Syrians with families there in Europe; but, droves of fathers who left their
children in Turkey can still go back.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdoğan has recently proposed offering citizenship to Syrian refugees. And
while it is not clear the move would help drivers like Fakhry, it is making
some refugees wonder if they may have better luck the second time around in
Turkey. "Go to the airport," he adds. "You will see so many
people going to Turkey."
Outside a camp in Berlin on July 1,
2016, young men say that without children at home to rescue, they will stay in
Germany, despite new laws that may make them wait two years before they can
apply to bring family members over to join them. (H. Murdock/VOA
At a camp in Berlin, other refugees
say they know a few people who are leaving, but young men without children are
rarely on that list. Many fled Syria to avoid conscription into the Syrian army
or one of the country's many militant groups, including Islamic State
militants.
"The Syrian military said I
have to serve," says Anas, who ran a food company in Damascus. "I
would be forced to kill my countrymen. Or they would be forced to kill
me."
Increasing hostility
Other young men at the camp
emphasize that they all want to go home, but to a home without war. In the
meantime, they are doing their best to remain in Germany, as it sorts through
the one million-plus asylum applications, some of which have already been
denied.
Local people in Germany, including
the civil servants charged with managing the refugee crisis, seem increasingly
hostile as right-wing political parties grow in the wake of terror attacks,
says Ahmed, 23, an aspiring mechanic from Syria.
The waning welcoming spirit, he
adds, is a surprise to new arrivals, many of whom came in the sweep of refugees
who poured into Europe in early fall after German Chancellor Angela Merkel said
Germany was ready to accept 800,000 new arrivals. Countries along the route to
Germany briefly facilitated travel, rather than blocking the way as they do
now.
"If you ask for help, they say,
'If you don't like it, go back,'" says Ahmed. "They seem to be
inadvertently saying we are not welcome; but, wasn't it Merkel who told us to
come?"
http://www.voanews.com/a/refugees-stuck-limbo-germany/3418568.html
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