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From: kuacou...@yahoo.com
Date: Jun 14 2006, 3:49 pm
Subject: WPost: Tiny Malta Struggles to Absorb Boatloads of Desperate Africans
To: alt.culture.malta
An Island Engulfed by Migrants
Tiny Malta Struggles to Absorb Boatloads of Desperate Africans
By Mary Jordan
Washington Post Foreign Service
Sunday, June 4, 2006; A14
VALLETTA, Malta -- Elegant white cruise ships slide into a perfect
Mediterranean harbor, dropping hundreds of sun-blushed tourists to
wander this former British colony's narrow alleyways dotted with pubs
and classic red English telephone booths. But just beyond these
postcard-perfect scenes, an unwanted flotilla of rickety fishing boats
carrying desperate Africans is arriving, too.
"See, there's one of them now," said Jesmond Saliba, pointing to an
African man in jeans and sandals ambling along streets alive with white
tourists.
Saliba, 34, drives a horse-drawn taxi, as his father did. For
generations in his family, more visitors meant more money. But Saliba
feels differently about the thousands of destitute Africans arriving
here needing food, housing and medicine. "We don't have enough jobs for
them, and it means more taxes for us," Saliba said. "This island is too
small for them."
Malta suddenly finds itself on the leading edge of an increasingly
emotional debate over how much immigration Europe can tolerate. About
twice the size of the District of Columbia, it sits like a tiny sentry
off southern Europe, 60 miles south of Sicily, looking across the sea
at 2,000 miles of North African coast. In the past four years, more
than 5,000 African immigrants have come ashore here, most often making
the 200-mile crossing from Libya in open fishing boats.
Nearly all were aiming for Italy and mainland Europe. But when their
skiffs foundered or ran out of gas, they found themselves in a nation
of just 400,000 people, more densely populated than Bangladesh, where
families have known each other for generations and people from the next
village are considered outsiders.
"There is a feeling of 'My God, we are being invaded!' " said Katrine
Camilleri, a lawyer with the Jesuit Refugee Service, which aids the
boat people. "It's becoming more and more acceptable for people to
openly say, 'We don't want them.' "
The same holds on the continent. Hard-line anti-immigration political
parties have made dramatic electoral gains in Denmark, Norway and
Britain. Mainstream political parties are tilting more and more in that
direction.
Countries that until recently had barely any foreigners, such as
Ireland, are now taking in large numbers of newcomers of different
races and religions. Last month, 40 Afghans staged a hunger strike
inside a Dublin cathedral to press their demand for political asylum.
More than 9,000 Africans, meanwhile, have reached Spain's Canary
Islands by boat this year, turning that tourist destination into
another immigration crisis point. The European Union's border patrol
agency said last week that it was planning to send air and sea patrols
to the Canary Islands, Malta and other hot spots.
"The whole of Europe is putting up the shutters," said Martin Scicluna,
an adviser to Malta's justice minister. Maltese officials are pleading
with other European nations to take custody of some of the boat people
who arrive here. So far, the Netherlands has taken 40; Germany has
pledged to take a similar number.
Many in Malta, an overwhelmingly white, Catholic nation, are angry
about the growing numbers of black, mostly Muslim newcomers.
"We don't want a multicultural society," said Martin Degiorgio, a
leader of the Republican National Alliance, an anti-immigrant group
formed last year. "Haven't you seen the problems it has brought to
France and Britain?"
"We have never had minorities, and we don't want minorities," he said.
"Until just three or four years ago, it was almost impossible to find a
black African walking in Maltese streets, but nowadays you just have to
walk in our capital city and there are many of them."
Many of the migrants gather near the old stone city gate near the
once-grand opera house that was bombed, like so much of the island, in
World War II. A British territory until 1964, Malta was a closer target
than London for the Nazi Luftwaffe, and many residents interviewed said
the relentless boatloads of foreigners made islanders feel as if they
were under assault again.
"We need to get extra patrol boats and send them back," said Charlie
Bezzina, 47, who was selling local Cisk beer near the opera house
steps.
Ruth Spiteri, a mother of three sitting with her children in a
perfectly groomed park a few blocks away, said the migrants demanded
too much. "They don't like the food we give them. They are aggressive
with soldiers. They bring different diseases," she said.
Some Maltese fault the government and a conservative church hierarchy
for failing to explain the boat people's plight and to calm unjustified
fears. In that vacuum, they say, racist and xenophobic views have
flourished. Recently, a Congolese man said a motorist deliberately
rammed him, throwing him against a wall and injuring both his legs.
The Rev. Paul Pace, acting director of Jesuit Refugee Service, said his
group has been going into high schools asking students to imagine
leaving their homes, without taking anything with them, and risking
their lives to move to a new country. He said Malta must show the human
face of these migrants, who have much to contribute. Pace said he was
certain that his group's advocacy for immigrants was the reason
arsonists recently torched seven cars belonging to Jesuits and the
house and car of Camilleri, the group's assistant director.
Terry Gosden, who runs one of the country's detention centers for
migrants, said physicians, lawyers and people with master's degrees
were among the people he was sheltering. Some have found jobs in the
community, working at building sites, as hotel chambermaids, as
laborers in shipyards or as garbage collectors.
Many died at sea trying to get here, he said. "The Mediterranean is a
graveyard."
Like many here, Gosden said he felt the answer to the current problem
lay in investment in Africa, which is needed to create jobs there:
"Turning Europe into a fortress won't work."
Malta, which joined the European Union in 2004, is bound by E.U. rules
stating that the country where illegal immigrants first land must take
responsibility for them, deciding who can stay on humanitarian grounds
and who should be sent home. In practical terms, it has proved
difficult for Malta to return people because of the cost and diplomatic
complications.
Currently, nearly 1,000 immigrants sit in crowded facilities known as
"closed detention centers." Human rights advocates call living
conditions there unacceptable. People who are taken from boats must
spend 18 months in these locked facilities -- off-limits to the news
media -- then may be granted humanitarian status to stay on and move to
an "open detention center."
"You can't imagine how difficult I find it here," said Ihaps Norain,
28, a sad-looking Sudanese man standing one recent day near the bus
terminal at the entrance to this city of sand-colored buildings built
by the famed Knights of St. John in the 16th century.
Norain explained how his Libyan boat ran out of gas, forcing him to
land here instead of Italy. Having served his time in the locked
detention center, he is now free to come and go. In Sudan, he said, he
was studying accounting; here, he builds windows in an aluminum
factory. He cannot wait to leave but doesn't know how. "I don't want to
be here," he said, "and I know people here don't want me."
Other dejected boat people have taken to calling Malta "midway to
nowhere."
Norain hopped on a bus for a five-minute journey to bring a visitor to
the open center where he lives with 560 other people, mostly Africans
but a few from Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan and other countries. Norain
sleeps on a mattress in a corner.
"I ask myself, 'Why did I risk my life for this?' " Norain said. "I see
the way they look at me on the bus. Some people make you feel so sad."
Human rights groups estimate that more than a million sub-Saharan
Africans displaced by war and poverty have gathered in Libya, hoping to
make a journey similar to Norain's.
Scicluna, the government adviser, said that it was "utterly unrealistic
to think you can pull up the drawbridge" and that the country needed
time to adjust to immigration.
"We've got to live with it. We've got to adapt to it. We have got to
make it work," he said.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/03/AR200...
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