The plight of the world’s migrants and refugees seems to worsen with every passing month. In late November twenty-seven people drowned [1] when their fragile inflatable dinghy capsized in the English Channel. In December a speeding truck packed with refugees from Central America flipped over [2] on a busy road in southern Mexico; fifty-four of them died. Most troubling of all was what occurred on the border between Belarus and Poland [3] in mid-November, when President Aleksandr Lukashenko ordered thousands of desperate Middle Eastern migrants to force their way into Poland, using them as pawns to seek leverage against the European Union. Polish troops resorted to tear gas and water cannons to drive them back, where they were then left to freeze in the wilds of the Białowieża Forest. At least eleven died from exposure.
These events seemed to elicit little more than a shrug in Europe and the United States, but indifference toward the migrant crisis has lately become even more tinged with hostility to the migrants themselves—and opposition to the right to migrate at all.
This is something of a shift for the European Union, which as recently as 2013—led by figures like Angela Merkel of Germany and Matteo Renzi of Italy—sought to welcome migrants through progressive policies and humanitarian programs. But now there’s talk of unraveling the 1985 Schengen Agreement, which permits open internal border crossing throughout most European countries. This has been accompanied by new reporting [4] from the New Yorker’s Ian Urbina on the EU’s outsourcing of migrant apprehension and detention to militias associated with Libya’s government. Provided with money and surveillance information from Frontex, the EU border agency, Libyan “coast guard” crews intercept vessels in the international waters of the southern Mediterranean and return captured migrants to makeshift prisons in Tripoli, where they are starved, beaten, and sometimes killed, or pressed into forced labor.
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