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A Turkish soldier searches a young Syrian refugee at a border crossing. Burhan Ozbilici/Press Association. All rights reserved.On the 4 April, 2016, the day of the first EU deportations of migrants to Turkey, an
image circulated on Twitter. Posted by the Comisión
Española de Ayuda al Refugiado, a Spanish refugee aid assistance group, the
featured tweet was captioned by the accompanying phrase, ‘an image that sums up
one of the darkest and most shameful days in Europe.’
The image
depicted ten hooded men with their heads in their hands on their forlorn ferry
route to Turkey. Standing just over the migrants, ten shaven-head FRONTEX
security officials with surgical masks over their faces: as if to suggest a
disgust in breathing the same air as their charge. Each official
wore bright blue armbands emblazoned with a ring of gold stars and under their
blue indicatory FRONTEX jackets, a full military uniform of black boots, black
trousers and a black coat. The armband symbolism and official use of the colour
black a frightening reminder of a previous era of mass-expulsions.
Back
in Greece, a Turkish activist called Baran Doğan campaigning for
local refugees, referred to the deportation as the “bargaining and bartering of
human bodies… it’s treating humans as goods”.
Winding
backwards, on the 18 March, 2016, heads of state or government
from the EU and Turkey agreed to
“end the irregular migration from Turkey to the EU” and instead replace it with
“legal channels of resettlement of refugees to the European Union”. The central
aim: to replace
“disorganised, chaotic, irregular and dangerous migratory flows by organised,
safe and legal pathways to Europe” for those entitled to international
protection in line with EU and international law.
The
agreement took effect as of 20 March 2016, and the 4 April 2016 was
set as the target date for the start of returns of people to Turkey. The
Commissioner for Migration, Home Affairs and Citizenship, Dimitris
Avramopoulos, of Greece and the EU, said that, “we
now need to honour their commitments and ensure an orderly, well managed and
safe arrival and admission to Europe”.
The
agreement stipulates that all asylum seekers, or “irregular” migrants are to be
“returned” to Turkey, which had been deemed a “third-safe country of
residence”, supposedly in full accordance with EU and international law (though
ultimately amounting to collective expulsions forbidden under international
refugee law – according to the UN).
I
might add that we keep this in mind as an instance of the law being adapted to suit the
case rather than the case being adapted to be brought in line with the rule of
law, or how illegality becomes legitimized, as I will discuss shortly.
The
draft statement for the agreement on the 18 March 2016 stipulated
that “this
will be a temporary and extraordinary measure which is necessary to end the
human suffering and restore public order”. The
treaty renders Turkey as a “third-safe-country of residence”: a territory
outside of EU jurisdiction, but a territory which acts to manage the flows of
migration within the EU, restoring the Schengen Area’s ‘normative order’, with
Donald Tusk declaring
that this agreement was about “strengthening the EU's external borders,
keeping the western Balkans' route closed and getting back to Schengen”.
Equally,
the “third-safe-country of residence” designation shifts the state of Turkey,
as an outlier or “neighbour” of the Union, to a space of liberal management,
giving Ankara a role in the EU’s border agency FRONTEX – subcontracting border
control, essentially creating a hub for the deported while also facilitating
detention and surveillance of those seeking to gain entry to Europe.
For
every Syrian sent to Turkey, one will be repatriated and given asylum in the
EU, for anyone else, including large amounts of Eritreans, Iraqis, Afghanis and
many others fleeing war and conflict, the possibility of Turkish government
deportation remains high.
Any
Syrian not granted asylum will be kept in a ‘detention camp’, part funded by €6
billion (£4.7 billion) from the EU to help the estimated 2.7 million Syrians
already stuck on Turkish soil. These detention camps have been dubbed ‘safe
zones’, which has caused controversy in the past, as they arguably are spaces
established with ‘geopolitical’, rather than humanitarian goals in mind. Bill Frelick, the
Refugee Rights Director at Human Rights Watch reduced the controversy of the
growing intake of Turkish ‘safe zones’ by stating,
“this means using vulnerable civilians like pawns on a chess board.”
There are
two ways to look at the current method of dealing with the ensuing migration
crisis.
One is to
consider the EU’s actions in humanitarian terms: to consider that the
circumstances are exceptional, where the EU evokes a responsibility to the
crushing poverty, suffocating crowdedness, and overall suffering of the
migrants affected, who are left to wait on the edges of Europe.
The other
is to consider that the migrants amassed on its borders are detrimental to the
security of the EU and on those terms, the responsibility of the EU to the
lives of the migrants shifts from being solely humanitarian to existing within
in a dual role where security becomes as paramount as humanitarianism.
This
collapsing of ‘security
into justice’ would call into question the terms by which liberalism itself
operates. If the securing of territorial integrity is collapsed into the
protection of migrants, it plays into anti-immigration rhetoric which continuously
recycles the figure of the “migrant” and the figure of the “terrorist”, which
has its roots in the liberal, legal exceptionalism stemming from the Bush
administration’s War on Terror.
We might
then refer to this agreement as an EU experiment in search of an optimal
balance between maximum control over its territory and minimum responsibility
to the people within it. Equally, as is similar to the point made in the
expansion of the FRONTEX processes, the use of Turkey as a “third-safe space”
is a problematic continuation and exacerbation of the externalization of
responsibility, where the EU uses an archipelago of camps and networks to
facilitate migrants – where Turkey stands as a kind of sovereign migrant
processing facility in its own right, or as Didier Bigo would refer to it, a
space for the management of unease, fear, and suffering.
The
immediate goal of this agreement is at once to ‘secure’ the unfolding
humanitarian catastrophe that the migration “crisis” presents through the
“quiet” means of mass-expulsion – within the remit of “acceptability’ through
the veneer of international law.
Though the
EU may be seen to be abiding by the terms of international law, the law itself
is actively being manipulated to suit the supposed necessity to “end the human suffering” of the crisis by sending asylum seekers to a
place where the risk of deportation to the war they originally fled from is
high, all in contradiction to international refugee law.
These new
exceptional measures of mass expulsion are not themselves adapted to suit the
rule of law, the rule of law is itself adapted to suit the agreement.
Legitimizing, on moral and humanitarian grounds and through such language as
“crisis” and “necessity”, illegality. The legitimacy gained fine-tunes the
backdrop of liberal freedom through the balancing of control and responsibility
through buffer zones and exceptional grey areas.
The
agreement statement declares in full that, “it will be a temporary and
extraordinary measure which is necessary to end the human suffering and restore
public order”,
as before. Yet, if we are to consider it on the
terms I have articulated above, the agreement itself becomes less about the
rights of the migrant and more about the restoration of order in this
tumultuous ‘zone of turbulence,’ and ultimately, the continuation of business
as usual in the EU.
The
consideration of the migrant as an entity which instigates the strengthening of
a border, as Donald Tusk and the EU has insinuated, has required an urgency and
imperative character precisely because it is linked the to idea of self-defence
(“crisis”) and survival (necessity based on humanitarian grounds), which only
further pushes the figure of the migrant into the realm of the figure who
causes fear and terror in the EU’s jurisdiction.
The
exceptional language used to deal with this figure normalizes the use of
security and militaristic techniques and thus legitimizes the mass-expulsion of
migrants. The response to
humanitarian catastrophe with security becomes associated with exceptionalism
and danger, and the EU then begins to manage
‘risk in order to discipline the future’ and excludes and oppresses the ‘other’
for the sake of securing ‘the self’.
The binding of security to
humanitarianism, as is the case with this EU-Turkey agreement, exposes its
underlying aim of maintaining the economic trade integrity of the Union. In
this sense, the protection of the liberalism of Europe becomes embroiled in a
complex and problematic exchange, where the lives of migrants are sent back to
‘where they came from’, in the dehumanizing process of expulsion, which treats
“humans as goods”, as Baran Doğan,
the previously quoted Turkish activist states. Even under the umbrella of
humanitarianism, the EU is demonstrating a blind disregard for human rights as
well as pushing the means of exception beyond its previous boundaries.