Wednesday, May 18, 2016

EU-Turkey Migrant Deal Unravels

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EU-Turkey Migrant Deal Unravels
Plan B turns Greece into massive refugee camp

by Soeren Kern  •  May 18, 2016 at 5:00 am
  • "It can be expected that, as soon as Turkish citizens will obtain visa-free entry to the EU, foreign nationals will start trying to obtain Turkish passports ... or use the identities of Turkish citizens, or to obtain by fraud the Turkish citizenship. This possibility may attract not only irregular migrants, but also criminals or terrorists." — Leaked European Commission report, quoted in the Telegraph, May 17, 2016.
  • According to the Telegraph, the EU report adds that as a result of the deal, the Turkish mafia, which traffics vast volumes of drugs, sex slaves, illegal firearms and refugees into Europe, may undergo "direct territorial expansion towards the EU."
  • "If they make the wrong decision, we will send the refugees." — Burhan Kuzu, senior adviser to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
  • Erdogan is now demanding that the EU immediately hand over three billion euros ($3.4 billion) so that Turkish authorities can spend it as they see fit. The EU insists that the funds be transferred through international aid agencies in accordance with strict rules on how the aid can be spent. This prompted Erdogan to accuse the EU of "mocking the dignity" of the Turkish nation.
Thousands of newly arrived migrants, the vast majority of whom are men, crowd the platforms at Vienna West Railway Station on August 15, 2015 -- a common scene in the summer and fall of 2015. (Image source: Bwag/Wikimedia Commons)
The EU-Turkey migrant deal, designed to halt the flow of migrants from Turkey to Greece, is falling apart just two months after it was reached. European officials are now looking for a back-up plan.
The March 18 deal was negotiated in great haste by European leaders desperate to gain control over a migration crisis in which more than one million migrants from Africa, Asia and the Middle East poured into Europe in 2015.
European officials, who appear to have promised Turkey more than they can deliver, are increasingly divided over a crucial part of their end of the bargain: granting visa-free travel to Europe for Turkey's 78 million citizens by the end of June.
At the same time, Turkey is digging in its heels, refusing to implement a key part of its end of the deal: bringing its anti-terrorism laws into line with EU standards so that they cannot be used to detain journalists and academics critical of the government.

Turkey: Erdogan's Promised "Reforms"

by Burak Bekdil  •  May 18, 2016 at 4:30 am
  • In third world democracies such as Turkey, there is a vast gap between what laws say and how they are enforced.
  • "As many as 2,000 individuals -- reporters, celebrities, academics and students -- are reportedly being officially investigated on charges of insulting President Recep Tayyip Erdogan or spreading 'terrorist propaganda.'" — "Reporters Without Borders" Report.
  • The EU must understand that it has too little, if any, leverage on a country that is going full speed toward darker days of Islamist authoritarianism.
  • With or without legal amendments to its anti-terror laws or a deal with the EU, Erdogan's Turkey will de facto follow the path of Islamist autocracies, where any kind of dissent amounts to terrorism and treason.
European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker (right) said that the visa requirement would not be lifted for Turks before all criteria in the EU-Turkey deal were met. That, in the words of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (left), would mean "you go your way and we go ours." (Image source: Turkish President's Office)
Turkey and the European Union (EU) have been negotiating a deal that ostensibly would stem the flow of hundreds of thousands of migrants into Europe; Turkey, on its part, would bring dozens of laws and regulations, including its draconian anti-terror laws, in line with Europe's; and nearly 80 million Turks would then be given visa-free travel to the EU's borderless Schengen zone. But now, as Turkey refuses to amend its anti-terror laws, the deal seems to be facing a stalemate.
That is hardly the heart of the matter. In reality, both Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and the EU are pursuing a deal that will not work.
In theory, Turkey would complete some tough homework, containing a list of 72 items. All went well until recently, when apparently the most controversial item on the list, which obliged Turkey to change its anti-terror laws, stalled the deal.

A Few Questions for London's New Mayor and Other Luminaries

by Robbie Travers  •  May 18, 2016 at 4:00 am
  • London Mayor Sadiq Khan has called moderate Muslims "Uncle Toms" - not quite what one would expect to hear from a supposed advocate of equality.
  • The irony of course is that to show you are not a racist, you are using racist terminology. Is that what an anti-racist should sound like?
  • Name-calling is usually just a form political blackmail designed to close down a discussion before it has even begun. What it does not wish to take into consideration is that someone might simply have a different opinion.
  • Every candidate's record on terrorism should be questioned. It is the public's right. Just because Khan happens to be Muslim, does that entitle him to special treatment? Why should one not be able to ask Khan the same questions one might ask any other politician?
Many are hailing the election of London's new mayor, Sadiq Khan, admirably the "son of a Pakistani bus driver," as the sign of a new, tolerant London and that Britain's Black and minority ethnic communities are making progress.
But there are concerns. Khan has called moderate Muslims "Uncle Toms" - not quite what one would expect to hear from a supposed advocate of equality.
The irony of course is that to show you are not a racist, you are using racist terminology. Is that what an anti-racist should sound like?

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