Europe’s soft dictatorship
In mid-June, about a hundred migrants attempted to cross Italy’s border into France, but were denied entry. The incident provoked Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi to not only claim that the EU’s response to the arrival of tens of thousands of migrants on Italy’s shores had “not been good enough”,
By our correspondents
June 25, 2015
In mid-June, about a hundred migrants attempted to cross Italy’s border into France, but were denied entry. The incident provoked Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi to not only claim that the EU’s response to the arrival of tens of thousands of migrants on Italy’s shores had “not been good enough”, but to also warn the EU that Italy would deploy an anti-immigration plan that would “hurt Europe”.
Only a few days after Renzi’s harsh critique of the EU’s immigration policy, Hungary announced plans to build a four-metre-high wall along its 175km border with Serbia to stop the flow of undocumented migrants.
At the same time, as part of the government’s national consultation on immigration and terrorism, eight million questionnaires were sent to citizens, asking, ‘Would you support the government placing illegal immigrants in internment camps?’ and ‘Do you agree that mistaken immigration policies contribute to the spread of terrorism?’
In other words, Viktor Orban’s government is openly equating immigrants with terrorists and even recommending that they be sent to work camps.
In a speech in July 2014, Orban finally announced the death of liberal democracy and the arrival of a new form of state called the ‘workfare state’, which would abandon liberal methods.
And then, in one of his speeches in May, Orban went a step further, claiming explicitly that “dictatorial countries are more successful than democratic ones”.
And what has the EU’s reaction been to Hungary overtly sliding into dictatorship?
When Hungary announced that it would build its anti-immigrant wall to separate it from Serbia, the EU’s commissioner on immigration said, “We have only recently taken down walls in Europe; we should not be putting them up.”
But this is far from the truth. What Europe is undertaking at the moment is something we might call the ‘outsourcing’ of new walls. Just take the anti-immigration walls between Morocco and Spain, which were constructed by Spain on the North African coast to deter potential migrants from crossing into Europe. So, instead of building walls in Europe, we build them in countries where the migrants come from.
And the real reaction to this humanitarian catastrophe was best embodied at the recent EU summit in Riga, Latvia, where the Head of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker jokingly greeted Orban with a ‘Hello, dictator’, and slapped him on the cheek.
Although it is clear that Hungary is openly moving towards a dictatorship, the EU’s political leaders refer to the prospect as a joke. The real threat to the EU is not Italy’s or Hungary’s Plan B.
The real threat is the cynical attitude represented by Juncker and his fellow commissioners, who are not only provoking military wars from Libya to Syria and economic wars from Spain to Greece, but are now ‘outsourcing’ the very problems they created.
Hungary’s inclination towards dictatorship has only been encouraged and made worse by the EU’s own dictatorship. After all, the only thing worse than dictatorship is a soft dictatorship.
Excerpted from: ‘Europe’s soft dictatorship’. Courtesy: Aljazeera.com
Only a few days after Renzi’s harsh critique of the EU’s immigration policy, Hungary announced plans to build a four-metre-high wall along its 175km border with Serbia to stop the flow of undocumented migrants.
At the same time, as part of the government’s national consultation on immigration and terrorism, eight million questionnaires were sent to citizens, asking, ‘Would you support the government placing illegal immigrants in internment camps?’ and ‘Do you agree that mistaken immigration policies contribute to the spread of terrorism?’
In other words, Viktor Orban’s government is openly equating immigrants with terrorists and even recommending that they be sent to work camps.
In a speech in July 2014, Orban finally announced the death of liberal democracy and the arrival of a new form of state called the ‘workfare state’, which would abandon liberal methods.
And then, in one of his speeches in May, Orban went a step further, claiming explicitly that “dictatorial countries are more successful than democratic ones”.
And what has the EU’s reaction been to Hungary overtly sliding into dictatorship?
When Hungary announced that it would build its anti-immigrant wall to separate it from Serbia, the EU’s commissioner on immigration said, “We have only recently taken down walls in Europe; we should not be putting them up.”
But this is far from the truth. What Europe is undertaking at the moment is something we might call the ‘outsourcing’ of new walls. Just take the anti-immigration walls between Morocco and Spain, which were constructed by Spain on the North African coast to deter potential migrants from crossing into Europe. So, instead of building walls in Europe, we build them in countries where the migrants come from.
And the real reaction to this humanitarian catastrophe was best embodied at the recent EU summit in Riga, Latvia, where the Head of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker jokingly greeted Orban with a ‘Hello, dictator’, and slapped him on the cheek.
Although it is clear that Hungary is openly moving towards a dictatorship, the EU’s political leaders refer to the prospect as a joke. The real threat to the EU is not Italy’s or Hungary’s Plan B.
The real threat is the cynical attitude represented by Juncker and his fellow commissioners, who are not only provoking military wars from Libya to Syria and economic wars from Spain to Greece, but are now ‘outsourcing’ the very problems they created.
Hungary’s inclination towards dictatorship has only been encouraged and made worse by the EU’s own dictatorship. After all, the only thing worse than dictatorship is a soft dictatorship.
Excerpted from: ‘Europe’s soft dictatorship’. Courtesy: Aljazeera.com
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