THEY
DIDN’ T PUBLISH THIS IN THE NEWS: Refugees from Tripoli and other
places in North Africa set off for Europe
LO
QUE NOS OCULTAN EN LAS NOTICIAS, ESTO NO LO PUBLICAN LOS NOTICIEROS:
"Refugiados de Tripoli e outros locais do Norte de África para
a Europa"
POSTSCRIPT.
I am told that these images are from 1991 and people fleeing Albania
This, however, is real
Refugees
Are Human. This Simple Fact Seems To Have Been Forgotten
By
Owen Jones
30
August, 2015
August
30, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Guardian"
- They’re not people: nobody would tolerate hearing
about the drowning of human beings over and over again. At best they
are bleak but intangible statistics, the object of a bit of tutting
before mundane everyday life takes over. For others, they are an
unwanted and uninvited swarm that Fortress Europe must keep out: full
of undeserving would-be leeches who have no place in the west. In the
hierarchy of death, anyone labelled “migrant” must take their
place somewhere near the bottom. It is a dehumanised word: for all
too many people, it is somewhere down with “petty criminal”, and
who mourns petty criminals?
As
the news of up to 200
dead refugees, drowned off the coast of Libya, filters fleetingly
into news coverage, the only guarantee is that more will drown. And
with news of more than 70
refugees found dead in a truck in Austria – to try to
imagine their last living moments triggers a horrible feeling in the
pit of the stomach – we know that more bodies will be found in more
trucks. Those of us who want more sympathetic treatment of people
fleeing desperate situations have failed to win over public opinion,
and the cost of that is death.
Other than a tiny proportion of sociopaths, our species is naturally empathetic
For
those who believe that hostility to human beings from other countries
who lost the lottery of life is somehow hardwired into us, there is
evidence to the contrary. Germany takes in around four times as many
refugees as Britain does; and for every
Syrian asylum seeker received by Britain, Germany gets 27. And
despite German generosity comparing starkly with our own, half of
Germans polled support
letting in even more refugees.
This
is a debate that cannot be won by statistics. We can tell people that
those reaching Europe represent a tiny fraction of the world’s
refugee population; that while developing countries housed 70% of
refugees a decade or so ago, that has now leapt to 86%. Far smaller
and poorer countries take in far more than us, such as Lebanon, with
its population
of around 4.5 million including 1.3 million Syrian refugees. But
it won’t shift people’s attitudes. We have to do it with stories,
humanising otherwise faceless refugees.
Other
than a tiny proportion of sociopaths, our species is naturally
empathetic. It is only when we strip the humanity from people –
when we stop imagining them as being quite human like us – that our
empathetic nature is eroded. That allows us either to accept the
misery of others, or even to inflict it on them. Rightwing newspapers
hunt down extreme and unsympathetic stories of refugees, and we fight
back with statistics. Instead, we need to show the reality of
refugees: their names, their faces, their ambitions and their fears,
their loves, what they fled.
Yes,
the solution to global human misery is not to extricate a tiny lucky
number and parachute them into richer countries. We need the west to
take responsibility for disaster zones it helped create, like Libya
and Iraq. We should pressure our governments to do more to solve
situations that compel human beings to flee. At home, communities
with higher levels of both migrants and refugees should be given
extra resources and support. But as long as there is misery, people
will flee it, and a tiny proportion will come this far. If we want to
help them, we need to change public attitudes by humanising refugees.
If we fail, then more and more women, men and children will spend
their last few hours drowning in seas or suffocating in lorries. It
is as bleak as that
How horrorific for them. The locust horde coming your way soon; poor souls,
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