BY FR. SHAY CULLEN
MANY Filipinos cannot find fair paid jobs and seek work abroad to escape poverty. An estimated 10 million Filipinos live and work abroad and every year another one million travel to join them. About 16 million Filipinos live in dire poverty, according to the Philippine Statistics Authority. The mass migration causes emotional stress, loneliness, family breakups, abandoned children and child abuse.
The impoverished deprived youth in Asia and Africa see no hope in their corrupt countries and flee poverty, violence and hunger. Thousands travel overland from Central America and others from Asia and Africa and across the Mediterranean Sea in small boats. They are mostly youth seeking to reach a better life in Europe or the United States. Many are refugees fleeing persecution, war and hopelessness. These are the unwanted and unwelcome migrants of failed or semi-failed states, many with colonial histories of exploitation and corruption.
The refugees and migrants are the strangers that all nations are supposed to welcome and shelter. They are the victims of historical colonial injustices and abuse. The youth of previous migrants to European countries are born citizens but are still unaccepted by many natives as true Italians, French, Germans, Swiss and so on. Some, despite efforts to change the situation in Europe and the United States, are still subject to marginalisation, racial profiling and police brutality. They are still unwelcome in many European countries although they were born there. France has been the scene of terrible violence and unrest by these marginalized youth. The consequences of past colonial sins are catching up on the present generation. They cannot accept the growing reality that diversity in population is inevitable.
These marginalized youth and their families are being joined by the fresh waves of migrants, refugees and asylum-seekers arriving daily. Some are victims of the neo-colonial regimes where corruption, inequality and poverty continues. Colonial exploitation still thrives among them as oil and mining companies of the rich developed nations exploit the natural resources of the “dependent” poor nations. At the same time, the rich nations continue to support lifestyles of vast consumption that are run on the burning of oil, coal and gas that are damaging the climate and causing more hunger and poverty. Climate justice demands recompense and an end to a fossil fuel-run world. The alternatives are there. They just need to build more renewable sources of energy.
As a consequence, there is continuing mass migration to the rich nations. The number of arrivals of refugees and migrants in Europe in 2021 was 123,318 people. Tragically 3,231 died in an attempt to cross the Mediterranean sea in small boats. In 2022, there were 159,410 arrivals in Mainland Europe and 2,439 drowned trying to cross the sea.
This year 2023, as many as 91,008 have crossed and sadly 1,872 drowned when left unrescued. It is forecast that about 56,000 migrants will cross the English channel from mainland Europe this 2023, having trekked across Europe from impoverished nations, whereas in 2022 there were 45,000 arrivals on the UK shores in small boats.
Most European countries have sealed their borders to migrants and asylum seekers and refugees of African and Middle Eastern origin. They have erected huge barbed fences and have armed patrols to stop crossings. However racial basis has been alleged when refugees and migrants from Ukraine flooded in their many thousands to Europe when Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022. They were welcomed with jobs and housing. As some Europeans said, “they are like us,” so some refugees are more welcome than others. Racial inequality persists.
However Germany, to the dismay of its neighbors and the delight of refugees and migrants and their supporters, has passed a new migrant-friendly law to invite and welcome migrants to apply for jobs in Germany with less stringent language and other requirements. Kindness and compassion meet self-interest as Germany has a huge decline in its birth rate. More on that in the next article. (preda.org)/PN