Wednesday, September 09, 2015

Refugees are the greatest existentialist challenge for the EU


Hungarian Camera woman is the tip of the iceberg. Eastern Europe emerged from along history of Fascism and Communism as homogenous countries and was integrated into the EU without redesigning the educational system to promote pluralism. Eastern Europeans respect and revere the West for their wealth and higher culture and have been the beneficial of hundreds of billions of funds and free movement. Social tension with the West was not a probability since the West was not their counterpart. The west turned a blind eye on their treatment of minorities such as Russians in the Baltic and Roma in the southern parts most of who fled and were offered asylum in the West. Instead of reforming their education system to root out xenophobia and racism by promoting human rights and equality they have tried to whip nationalism and religious revivalism. In this political climate the refugees are seen as marauders who will undermine their social fabric and not as individuals with dignity who deserve our respect. The influx of refugees who come from different ethnic and religious background poses the greatest challenge to the EU as the Eastern part is not willing to take part in any EU wide plan to help.

Monday, September 07, 2015

The Refugee Crisis and the greater malaise of the West

Yes please, I will take in a refugee and house them in my home. But also Lets be clear that it’s a collective responsibility to look after the vulnerable fellow humans in extreme condition. That collective responsibility has been delegated to the governments as the body that represents our collective wishes. The failure of the government to show resolve and strength demonstrates lack of leadership and efficacy. 

Just how dire is Western leadership?
The greatest service to refugees of all possible sources came from Victor Orban. His action on forcing refugees to camps, stopping them from travelling and erecting border fence along with comments like “Hungarians have the right to live without Muslims” galvanized public support for refugees at a time when one of the main rhetoric of Western governments is “immigration control”.  Civic activism and magnanimity forced Western governments to do something.

Leadership has degenerated into public management. Government has digressed to be only concerned with bureaucracy due to a lack of visionary leadership. Almost everything in social life is produced by rare but consequential shocks and changes; all the while almost everything studied focuses on the “Normal” in tune with the populous temperament that tell close to nothing. Democratic populism ignores the changing world, cannot handle the, yet makes us confident that we have tamed uncertainty.  The nature of social phenomena can only be understood in severe circumstance, not under the regular rosy glow of daily life. Can you assess the danger a criminal poses by examining only what he does on an ordinary day? Can we understand health without considering wild diseases and epidemics? Indeed the normal is often irrelevant.

Focusing on the “normal” means the government is represented on most issues by the vocal part of the society that includes the immigration debate. The anti immigration lobby happens to be xenophobic which makes government policies sinister and particularly unfair on the immigrants. 

Friday, September 04, 2015

Legal routes for Refugees to reach Europe

Germany is adopting a very moral compassionate position. However there simply isn't the public support for taking in tens of thousands of refugees in the UK. is there any alternative routes for people to reach Europe, some have argued that the UK should offer visas to highly skilled Syrians eg nurses doctors computer engineers etc. This could be sold as offering benefits to both the UK and the people concerned. Its hard to see why such professionals would come to the UK lack of social support and stringent visa controls while they can be free of immigration control in more supportive countries like Germany. such social support include child care, working family support, housing and education all of which are abysmal and withheld all together from working families who come from war torn countries.

I came to the UK on a skill visa from Afghanistan; after investing half a million pounds, creating numerous jobs for British citizens and paying tens of thousands into the public purse I face the prospect of being removed from the UK. The government this year introduced more requirements in order to qualify for stay such retrospective rules are against the rule of law yet contrary to Phil Woolas assertion I can not find legal help to initiate a judicial review. The official line of Home Office is to “control” the number of immigrants in response to concern expressed by British people through democratic processes in practice this has turned into oppressing minority by popular demand. 

The system suffers from a lack of visionary leadership, xenophobia and short-sightedness. Refugees have protection and the government cannot remove their status in response to popular demand but those who work are a toy for making political gestures. the proof is the immigration website where you will find constant and relentless stream of judicial decisions showing the vast numbers of errors which occur by the Home Office; transitional provisions regarding immigration rules ignored, policies not taken into account, ambiguous rules inconsistently applied, children or dependents not considered properly, judicial precedents ignored.

The system is broken because it does not recognise my circumstances. I am invested in the UK, my children are born and raised here; a war is raging in Afghanistan and apart from being born there I have no real connection to it. Yet I am constant threatened with removal by unfair rules. There is a divorce between the values the British society espouse to hold and the immigration system. 

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

When is it OK to coerce individual or group of people by popular demand?

Growing up in Kabul I lived in a neighborhood with a significant number of Hindus and Sikhs but the numbers started to dissipate after the government collapsed in 1992 and by 2001, before the American led invasion, there was a few hundreds left. That same year the Taliban issued a Fatwa; the ruling by a council of prominent Islamic clerics required all non-Muslims to wear distinguishing symbol. Under the plan all non-Muslims must wear a piece of yellow cloth whenever they venture outdoors. 

Many Hindus and Sikhs did not see this as unjust; I remember some rationalising the distinguishing badge as a safeguard for Hindus and Sikhs from Taliban religious police who enforced a strict line of Islamic practice through tough punishment including imprisonment and on the spot beating.  The victim adopts methods to cope with injustice, this is certainly true in other cases of the tyranny of majority. The Gladiator who died or killed for the pleasure of the audience fostered and lived with a culture of chivalry and honour that reinforced the tradition.

What about the modern Western democracy? Is it still OK to oppress some by the demand of majority? Does it still have that segregating impact where the oppressed adopts mannerism and culture to cope with the injustice.

The Western democracies claim that social injustice has been addressed by the provision of Human Rights that is enshrined at the core of legal and political system. But we all know that is a load of hotair; the oppression of the minority and the emptiness of Human Rights claim is demonstrated clearest in the issue of immigration. The UK Home Office has appointed an obnoxious anti-immigration minister Nick Harper who has launched a crusade against people of certain national origins that is supported by claim of responding to popular demand for fierce restrictions on immigration. The official policy line of the Home Office is to “control” the number of immigrants from low-GDP countries in response to concern expressed by British people through democratic processes.

The Home Office has put in place new rules and regulations in order to make it difficult for people of “low GDP countries” to secure an extension to their stay. Lets consider a family with a house, a business, children born and raised in the UK, social connections, cultural and educational ties with the UK; the family has lived here legally for a decade or so and one day out of the blue the Home Office changes the rules without notification. Under the new rules recruitment of people from low GDP countries will be a violation of visa term; (if you think that is a wild rule I invite you to read the immigration website) this family is now advised by the Home Office that their visa application is refused and they should be leaving the UK.

Popular demand is questionable in the way it objectifies the minority but also the legitimacy of claim to popular support is questionable too. A closer look will show that it is not the majority but a very boisterous minority with vested interested and power that drives such agendas. The most popular tool of such a coward policy is “Framing”. Lets consider this in the case of immigration; a YouGov poll asked 2,056 people whether they agreed or disagreed with the statement: “People should be free to live and work wherever they wish, and enjoy all the same rights as all other residents.”

·      54 percent of them either agreed (35 percent) or “strongly agreed” (19 percent)
·      31 percent either didn’t know (8 percent) or “neither agreed nor disagreed” (23 percent)
·      Only 16 percent disagreed (12 percent) or “strongly disagreed” (4 percent)

Contrary to Home Office claim most people recognise the right of people to live and work at the place of their choice but people respond differently by how the argument is framed. The sample was then split in two the first Group was asked “whether they should be free to live and work in a foreign country” and the second group was asked “whether foreigners should be free to live and work in Britain.” Both groups replied in favour – although the first group majority (72 percent) was much bigger than the second group (46 percent). A constructive debate about immigration will aim to find a decent solution that is based on Human Rights and legal precedence with the support of rational majority. The current approach of inflammatory language and dehumanization of immigrants is a framing attempt by the anti immigration lobby that uses fear and shock to continue its oppressive policies.

Its certainly helpful to recognise depth and extent of personal issues such as anger, hate and imprudence while trying to make heads of ghettos, terrorism and disillusionment. However personalities thrive within a subculture or a group mentality and government policies of neglect, scapegoating and oppression of minorities have contributed to the formation of those undercultures.