When it Comes to Sudan, Europe is Proving as Xenophobic as Trump’s America
Eric Reeves | December 5, 2017 | https://wp.me/p45rOG-2bh
Nothing in this extraordinarily revealing article that is truly new. Having worked on dozens of asylum cases in Europe in recent years, I’ve seen the increasing determination to rid the continent of African immigrants, even if they are asylum seekers who have been imprisoned and/or tortured. Cases such as the one reported here in Belgium are signs of just how despicably the countries of Europe are accommodating a genocidal regime that is destroying the Sudanese economy for self-enrichment and in the process putting the lives, health, and livelihoods of millions of ordinary Sudanese at risk.
This belies every claim Europeans make to a commitment to human rights. The grim history of deportation in Europe in the 20th century should have made impossible such deportations as reported here.
Belgium teamed up with Sudan on deportations. Then, allegedly, there was torture.
The Washington Post | Michael Birnbaum, January 4, 2018
BRUSSELS — In an era of closing borders, European leaders are increasingly willing to go to extreme lengths to deport people. But a Belgian effort to partner with the Sudanese government has backfired after two men alleged they were tortured after being sent home, and
the top Belgian migration official involved is now facing pressure to resign.
The Sudanese citizens’ expulsions highlight new measures that might once have been seen as politically toxic. The men were repatriated after being identified by a delegation of Sudanese officials who had been invited to Belgium to screen migrants accused of being in the country illegally and to authorize the deportation of people from Sudan. Migrant advocates condemned the collaboration with Sudan, whose president, Omar al-Bashir, has been accused of war crimes and genocide.
Now the allegations of torture are roiling Belgium’s complicated ruling coalition. Some politicians have suggested that the migration secretary, Theo Francken, the leader who invited the Sudanese officials to Belgium, should consider stepping down over his handling
of the matter.
Belgian Minister of Migration (and deportations) Theo Francken
“In the past, we have seen ministers . . . resign if they seem to have lied, even if that is not the case,” said Wouter Beke, the leader of the Christian Democratic and Flemish party, which is a member of the ruling coalition, in an interview with Belgian radio. “It’s a question of personal ethics,” he said.
Francken has said he has no plans to resign after appearing to mislead Parliament by telling lawmakers, incorrectly, after the allegations emerged that no further deportations were planned. He said he has not received any direct information about deportees being tortured, but
“if it turns out that they have indeed been tortured, that’s a big problem.” He has called for a commission to investigate the allegations.
The Belgian effort follows a deal Italy struck this summer with Libya to halt migrant traffic. Rights groups warn the agreement increases risks of slavery and abuse in Libya. And in 2016, E.U. leaders promised aid and concessions to Turkey to stop the migrant flow to Greece.
The accusations of torture emerged late last month, when Belgium’s Het Laatste Nieuws newspaper published interviews with two of the expelled Sudanese men who said they had been beaten after returning to Sudan.
“They picked me up immediately after landing in Sudan, interrogated me for hours and struck my feet with sticks. They only released me two days later,” said one of the men according to the Belgian news account, which used a pseudonym for the man because he feared for his
security. “I was so scared that I lay in bed at home for three days.”
Another man said he was picked up by police and beaten for three hours during an interrogation, in which the officials accused him of being a political enemy.
Through an intermediary, both men declined a request for an interview, saying their communications were being monitored by the Sudanese government and that Sudanese security officials told them after the initial article was published not to speak to journalists.
The collaboration with the Sudanese officials brought representatives of that government, which has been cited for human rights abuses, into the nation that hosts the capital of the European Union, Brussels. Although Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel later said the Belgian and Sudanese governments did not sign an agreement formally outlining
the terms of the partnership, the Sudanese officials were granted access to detention facilities holding migrants who had been arrested for being in Belgium without the proper documents.
Then they were offered the chance to question the detainees. Belgian leaders have said that although representatives of the Belgian government were present, an Arabic translator was not always present so Belgian officials could not always understand what was being said.
Lawyers for some of the migrants said the Sudanese officials threatened the detainees they talked to, warning that if they applied for asylum in Belgium, they would be targeted for abuse in Sudan if they returned home. That alleged threat could have served to discourage asylum requests, since half of Sudanese asylum seekers are rejected in Belgium.
The Sudanese Embassy in Belgium did not respond to a request for comment.
“This whole story was bound to end in disaster,” said Koert Debeuf, the director of the European branch of the Tahrir Center for Middle East Policy, who stayed in touch with some of Sudanese men after they were deported and helped publicize the allegations of abuse. “These Sudanese guys are frightened to death.”
Rights groups have condemned the collaboration.
“They did a lot of harm to these people for nothing. The disproportion between the goal they have and the harm they have created is enormous,” said Alexis Deswaef, the head of the Belgian League of Human Rights who filed a suit to halt the deportations. The Belgian
government won the case on appeal, after a judge ruled that the group had no standing to sue.
But Michel, the prime minister, has so far stood behind the actions of his migration secretary.
“The government has been implementing a firm and humane migration policy,” he wrote in a post on Facebook this week. “Belgium makes it a point of honor to respect European and international obligations.”