Alternate FM Xydakis’ statement on the refugee issue, in response to statements from European politicians
In recent days, extremist conservative European circles have been
attempting to target Greece, presenting it as the source of the refugee
problem. In this context, they have taken the Greek coastguard to task
for supposedly not “protecting” the maritime borders by intercepting
refugee and migration flows by military means.
We are absolutely clear on this.
Greece
is guarding its national border, which is also a European border. What
it cannot do, and what it will not start to do, is sink boats and drown
women and children, because this is prohibited by international and
European conventions, as well as by our cultural values. Greece is a
guardian of European culture, and the same holds true for the countries
that are supporting the refugees, including Germany, Austria, Sweden and
others. To date, Greece has rescued 104,000 children and adults from
the waters of the Aegean.
The pressure on Greece to change the
terms of controlling the Aegean (How should it do that? By pushing back
and sinking plastic boats?) entails the risk of increasing the already
large number of deaths: Just the day before yesterday we mourned another
42 lives, including 17 young children. Thus, anyone asking for this
should have the political honesty not to ask for it indirectly, but
directly, endorsing the illegal policy of refoulement. Anything else is
political opportunism.
To refute a few more lies: As of July,
Greece requested additional assistance in the form of personnel,
vessels, equipment and Eurodac devices from Frontex, along with the
upgrading of operation Poseidon in the Aegean. This assistance was late
in arriving. Nevertheless, even with reduced forces, Frontex, a European
institution, has been operating together with Greece for years now in
the Aegean and shares responsibility for safeguarding the European
borders. Anyone who wants to level criticism at the rules based on which
Frontex operates should do so openly, within the framework of the EU.
Moreover,
despite any delays, Greece will be completing the hotspots in a matter
of days; hotspots that are already operating. However, the
aforementioned critics needn’t respond: Will the completion of the
hotspots solve their problem, or will they then remember that what
concerns them is the number of refugees?
What does Europe need to
do? It needs to quickly implement the programme – decided on by the
European Council – for the relocation of 160,000. A programme facing
many problems due to the fact that many EU member states are either
delaying their response to the hundreds of applications for relocation
from Greece or – even worse – completely rejecting the process. Is this,
too, perhaps the fault of Greece, a country that, since 1990, has
hosted some one million immigrants – 10% of its population – in
completely harmonious conditions? And of course Greece itself is
accepting the relocation of refugees. Is it perhaps Greece’s fault that
the EU has been unable to exert pressure for the return of migrants to
their countries of origin?
It is vital that the EU’s Joint Action
Plan with Turkey go into operation. From the very outset, Greece agreed
with this Plan, which provides for a drastic reduction in flows, safe
relocation of refugees from Turkish territory, and extensive readmission
of migrants to Turkey, within the framework of the Greek-Turkish
readmission agreement.
At the same time, the European Union needs
to get to work on the real problem – the war in Syria and the
humanitarian crisis in Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey – taking on, with its
organs and the Netherlands Presidency, jointly with the UN, the
befitting role of peacemaker. Only in this way will we, all Europeans
together, resolve the current crisis – as well as the next crisis,
which, in the world we live in, is inevitable.