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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, September 28, 2016
Afghan
asylum seeker Shakira Sarwari, 27, and her two children, Mohammed, 17
months, and Setayesh, 7, are taken off a Munich-bound train in Salzburg,
Austria, by German police. (Anthony Faiola/The Washington Post)
By Anthony Faiola September 27 at 4:35 PM
SALZBURG, Austria – The 5:08 p.m. to
Munich pulled into Salzburg Central Station, and four German police
officers boarded the train. This was a migrant sweep, and the cops moved
quickly past the fair-skinned passengers, questioning a group of Saudi
tourists and a Chicano from Chicago.
In the last seat of the last car, the patrol found Shakira Sarwari.
Eight months on the road from war-torn Kandahar, the young Afghan mother
clung tightly to her 17-month-old son. Her 7-year-old daughter huddled
close, nervously eying the officers. They were now one station away from
their final destination:
Germany, the promised land of refugees.
But they were not there yet — and after more than a million arrivals in
2015, the German welcome is no longer so warm. In fact, a crackdown at
the border is giving those migrants who make it this far the worst odds
of crossing than at any point since the height of the crisis last year.
It is more evidence, some say, that as Europe’s migrant crisis stokes a
mounting voter backlash, even generous Germany is quietly closing its
door.
“Your passport,” asked one of the officers, who now have permission from
the Austrians to stop migrants on trains bound for Germany.
Sarwari replied with a pleading look, holding up an empty palm.
“Where are you going?” the officer asked slowly. Sarwari tugged
nervously at her pink headscarf. In her arms, her son squirmed and
whined. Her daughter, terrified, was on the verge of tears.
“To Germany,” Sarwari said. “To Germany.”
The officer shook his head.
“You’ll have to come with us,” he said.
In September 2015, as thousands of migrants a day were converging on
Europe, German Chancellor Angela Merkel issued an astounding pledge. In
the face of raging wars in the Middle East, she said there was “no
limit” to the number of refugees Germany could accept. That promise —
along with some of the most generous refugee benefits in the world —
made the same country that sparked World War II an asylum seeker’s
paradise.
But that has already begun to change. Since March, tougher controls in the Balkans, Greece and Turkey have
sharply reduced the number of new arrivals. But hundreds of migrants
each week — mostly from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and Africa — are still
attempting to enter Germany.
Yet the nation that took in more migrants last year than the rest of
Europe combined is making it harder to get in. In August, Germany
refused entry to 1,070 of the 2,300 migrants — or 46 percent — it
stopped on its side of the Austrian border. In January, when arrival
numbers were far higher, only 7 percent of migrants were turned back.
The smaller number of arrivals now, German officials say, has allowed
them to more rigorously question migrants and apply rules meant to weed
out economic migrants and opportunists. But critics say the policy is
too sweeping and that there’s a good chance that people who qualify for
German asylum are not being given a chance to apply. A large portion of
those coming now also already have family in Germany and are trying to
skirt years-long waiting periods for family reunions .
Yet the German message to migrants is clear: It’s not so easy anymore.
“The reality of today’s Germany is a different one than the refugee
fairytale of last summer,” said Karl Kopp, spokesman for the migrant aid
group Pro Asyl.
It happens as Germany is drowning in a backlog of hundreds of thousands
of asylum requests. Last year, it paid $5.91 billion in aid and shelter,
more than double the cost in 2014. A violent standoff last week between
migrants and right-wing Germans became the latest sign of rising
tensions. Germans are investigating 60 cases of migrants allegedly
conspiring with Islamist militants.
Perhaps the most important factor: The chancellor’s Christian Democratic
Union is suffering steep political losses because of her refugee
stance, losing ground in a string of local elections and surrendering
voters to the anti-migrant, Alternative for Germany party only a year
before Merkel’s possible reelection bid. After another bitter defeat in
liberal Berlin, Merkel this week offered a mea culpa.
“If I could, I would turn back time, many, many years in order to be
able to better prepare myself, the whole government and all those
responsible, for the situation that hit us rather unexpectedly in late
summer of 2015,” she said.
Germany is now rejecting more than a third of all asylum applications
for those already there, and it is trying to negotiate mass returns to
countries like Afghanistan. The tough-talking interior minister, Thomas
de Maizière, has even suggested that Germany wants to send many refugees
back to bankrupt Greece, where most of them first entered Europe.
In the graceful city of Salzburg — the birthplace of Mozart that last
year turned into the main gateway into Germany for migrants — German
police are going further. Since June, they have been boarding trains
here to pull off irregular migrants with Austria’s blessing. Some
migrants are briefly detained in Austrian jails. Most get 14 days to
leave the country or apply for asylum in Austria. Still others could get
pushed back by the Austrians to Italy or Slovenia.
It is all part, observers say, of Europe’s closing door.
As the German police led Shakira Sarwari off the train in Salzburg, her
daughter, Setayesh, dressed in pink sneakers and an Elsa shirt from
Disney’s “Frozen,” broke down in tears. In the busy terminal, and
flanked by cops, they walked past gawking passengers as Sarwari tried to
comfort her crying son.
“Ssh, ssh,” she said softly, cradling Mohammed in her arms.
The German police showed the three of them into an industrial-looking
room fitted with a computer terminal, a few wooden desks and a bench
behind a partial fence. She went behind the fence with a male officer,
who did a cursory check. She placidly complied when he asked her to
remove her headscarf. Mohammed cried as the police took his mother’s
digital fingerprints.
As requested, she emptied her possessions onto a table — the most
important being a plastic bag with a few hundred euros, all that she had
left. She flushed as she was presented with, and asked to sign, a
document in her native Pashtun language stating that she was being
denied entry to Germany. She would later tell an interpreter that she
couldn’t read or write.
Via a telephone interpreter, she was able to communicate with the
police, telling them that her husband was already in Germany and she was
trying to join him there.
“I want to go to Germany,” she said.
“You cannot go,” an officer explained. “Because of European law.” She was told she would need to stay in Austria.
“I do not want to stay here,” she said, shaking her head. “My husband is in Germany.”
Her girl could not stop crying now. One of the German officers, Horst
Auerbach, gave her daughter a gentle look and a glass of water.
“It gets to you,” he said, a lump in his throat.
Within two hours, the family was handed over to the Austrian police. A
sturdy female cop with plastic gloves took Sarwari away for a more
thorough search. Afterward, the family spent the night at the main
Salzburg police station.
The next morning, like most migrants taken off the trains here, she was
issued an order to leave the country or apply for asylum in Austria.
Some Austrian politicians are bitterly complaining that the German
policy is leaving more migrants on Austria’s doorstep — although
Austria, too, is trying to send some migrants back to Italy and
Slovenia. Officials in Vienna say both they and the Germans are simply
following European rules.
It remains unclear how efficient the German measures are at thwarting
migrants. All the migrants in Salzburg are indeed being stopped. But
farther north, at other border crossings, more asylum seekers are
managing to get across the German border, where German officers decide
whether to push them back. Almost 1 out of every 2 are refused.
Decisions, officials say, are made on a case-by-case basis.
As Sarwari prepared to leave the police station, she said she had no
real plan. She did not speak German or English. She did not know which
way to go.
“I made it this far by myself, with the kids, and I am going to go to
Germany,” she said, determined. “I will manage to find a way.”
Stephanie Kirchner contributed to this report.