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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, August 28, 2018
Anti-Muslim Lobbies & Immigration Control In The West

An
inconvenient truth behind West’s current immigration policy is that it
is shaped by the power of anti-Muslim and Far Right lobbies. The entire
debate about controlling the intake of immigrants emerged in the wake of
Muslim refugees arriving by the boatloads after the American invasion
of Iraq and Afghanistan. The exodus started then continues till today
through recurring episodes of violence perpetrated by both state and
non-state actors. The shores of Europe, Britain and Australia are the
favoured destinations of Muslim refugees.
The refugee problem in general and exodus of Muslim refugees in
particular also coincided with a rising wave of discontent over economic
difficulties resulting from a globalising neo-liberal economic
ideology. This ideology, in the name of promoting economic growth
through private enterprise, market competition and technological
innovation relegated issues of equity and distribution to the margin of
economic policy making and assumed that those issues would be handled
best by the market itself through the so called trickle-down effect. On
that assumption welfare economic models and economic safety nets
structured on Keynesian foundation were systematically dismantled in all
major economies starting with the US. This switch over to a free
market, free trade and free enterprise ended in a vicious game of
survival of the fittest and the largest The consequence was widening
income disparities, falling wages, lack of job security, weakening of
all countervailing powers and colossal environmental neglect.
When economic adversities mount rulers always look for scapegoats
“Muslim terrorists” and “Islamic terrorism”, products of Western
imperial misadventures, fitted the candidacy. While the traditional left
and right in politics embraced economic neo-liberalism with differences
in its modus operandi,
the far right on the other hand while surrendering to the same ideology
blamed the newly arriving Muslim immigrants and Islam for all problems
confronting the Christian world. Its anti-Muslim stand and Islamophobia
provided a new twist to West’s age old anti-Semitism. The idea of
multiculturalism celebrated by inclusive political regimes was scorned
by the Far Right in favour of a socio-political milieu ruled by
Judeo-Christian values. At least one of its politicians in Australia
even called for a ‘final solution’, echoing the Nazi leader.
A number of Far Right parties such as the National Front in France,
Independence Party in UK, Party for Freedom in the Netherlands, the
Danish People Party and the One Nation Party in Australia among several
others, and all of them in the West, structured their political campaign
on the populist issue of stopping and turning the boats and saving the
West from Islam’s threat. Paulin Hanson’s One Nation Party for example,
was the direct result of anti-Muslim paranoia linked to the influx of
refugees from war-torn Middle East. She was not mincing words when she
said that Australia was in danger of being swamped by Muslims and Islam.
The rising popularity of these parties clearly threatened the erosion of
electoral support to the traditional centre-right and centre-left
parties. Donald Trump’s victory in US Presidential Election was clearly
won on an anti-Muslim platform. He translated his policy into action by
banning Muslims from seven Muslim countries, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia,
Sudan, Syria and Yemen, even though none of them ever posed a threat to
the US.
It therefore became self-evident to traditional parties that they too
should change track if they were to arrest losing further and win back
if possible the lost support to the Far Right. The dilemma is how to do
it without openly advocating Islamophobia. Controlling immigration and
strengthening border security are two areas that promised an escape
route. Political opportunism has driven main stream parties in Europe
and the West to hide their Islamophobia behind a seemingly neutral
agenda on immigration, citizenship and national security. The running
battle over limiting asylum seekers into Europe and emergence of
coalitions between main stream parties and anti-Muslim groups reflect
the political success of Islamophobia. This trend is clearly witnessed
in Belgium, France, Switzerland, Italy and Austria. Germany too which is
relatively more benevolent towards Muslim refugees is forced to toe a
hard line. In Australia, the success of the Far Right is manifested in
the progressive decline of Muslim immigrants into the country, which has
more than halved from 40.5% in 2013-14 to 18.9% in 2016-17, and Chip Le
Grand in The Australian (27
August 2018), reports that “Scott Morrison’s elevation as Prime
Minister is expected to further reduce Muslim immigration, with the
former immigration minister a prominent supporter of Australia
prioritising Christian refugees ahead of Muslim asylum-seekers”.
