The subject of
migration has been difficult to avoid in recent weeks. The debate on the scale and extent of the
present movements and their effects has been a muddle of thinking, largely
because so many in power are in a state of denial about the nature of it.
I am the child
of many migrations. In the generation in
which there are 32 ancestors only two are from the vicinity of the city where I
was born and from which my parents took their identity. As we moved soon after in the next city there
were none. Further back in ancestry
there are others from beyond the Atlantic Isles and let us leave out all the
DNA considerations.
This is
mentioned, yet again, because too often even to discuss issues of
migration is often decried as racism.
Similarly to raise questions of population growth and impact invites the
same reaction. For some reason
"sustainability" became a dirty word in the early years of this
century.
The present
situation may not have been possible to predict in detail a decade or so ago
but the risks of a major movement from one part of the world to another was
certainly there. It was always a
question of what, which, who, where and when the first mass movements would
occur. What was a higher degree of risk was
that Western Europe would be a destination.
Sixty odd
years ago I was a younger person with progressive ideas about the peoples of
the world and internationalism etc. in that period after World War 2 when in
Western Europe many ideas about the relationships between states, beliefs and
peoples were formed. But the world has
changed.
One change is
that world population has tripled and the demands on resources have more than
tripled. Another is that the
expectations of what is basic are far greater, notably in Western Europe and so
in the poorer and more unstable parts of the world there is the desire to at
least share them. If that cannot be done
in many places the logic is for some people to move to Western Europe.
What follows
is that if small minorities from states with large populations move out
together with larger minorities from others the result is that in the richer
states of Western Europe the inward migration is relatively large for those
countries.
Moreover, because of the
patterns of tribal and extended families cultures once a few arrive and settle
the long run effect is to generate increasing levels of related migration.
In the early 1970's
when Idi Amin of Uganda expelled the Indians, one reason was that they had
become a growing foreign element that was increasing in this way. In the UK where many arrived, once
established those links to Asia continued and have contributed to later
migration.
In the UK
there was already a debate about the impact of migration at the time and
reservations about such a level. Edward
Heath explained that it was only one family per parish so the effect would be
small. The Indian families did not
disperse; in fact they were mostly concentrated into a small number of urban
areas as is common with much migration both before and since.
With the present
crisis in Syria unfolding, it seems that Yvette Cooper is a devoted follower of
Edward Heath in declaring that a quota for the UK means only ten people a
town. If, however, several thousand
decided that the attractions of Pontefract and Castleford were preferred, I
think she would become aware that it is not as simple as that especially if the
racecourse became a tented suburb.
This
from Naked Capitalism by Raul Ilargi Meijer titled "The Real Refugee
Crisis Is In The Future" linked from Automatic Earth suggests that there
is a lot more to come:
Quote:
Europe needs
to look at the future of this crisis in very different ways than it is doing
now. Or it will face far bigger problems than it does now.
The
desperation of millions of human beings, manipulated by traffickers and by
terrorist groups is also an instrument of disintegration of the countries of
origin and of destabilization of the host countries.
It is
estimated that sub-Saharan Africa will have 900 million more inhabitants
in the next twenty years. Of these, at least 200 million are young people
looking for work. The chaos of their countries of origin will push
them further north.
That is the
future. It will no more go away by itself, and by ignoring it, than the present
crisis, which, devastating as it may be, pales in comparison. Europe risks
being overrun in the next two decades.
And as things
stand, it has no plans whatsoever to deal with this, other than the military,
and police dogs, barbed wire, tear gas, fences and stun grenades.
This lack of
realism on both the political and the humane level will backfire on Europe and
turn it into a very unpleasant place to be, both for Europeans and for
refugees. Most likely it will turn the entire continent into a warzone.
Unquote.
One aspect
that does worry me is that in all the discussion and debate both now and in the
recent past there has been almost complete ignorance of the history of
population movement and forms of migration.
If my male Y
Chromosome DNA is correct I might go back to the depths of Saxony or if a
period long before somewhere in mid Africa.
But I fear I would not be welcome.
The present
crisis is just the beginning.
"The present crisis is just the beginning."
ReplyDeleteI agree.
"I am the child of many migrations. In the generation in which there are 32 ancestors only two are from the vicinity of the city" -This is very selective.
ReplyDeleteMost people consider their nation as their nation. No clever DNA talk.
We are a very small area on the face of the earth. I would fear a 'cultural revolution' probably based on age, terminating at 60? Think back in World history.
ReplyDelete