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In Europe, Wave of Illegal Migration Has
Deadly Cost
By MARJORIE MILLER, Times Staff
Writer
LONDON--The
58 Chinese immigrants found suffocated in the back of a refrigerated truck
in Dover last month have exposed a horrifyingly simple truth: Men, women
and children are dying to get into Europe.
Although the Dover tragedy was extreme,
it was hardly isolated. More than 2,000 people are known to have died
crossing the seas and borders of Western Europe in the last seven years,
and the mortal tide continues with numbing regularity.
They drown in the Adriatic on the way to
Italy or in the Strait of Gibraltar while headed for Spain. They step on
mines along the Iranian-Turkish border and freeze to death on an icy
mountain pass between Bulgaria and Greece. They die in the landing gear of
a commercial airplane. This grim toll is
the underbelly of Europe's economic success and, to some degree, of its
efforts to clamp down on illegal immigration. Pulled by a demand for
unskilled laborers and pushed by desperation in their own countries, more
and more Asians, Africans, Indians and Eastern Europeans are making their
way to Western Europe's dynamic cities.
Visa requirements, sanctions against
airlines transporting illegal immigrants and new enforcement measures,
however, have forced these desperate migrants to seek ever more
clandestine and dangerous routes into Western Europe. Whether they are
refugees fleeing persecution or laborers looking for a job, for the
majority of migrants the only way into Europe is illegally and often
perilously. Professional traffickers are
happy to ply their trade to the 250,000 refugees who ask for asylum in
European Union countries each year and to the hundreds of thousands of
economic migrants looking for a better life. Law enforcement officials and
refugee workers say the business of human trafficking has become as
lucrative as drug smuggling in Europe.
"There has always been illegal
immigration, but there is a massive growth in organized, illegal
immigration. Instead of coming in ones and twos, they are coming in
fifties and hundreds," said Fleur Strong, a spokeswoman for Britain's
National Criminal Intelligence Service.
"In most European countries, the
penalties for human trafficking are lower than for drugs, and the money is
just as good," Strong said. While the
short trip from Albania to Italy may cost as little as $500 to $1,000, the
price of an illegal journey from China's Fujian province to London ranges
from $18,000 to $30,000. The penalty for
people smuggling in Britain is $3,000 a head for drivers and up to 10
years in prison for trafficking masterminds. Drug smuggling is punishable
by prison terms of up to life. "Human
smuggling is a growth industry for organized crime, and [the smugglers]
adapt well to changing circumstances," said Mark Pugash, a spokesman for
the Kent County police in Dover.
Smugglers Can Quickly Reroute
Their 'Cargo' When routes from China
to London through Russia come under scrutiny, traffickers quickly transfer
their "cargo" through Thailand or Cambodia. Law enforcement pressure on
one European border may shift immigrants and would-be refugees to another.
"The majority of immigrants have a
likely destination, but when they arrive [at the border] they look at the
circumstances in Europe," said Bobby Chan, a legal advisor with the
Central London Law Center. "There are always rumors about the amnesty
situation. Recently, clients told me there were rumors that there would be
an amnesty in Britain for the Queen Mother's 100th birthday."
Immigration attorney Wah-Piow Tan
believes that the 58 Chinese who died en route from the Netherlands to
Dover might have been the victims of one smuggler's efforts to outwit
British law enforcement techniques. Typically, immigrants have been
ferried across the channel inside canvas-topped trucks that let in air but
also make it easy for police dogs to sniff out human scent.
"The syndicates have responded with more
expensive transportation. At one point the air vent was closed on this
truck," Tan said. "Was it because something went wrong, or was it because
of a fear of being detected by the dogs?"
An estimated 3 million to 5 million
undocumented immigrants live in the European Union, compared with about 7
million in the United States, which has a slightly smaller population than
Western Europe. But about 500,000
illegal immigrants try to get into the EU each year, according to British
Home Office figures. British officials
detected 616 people trying to enter the country illegally in 1996 and
16,000 last year. They now nab about 100 illegal immigrants daily in
Dover--stopping a small fraction of the 4,000 trucks that roll off the
ferries each day. About half of the immigrants say they had planned to ask
for asylum, and half say they had planned to remain illegally.
Across the channel in Pas de Calais,
French officials detained 8,500 illegal immigrants last year, an increase
of more than 500% over the previous year. Improved detection might account
for some of the increase, but experts say the numbers reflect rising
migration across the region. As for how
many people die trying to get in, figures are anecdotal. The International
Organization for Migration in Geneva states on its Web site that "numbers
collated from just two news sources show that at least 467
smuggled/trafficked migrants died in 1999 and the first half of 2000."
The Dutch organization United for
Intercultural Action has compiled a list of more than 2,060 people who
have died trying to reach Europe since 1993. But they say this is far from
complete because it represents only those cases that have come to the
attention of authorities. Other victims might have been lost at sea or
died in airtight trucks that officials didn't manage to detect. Still
others might have died under the yoke of traffickers who forced them into
prostitution and other coerced labor to pay off their debts.
Clearly, the toll continues:
* Last week, a 10-month-old Kosovo
Albanian died of dehydration on the southern Italian coast town of Porto
Badisco, where she reportedly was ditched by a smuggler fleeing police.
This week, Italian authorities averted a disaster when they rescued 228
Iranian Kurds and Moroccans--including 53 children--from a boat wreck off
the southern coast near Reggio Calabria.
* More than 30 immigrants died trying to
enter Greece illegally from November 1999 through January 2000, including
two Eastern European women who froze to death on an icy mountain pass from
Bulgaria after being stranded when smugglers failed to meet them in a
snowstorm. * Spain's Guardia Civil
pulled 29 bodies from Spanish waters in 1999, and immigrant associations
estimate that, with the increased traffic, three times that many have
drowned already this year trying to cross the Strait of Gibraltar in
rickety boats. Among them were five North African men and a 16-year-old
girl who drowned when their vessel sank near the southern coastal town of
Tarifa on May 19. Illegal immigrants
normally travel without documents, and many victims are never identified.
Many have no family in Europe to make the identification, and, in other
cases, relatives are too afraid to come forward.
This has complicated the job of naming
the 58 immigrants from Fujian province who were discovered in Dover last
month behind a load of tomatoes in an airtight truck.
Many Chinese immigrants who believe that
they had family on the truck were afraid to present themselves to
authorities in Britain either because they are here illegally or because
they fear it would prejudice their own pending asylum cases, according to
immigration lawyers. As a result, Kent police went to China to collect DNA
samples to match against the victims'.
While Kosovo Albanians, Afghans and
Iraqis are likely to claim asylum when they arrive in Britain, Chinese and
Indian immigrants are more likely to go underground. Regardless of their
intentions once they get here, most immigrants arrive by the same
dangerous means as the Chinese who died.
Gon Nokr, a 23-year-old Kosovo Albanian,
paid about $6,000 to be taken from his hometown of Kosovska Mitrovica to
London eight months ago. For that price, he walked to the neighboring
country of Macedonia, where he was loaded into the back of a truck next to
25 other people for a four-day drive with one stop for food and water.
"I was very, very scared. There was no
fresh air, no eating or drinking," Nokr said.
Rodion Gulakov, 25, of St. Petersburg,
Russia, was one of the luckier ones. He bought a plane ticket from Russia
to Cyprus with a stopover in London, where he jumped ship between Gatwick
and Heathrow airports. But then he had to pay a compatriot $700 for
information on how to ask for refuge.
Many Take Extra Risk to Reach
Britain Nokr and Gulakov are two of
the 680 refugees awaiting answers to their asylum claims at the
government-funded London Park Hotel, an example of why immigrants seek out
Western Europe. In Britain, asylum-seekers receive free housing, food
vouchers, legal aid and necessary medical care and, after six months, are
allowed to go to work. Although they may
already have reached Europe, many economic immigrants want to take the
extra gamble on crossing the channel to Britain because they think they
have a better chance of finding work and living undetected here. Chinese
immigrants say they can disappear into Europe's largest Chinese
community--about 150,000 in London--and work for bosses who speak their
language. Others say Britain is a more
open, less policed society than Germany, where residency papers are
required for something as simple as opening a bank account, or France,
where immigrants are routinely stopped on buses and trains. There is no
national identity card in Britain as there is in other European countries,
and there is work to be had. Britain is
trying to discourage illegal immigrants and to make its borders less
penetrable. On top of visa requirements introduced in the 1980s and fines
on airlines carrying improperly documented passengers, the government has
introduced $5,000-a-head fines on employers hiring illegal immigrants and,
in April, $3,000-a-head fines on truck drivers transporting them.
But immigration experts say this has
hardly deterred immigrants who can earn from 10 to 30 times as much as
they can earn back home, or the traffickers who are making a killing.
"The more barriers you put up, the more
this encourages the involvement of criminals and organized crime," said
John Morrison, author of a U.N. High Commission for Refugees report on
human trafficking released last week.
Times staff writers John-Thor Dahlburg
in Paris and Carol J. Williams in Berlin, researchers Christian Retzlaff
in Berlin, Maria de Cristofaro in Rome and special correspondents Maria
Petrakis in Greece and Cristina Mateo in Madrid contributed to this
report.
Search the archives of the Los Angeles Times for similar stories
about: Europe
- Immigration, Illegal
Aliens - Europe, Accidental
Deaths. You will not be charged to look for stories, only to
retrieve one.
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