Презентация Migration policy of Spain & Switzerland онлайн
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Презентации » Политика » Migration policy of Spain & Switzerland
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- Всего слайдов:20 слайдов
- Для класса:1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11
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Слайды и текст к этой презентации:
№5 слайд
Содержание слайда: With hundreds of thousands of migrants now arriving elsewhere in Europe, that sounds magical. “Spain has accumulated experience that no other country has”, says Carmen Gonzalez, a migration specialist at the country’s National Distance Education University. But can that experience be applied to today’s surge?
The secret of Spain’s success was co-operation with transit countries such as Senegal, Morocco and Mauritania, says Gonzalo Robles, the government’s aid agency.
№6 слайд
Содержание слайда: As a former secretary of state for immigration, Mr Robles drew up agreements that helped block Morocco as a departure point both for the Canaries and Gibraltar. They included joint maritime patrols backed up by a sophisticated radar system that could detect boats leaving Morocco’s Mediterranean coast, just nine miles away from Spain at its closest, and tip off police.
№7 слайд
Содержание слайда: Patrolling the 2,395km of Atlantic coastline shared by Senegal, Mauritania and the Moroccan-run Western Sahara (not to mention Morocco’s own, long stretch) is a task of another order. But the aim is still to catch boats as they leave. Spain has achieved this with only a few dozen of its own frontier police deployed in Africa. Most work is done by local police, who receive Spanish money, equipment and training. ‘A trained officer can always spot a migrant boat’, says Nicolas Meca, the Spanish police commissioner in charge of the operation in Senegal.
№8 слайд
Содержание слайда: Poorly paid local police, once easy targets for traffickers’ bribes, now receive daily allowances from Spain when on migration watch. 30 meter patrol boats operated by Spain’s Civil Guard police, or donated to their Senegalese and Mauritanian counterparts, are maintained with Spanish money. And a Spanish helicopter with Senegalese police on board watches from the air. A generous development aid program has bought additional goodwill.
№9 слайд
Содержание слайда: Traffickers’ boats are intercepted and forced back to shore. Though migrants are rarely arrested in Senegal, their stories of failure and wasted money spread quickly, stemming the flow. One of the few to get through in the early days of the crackdown was 31 year old Ibrahima Dieme, whose pirogue slipped secretly out of Hann carrying 75 migrants from several African countries. The experience was terrifying and pointless.
№10 слайд
Содержание слайда: ‘From the beach, you think it is calm in the ocean. But you go into the sea and the ocean is huge: the waves are deadly; the storms are deadly’, he recalls.
The crackdown made Mr Dieme’s journey far tougher than the coast-hugging trips of early migrants, as the smugglers tried to dodge patrols by sticking to open sea. A promised 72-hour trip took ten days as fuel ran low. The crew smoked marijuana and jittery passengers threatened to jump overboard.
№11 слайд
Содержание слайда: Mr Dieme eventually landed in the Canaries, but fell foul of Spain’s repatriation agreement with Senegal. After spending over two weeks in detention, he was sent home with some money, a sandwich and a bottle of water. The roughly $900 he gave the traffickers in 10 times the monthly salary he now earn
helping young people find work.
Spain’s economic crash in 2008 further put job-seeking migrants off. With sea borne migration close to zero and a swelling budget deficit, Spain could have shut the operation down.
№12 слайд
Содержание слайда: But the agreements signed in 2006 have been renewed each year, blocking the path to new migrants from Syria, Eritrea and elsewhere – enhancing Spain’s relationship with border forces in a region with other security threats, such as Islamist terrorism. Maintaining the program has required Spain to turn a blind eye to its partners’ dubious democratic credentials. A coup in Mauritania in 2008, later followed by elections, did not change the agreements there.
№13 слайд
Содержание слайда: Money has also gone to helping transit countries patrol their land borders, forming barriers further down the routes that crisscross northern Africa. And the transit countries have taken a more active approach to managing migration. Last year Morocco gave residency papers to some 18,000 sub-Saharan Africans, making them easier to monitor and integrate. Mauritania, with a population of just 3,5m, expelled 6,463 immigrants last year, up from 713 the previous year.
№14 слайд
Содержание слайда: Mr. Robles reckons the lessons learned by Spain can be applied elsewhere. Wide ranging bilateral agreements that cover policing, aid and the buttressing of state institutions in transit countries are, he says, the key to success. But economic migration from Africa and a flood of refugees from war-torn countries such as Syria are very different. So, too, is dealing with a shattered state like Libya.
№15 слайд
Содержание слайда: On October 15th European leaders were due to discuss a deal with Turkey, including the readmission of failed asylum seekers. So far Spain, which has the advantage of being at the far end of the Mediterranean, has avoided Europe’s current migration headache. But it is seeing migrant detention centers in Ceuta and Melilla, two African enclaves encircled with barbed wire fences, fill up with Syrians who are through with fake Moroccan documents.
№17 слайд
Содержание слайда: If any prosperous European country has been left
untouched by Europe’s latest migrant crisis, it is
Switzerland. While the country is not a member of the European Union, it belongs to its Schengen visa free travel zone, and has agreed to take part in the mandatory relocation scheme for asylum applicants the EU adopted in September. But it intends to take on only a few additional migrants.
№18 слайд
Содержание слайда: The government of the Alpine country had planned to admit about 29,000 asylum seekers in 2015. Over the summer, as hundreds of thousands of refugees surged through the Balkans into neighboring Austria and Germany, Switzerland expanded that estimate – but only to about 30,000. The country’s mountainous terrain and lack of major rail hubs seem to have kept it off the major migrant routes.
№19 слайд
Содержание слайда: Nevertheless, voters rewarded right wing politicians who campaigned on promises to curb immigration. After weeks of news images of migrants swarming trains at Budapest, Munich or Calais, one opinion survey found the crisis topped the list of voters’ concerns. It also aggravated long festering worries about immigration, overcrowding and the impact of foreign cultures on Switzerland’s social cohesion.
№20 слайд
Содержание слайда: In February 2014 the voters defied bilateral agreements with the EU by voting in a referendum to impose immigration limits even on EU citizens. Those restrictions remain in limbo, waiting for the government to pass them into law. Centrist parties have been reluctant to do so: the EU says any limits on the free movement of European workers violate treaty obligations, and it could retaliate by terminating all of its trade agreements with Switzerland.
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