MADRID (IPS) - The process of legalising the status of undocumented
immigrants, which began Monday (February 7) in Spain, will open doors to
foreign workers who are already living in the country in order to close them
more tightly against those who try to enter in the future.
The opening of the process to grant work and residency permits to hundreds
of thousands of undocumented workers came shortly after a boat carrying 227
people, mainly young men, from sub-Saharan Africa was intercepted off the
coast of Spain's Canary Islands.
The decrepit boat had set out on January 6 from the West African nation of
Ivory Coast. The would-be immigrants had recently been surviving on just
water, sugar and candy, according to police reports, which said two
traffickers abandoned the craft in a speedboat before it reached the
islands. The passengers identified the two fleeing men as the crew.
Although the arrival of immigrants by sea or the sinking of their boats
captures the most media attention, undocumented foreigners also enter Spain
by air or land from other European countries, while Spain is seen as a major
gateway for immigration to the EU.
Because of that, the socialist government of Prime Minister Jose Luis
Rodriguez Zapatero "backs, first and foremost, a common (EU) immigration
policy," said Spanish Immigration Secretary Consuelo Rum’.
The government also noted that once the process for granting amnesty comes
to a close, only immigrants who have signed work contracts with Spanish
companies before they arrive in this country will be eligible for work and
residency permits.
Meanwhile, in London, Britain's Home Secretary Charles Clarke announced
Monday that the government of Prime Minister Tony Blair would eliminate the
automatic right to permanent residency that currently applies to all
immigrants who have lived in the country for four years.
Under the new plan unveiled by Clarke, only professionals and skilled
workers, like doctors, nurses and teachers, will be eligible for permanent
residency status, but after five years instead of four, and only if they
pass an English language exam.
The reform of British immigration law would also cover asylum-seekers and
refugees, who would be granted asylum for five years, subject to renewal,
rather than for life.
In addition, the British government, following the U.S. lead, plans to
install in 2008 a system to record the fingerprints of all foreigners
entering Britain.
In France, Interior Minister Dominique de Villep’n and Nicolas Sarkozy, the
president of the conservative ruling UMP party, are in favour of stiffer
obstacles to immigration, although President Jacques Chirac is still
opposed.
And in Germany, a new law that went into force on January 1 bans workers
from outside of the EU from working legally in the country, except under
bilateral temporary work agreements between Germany and other nations.
People from the 10 countries that joined the EU this year will also have to
wait seven years before they are allowed to take jobs legally in Germany.
Yet another large EU country, Italy, has adopted a strict immigration law
that only allows entry to foreigners who come equipped with a work contract,
and they are only allowed to stay for the duration of the contract.
The debates of EU governments are caught between the need to import both
skilled and unskilled labour to bolster economies and ageing populations
with low birth rates, complaints from those opposed to immigration, and
fears of being unable to control growing immigration flows.
As many as 800,000 immigrants may qualify for the amnesty that began to be
offered Monday in Spain.
To be eligible, applicants must have an identity document, demonstrate that
they were living in Spain before August, have a job contract for the next
six months or more, and have no criminal record.
Those who fail to meet these criteria should not remain in the country,
because they face the risk of deportation, warned Rum’.
Immigrants will be able to hand in their applications at 160 social security
offices around the country that will open in the evening over the next three
months.
After the May 7 deadline, businesses employing undocumented immigrants will
be subject to fines.
A total of 120,000 foreigners were deported by Spain in 2004, 30,000 more
than in 2003. So far this year, 10,000 have been sent back to their
countries of origin.
According to the government, each deportation to Romania costs the
equivalent of 2,300 dollars, to Senegal 2,500, to Ecuador 4,900 and to China
8,600.
Immigrant advocacy groups say the only thing that could curb the inflow of
undocumented immigrants is sustainable development in their home countries,
which is not a short-term possibility.
Instead of costly measures to curb immigration, these groups are calling for
industrialised countries like Spain to increase development aid to poor
nations and to open their markets to products from the developing South.
A study reported on Sunday by the Madrid daily El Pa’s demonstrates that
without the hundreds of thousands of immigrants living in the Spanish
capital, the city would virtually come to a halt, since these workers play
essential roles, especially in the service industry.
Rafael Lara, president of the Human Rights Association of the southern
Spanish region of Andalusia, says tighter border controls are not effective
in keeping out immigrants, since so many are willing to risk their lives to
reach Europe.
Lara said that in 2004, around 500 people died or went missing in their
attempt to reach Spanish shores. Of that total, 289 bodies were found. The
rest were lost at sea.
Andalusia receives a heavy inflow of immigrants, who cross the Mediterranean
from North Africa.
And the flow will continue, added Lara, because there are camps in North
Africa, mainly Morocco and Algeria, "where thousands of people are waiting
for a chance to cross the sea to Europe." (END)