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- <text id=91TT1761>
- <title>
- Aug. 12, 1991: Europe:Racisme
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 12, 1991 Busybodies & Crybabies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 36
- EUROPE
- Racisme
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As Europe's ethnic mix begins to change, some countries discover
- they are not as tolerant of foreign cultures as they once thought
- they were
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Margot Hornblower/Paris and
- Robert T. Zintl/Rome with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Black-clad German skinheads from both parts of the newly
- united country parade through the streets of Dresden to mourn
- their hero Rainer Sonntag, killed by a gang of pimps in a
- dispute over turf. Silent onlookers and 1,500 police watch as
- the 2,000 neo-Nazis raise their arms and shout, "Sieg heil!" and
- "Foreigners out!"
- </p>
- <p>-- Bands of young Arab men attack the highways of southern
- France, setting up barricades, occupying tollbooths,
- fire-bombing buses. They are the sons of Algerians called
- Harkis, who served the French colonial government during the war
- in Algeria, and they are demanding jobs and better living
- conditions.
- </p>
- <p>-- In a sterile, high-rise housing project in southeast
- London, Rolan Adams, a black teenager, steps out of one of the
- neighborhood's few youth clubs. A gang of whites jump him and
- stab him to death. Of the nine whites arrested, five are
- acquitted, and four still face trial. The Adams family is
- receiving phone calls from people who say they are glad Rolan
- is dead.
- </p>
- <p>-- Mulie Jarju, 33, a migrant worker from Gambia, starred
- last year in a prizewinning film, Letters from Alou, about the
- plight of Africans employed illegally in Spain under conditions
- close to those of slave labor. Today Jarju cannot find work in
- Spain as either actor or laborer and faces deportation.
- </p>
- <p> The collapse of the Soviet empire let the lid blow off
- Eastern Europe's ugly assortment of old ethnic hostilities. At
- the same time, for different reasons, countries in Western
- Europe are becoming increasingly aware of the pressures
- generated by their own changing racial mix. As their Muslim and
- African populations have increased, Europeans who for decades
- delighted in accusing the U.S. of bigotry and violence have
- discovered they are not nearly as tolerant as they thought they
- were.
- </p>
- <p> Altogether, 8 million legal and an estimated 2 million
- illegal immigrants live in the 12 nations of the European
- Community. These numbers are about the same as they were 10
- years ago, but the proportion of dark-skinned, poor Africans and
- Arabs in Western Europe is significantly higher now. Even though
- the overall numbers are not increasing, E.C. governments have
- decided they have reached the saturation point--what French
- President Francois Mitterrand calls "the threshold of
- tolerance."
- </p>
- <p> Looking toward 1992, when the community's borders will
- become even more permeable, E.C. countries are working to
- tighten their immigration rules. The focus on immigration is a
- reaction to a popular belief, often fueled by incendiary press
- reports, that migrants from abroad are taking jobs and houses
- away from needy citizens or living handsomely on welfare
- payments. There is little or no evidence for such claims, but
- resentment is building in one country after another.
- </p>
- <p> GERMANY
- </p>
- <p> No sooner had the Berlin Wall fallen than it became
- obvious that there were other barriers for many former East
- Germans to overcome. Isolated from the world, trained to
- distrust everyone unlike themselves, alienated German youths
- lashed out in a fit of xenophobia. Often their targets were
- workers imported by the communist regime from other Marxist
- countries, like Angola and Vietnam, but sometimes they were
- simply anyone of another race.
- </p>
- <p> In Dresden last April, neo-Nazis threw a Mozambican to his
- death from a moving streetcar. In May they invaded a tenement
- in Wittenberg, forcing two Namibians off a fourth-floor balcony
- and critically injuring them. Two weeks ago, 50 skinheads
- stormed a center for asylum seekers from the Third World,
- smashing windows and pummeling residents. No one with a dark
- skin, police officials say, can feel safe on the streets of
- eastern Berlin.
- </p>
- <p> This phenomenon is really "antiforeign sentiment without
- foreigners," says Liselotte Funcke, former Federal Commissioner
- for the Integration of Foreign Workers. In the five states that
- used to make up East Germany, foreigners account for only 1% of
- the population. Half of the 60,000 Vietnamese who once worked
- there have gone home, as have the 8,000 Cubans and all but 3,000
- of the 15,000 Mozambicans.
- </p>
- <p> "We have to differentiate between racism and xenophobia,"
- says Daniel Cohn-Bendit, one of the leftist leaders of the
- student revolt in Paris in the late 1960s, who now heads the
- city multicultural affairs office in Frankfurt. "I would deny
- that the Germans are more xenophobic than other countries."
- </p>
- <p> The surge in hate crimes in eastern Germany occurred just
- as the 1.6 million Turks in western Germany were becoming
- accepted. There is no longer widespread anti-Turkish prejudice,
- says Barbara John, the Berlin commissioner for foreigners. "The
- contrary is true," she says. "West Germans have taken to
- defending the Turks against antiforeign slander coming from the
- east."
- </p>
- <p> One possible reason, officials say, is the fact that
- Turkish workers, most of them young and healthy, pay more into
- the German social-welfare and pension system than they take out.
- Turks opening businesses in Germany have created at least
- 100,000 new jobs, and their investments in the country total
- $2.7 billion.
- </p>
- <p> FRANCE
- </p>
- <p> During the 1960s and 1970s, labor-short French businesses
- imported planeloads of workers. Now the welcome has waned for
- these immigrants, particularly for the 3 million North and West
- Africans and their French-born children. A government study
- released in June showed that 71% of French citizens said the
- country had too many Arabs, 45% said too many blacks, and 94%
- acknowledged that racism is "widespread."
- </p>
- <p> Every month brings new controversy. A school expels two
- Muslim girls for wearing head scarves, sparking a national
- debate over religious freedom. Hundreds of youths, mostly Arabs,
- riot in a suburb of Lyons over charges of police brutality.
- Off-duty paratroopers attack Arabs in Carcassonne, injuring
- five. "There's an overdose of foreigners," the conservative
- mayor of Paris, Jacques Chirac, charges. Jean-Marie Le Pen,
- leader of the anti-foreign National Front, seizes the
- opportunity to claim that France is heading for "civil war."
- </p>
- <p> Prime Minister Edith Cresson, who has proved herself quick
- with a cutting quip about foreigners, is emphasizing a tough
- immigration policy that is certain to reduce the number of North
- Africans in the country. All those judged illegal immigrants by
- "French justice," she says, "will be sent back home." Mitterrand
- agrees. "Enforcement of the law must be strict," he said last
- month. "Clandestine immigrants must go home."
- </p>
- <p> BRITAIN
- </p>
- <p> A poll published in July by the Independent on Sunday
- indicated that a majority of British consider their country
- racist. While a third of the respondents thought the United
- Kingdom was a bit more tolerant than a decade ago, 79% of
- blacks, 67% of whites and 56% of Asians regarded the nation as
- "very racist" or "fairly racist." A four-year study by the
- European Parliament accuses Britain of creating and exporting
- the "racist and violent subculture of the skinheads."
- </p>
- <p> Strict immigration policy makes it difficult to move to
- Britain; only 49,000 newcomers were admitted in 1989. In the
- past decade, the nonwhite population rose only from 1.9 million
- to 2.6 million out of a total of 57 million residents. But those
- facts seem to make no impression on the country's racists.
- Between 1988 and 1990 alone, the number of racially motivated
- incidents of harassment or violence reported to the police
- jumped from 4,383 to 6,359. "Racism is on the increase and is
- becoming more violent," says Asad Rehman, a caseworker in
- London's poor East End.
- </p>
- <p> Still, some believe race relations in Britain are not as
- bad as they are on the Continent. "There, blacks are seen as
- second-class citizens with few rights or none at all," says
- Bernie Grant, one of four black Labour Members of Parliament.
- "In Britain, most black people are citizens." And they can
- muster some political weight. More than 500 elected members of
- local city and town councils are black. Nevertheless, the
- tabloids keep whipping up their working-class readers with
- improbable tales of immigrants living in luxury at taxpayer
- expense. In fact, says David Dibosa of the Greater London Action
- for Racial Equality, "White middle-class citizens have much more
- access to the benefits of citizenship than blacks."
- </p>
- <p> ITALY
- </p>
- <p> At a subway entrance in central Rome, a Senegalese street
- vendor displays his wares. He lives with 20 other foreigners in
- a three-story house with no hot water. He thinks the Italians
- are racist because "when we get on a bus, they move away from
- us."
- </p>
- <p> To the Italians, these immigrants are known sneeringly as
- vu cumpra, a distorted form of the phrase Vuoi comprare?--Do
- you want to buy? Africans and Asians can be seen everywhere,
- selling cheap goods on the streets, pumping gas, trying to
- clean windshields at intersections. According to Italy's
- brand-new Ministry of Immigration, 662,047 registered foreigners
- from outside the E.C. are in the country, and probably another
- 600,000 are there illegally.
- </p>
- <p> Racial incidents are now commonplace. In May, Somalians
- demonstrated in Rome's Piazza Venezia to protest overcrowding
- and poor housing. A shelter for immigrants near the Colosseum
- was burned last January, and in December two gypsies were shot
- and killed at their campsite in Bologna. Under tougher
- immigration laws that went into effect last year, Italy expelled
- more than 6,000 illegal immigrants and turned back 13,435 from
- its borders in the first four months of this year.
- </p>
- <p> A national poll last month showed 75% of respondents
- opposing further immigration. Many Italians, citing their
- traditions of tolerance, say they are shocked at the rise of
- anti-foreign feelings. But, insists the Rev. Luigi di Liegro,
- head of the Caritas charity in Rome, "racism is the same
- everywhere. It just takes shape differently in different
- cultures."
- </p>
- <p> Among the ironies in this wave of racial hostility is that
- the birthrate in major West European countries like Italy,
- Germany and France is flat. A government-funded study published
- in France last month suggested the country may be forced to
- import more immigrant workers to fill empty jobs after the year
- 2000.
- </p>
- <p> Massimo Livi Bacci, a professor of demographics at the
- University Cesare Alfieri in Florence, predicts that while
- populations on the Mediterranean's European north coast will
- barely increase over the next 30 years, those on the African
- south coast will rise more than 100 million. The numbers add up
- to an inescapable conclusion: if Europe is to find workers for
- all its industries and services in the years soon to come, it
- will have to raise its threshold of racial tolerance.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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