Europe’s refugee opportunity

ROME—Europe’s so-called refugee crisis should never have become an emergency. Accommodating one million asylum-seekers should not be a huge challenge for the European Union—an area with 500 million citizens that welcomes more than three million immigrants yearly. Unfortunately, the lack of a coordinated response is transforming a manageable problem into an acute political crisis—one that, as German Chancellor Angela Merkel has rightly warned, could destroy the EU.

Most EU member-states are selfishly focusing on their own interests. This pits them against one another and has precipitated panic, putting refugees in even greater peril. A smart, comprehensive plan would calm fears. Instead, Europe has preferred to search for scapegoats—and Greece is the latest to be targeted for blame.

Greece has been accused of not doing enough to process and house refugees. And yet, even if Greece were not crippled by economic crisis, it would be unreasonable to expect one small country to bear the burden alone—especially in a year when more than 800,000 refugees are expected to pass through its territory. This is a European and global problem, not solely a Greek problem.

There is plenty of blame to go around. In Greece, George Soros’ Open Society Foundations, acting in partnership with European Economic Area and Norway Grants, anticipated the problems that the lack of a serious European asylum policy would create. In 2013, the partnership established an organization, Solidarity Now, run by the cream of Greek civil society. Solidarity Now needs just 62 million euros ($67 million) to care for 15,000 of the 50,000 refugees who need to be housed in Greece in 2016. And yet, though the EU has promised to spend 500 million euros to help Greece manage the crisis, some member-states have failed to pay their share.

In addition to backing Greece, the EU needs a comprehensive plan for the safe, orderly arrival of asylum-seekers. That means operating beyond Europe’s borders, as, from the donors’ perspective, it is much less disruptive and expensive to maintain asylum-seekers close to their present locations.

The plan will involve these steps:

Gateway countries would have to improve reception, asylum and integration standards. In exchange, these countries should be helped financially and provided with other incentives—for example, easier access to the EU for their citizens. Indeed, the EU should establish or expand programs that allow entry to non-asylum-seekers.

Full support for refugees in frontline countries is estimated to cost at least 20 billion euros per year. The EU should commit at least half of this, with the balance coming from the rest of the international community. Special economic zones that benefit from preferred trade status with the EU and the United States should be created, in order to generate investment, economic opportunities, and jobs for refugees and locals alike. These zones should be established in both frontline and transit countries.

The ongoing exodus from Syria and other war-torn countries was long in the making, easy to foresee, and eminently manageable. Fear-mongering nativists are taking advantage of the lack of a coordinated response to peddle a vision that runs counter to the values upon which the EU was built. Their vision, if realized, would violate European law; already, it threatens to divide and destroy the EU. For this reason, it is all the more urgent that the EU back a comprehensive strategy to end the panic and stop the unnecessary human suffering. Project Syndicate

Emma Bonino, a former Italian minister of foreign affairs, minister of international trade, and EU commissioner, is a founding board member of the European Council on Foreign Relations.

Read more...