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IN THIS UPDATE
1. INTEGRATION
OF IMMIGRANTS
2. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
3. GROWING U.S. CONCERN ABOUT ISLAMISM IN EUROPE
4. LEARN MORE ABOUT THIS SUBJECT AT THE INSTITUTE
5. IN BRIEF: JHA & THE WORLD CUP
Welcome to the first
JHA update of 2006. This service from the Institute of European
Affairs will regularly update you about developments in Justice
& Home Affairs (JHA). JHA is the fastest developing policy
area in the EU and now includes immigration, trafficking,
counter terrorism, fraud, fundamental rights, citizenship,
increasingly close police-, security- and judicial cooperation,
and action in non-EU countries. This update focuses on the integration
of immigrants in the EU and illustrates how JHA issues play an
increasingly large and direct role in the lives of EU citizens and in the EU's relations with other nations.
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
Immigration
& integration remain key issues for the EU and its member states.
According to Eurostat, almost 1.7 million immigrants settled in the EU
in 2005. The integration of established immigrant communities and new
immigrants is of particular importance for EU leaders. Following
widespread rioting throughout France in late 2005, bomb attacks in
London in July 2005, the assassination of Theo Van Gogh in the
Netherlands in November 2004, and the bomb attack in Madrid in March
2004, European leaders are seized of the need not just to enhance their
counter-terrorism cooperation, but to integrate minority, immigrant
communities within their own populations. With this in mind, the EU Commission's forthcoming "non-emotive lexicon for discussing radicalisation" (June 2006), which will suggest the term "terrorists who abusively invoke Islam" instead of the term "Islamic terrorism".
On 23 March 2006, the interior ministers of the six largest EU member states
("G6": Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Poland and Spain) met at Heiligendamm, Germany, and agreed for the
need for a mandatory EU contract of integration
under which immigrants wishing to live in the EU would be reciprocally
accorded the rights of citizenship but obliged to accept the values of
the Union and learn the local language. According to UK Home Secretary
Charles Clarke, breaches of the contract could result in deportation.
The "G6" proposal is similar to a suggestion, which EU JHA Commissioner,
Frattini, made in September 2005 of an oath of allegiance to the values
of the EU. Furthermore, the "Common Basic Principles for the
integration of Third Country Nationals" (CBPs) outlined by the Commission
in November 2004 include the principle that "Integration implies respect for the basic values of
the European Union by every resident"[see note1]. However, it remains to be seen how the other 19 member state governments react to the "G6" proposal.
A number of national and state
governments have also proposed or implemented new approaches to integration
since the beginning of 2006:
Germany: Two
states have developed tests for prospective citizens. Muslims
living in Baden-Württemberg who apply for citizenship
must, since 1 January 2006, submit to a test which gauges
their attitudes towards aspects of liberal German society
such as homosexuality and sexual equality. Another state,
Hessen,
drafted a test of applicants' attitudes towards sexual equality and
their general knowledge of Germany including history, election system,
civics and electoral system. The test awaits approval by the German
parliament in June 2006. In early April 2006, amid controversy arising
from incidents of violence by Turkish and Arab students at the Ruetli
school in Berlin, Germany's conservatives called on Chancellor, Angela
Merkel, to hold a national integration summit and develop a national
integration plan overhauling the school system, introducing requirements to learn
German, and proposing sanctions in case of refusal to take integration
courses.
France: Internal Minister, Nicolas
Sarkozy, submitted a draft immigration bill in February 2006, which
includes a "contract of welcome and integration" stipulating that immigrants must learn French, look for
a job, and respect human rights. Giving an example of the
scope of the proposed legislation, Sarkozy warned that, "in
the case of a woman kept hostage in her home without learning
French, the whole family will be obliged to leave".
The Netherlands: In March, the
Netherlands became the first country to introduce a mandatory
test to gauge prospective immigrants' ability to tolerate, and
integrate into, its society. Muslim
leaders in the Netherlands have criticised the inclusion of video clips of various
aspects of liberal life in the Netherlands and the expense
of the test, which must be borne by applicants.
Top
GROWING U.S. CONCERN ABOUT ISLAMISM IN EUROPE
While
transatlantic counter terrorism cooperation remains strong, American
observers are increasingly concerned about Islamist militancy within
Europe. In March 2006, John Podesta, former Chief of Staff to President
Clinton, and President of the Centre for American Progress, told the IEA
EU-US Group
that some experts fear Muslim discontent in Europe more than they fear
the 'blow-back' from the Iraqi campaign. US concerns directly relate to
the successes and failures of European integration policies.
Despite
its initial focus on Afghanistan, and early attention to other theatres
such as the Horn of Africa, Philippines, and eventually Iraq, American
attention has begun to focus on Europe as an area of concern in the
‘war on terror’. Reporting to a House subcommittee on EU-US
counter-terror cooperation in September 2004, one State Department
official noted that while “the capabilities of our Western
European partners are excellent. European intelligence and … generally
do an effective job of monitoring extremists”, nonetheless, “terrorist
activity and the presence of terrorist support networks in Europe
remains a source of concern. ... As we all know, much of the planning
for 9-11 took place in Europe, and terrorist support networks continue
to exist on the continent. … We are concerned that some European states
have at times demonstrated an inability to prosecute successfully or
hold many of the terrorists brought before their courts”. A House
subcommittee hearing on ‘Islamic extremism in Europe’ in April 2005
heard that “the greatest threat[s] from al-Qaeda and its affiliated
groups come from Europe today. … We have seen, with the Madrid attacks
and also the recent terrorist plots uncovered in London, that there is
a serious group of sleeper cells in Europe. ... We have the unfortunate
confluence of rising Muslim immigration into Europe, a certain amount
of European racism and a certain amount of Muslim alienation”.
The July-August 2005 edition of Foreign Affairs quoted a Nixon Centre study of 373 mujahadeen
in Western Europe and North America, which found that “fully a quarter
of the jihadists it listed were western European nationals – eligible
to travel visa-free to the United States”.
Earlier this month, a US Assistant Secretary of State told a Senate
hearing on Islamist extremism in Europe that "most countries in Europe
have not pursued a conscious integration policy", and that failure to
integrate Muslim minorities in Europe provides an "audience" for
extremist messages and poses a security risk for the US. As Iraq and
Afghanistan slide off the agenda in coming years, one can anticipate US
attention focusing more upon the integration of Muslims in the EU.
Top
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LEARN MORE ABOUT THIS
SUBJECT AT THE INSTITUTE OF EUROPEAN AFFAIRS
The Institute continues its series of seminars on immigration & integration this month. The next seminar will be on 19
April 2006, and will discuss “Islam,
integration, and Europe”. Professor Tariq
Ramadan will examine the integration of Muslims
in Europe and Islam’s compatibility with European
values. Professor Ramadan is a Visiting Fellow at St.
Anthony’s Oxford, a leading Swiss imam, and one
of the Time Magazine “100 Innovators”
of the new century. Professor George Joffé
will then discuss the experience of Europe’s Muslims
and the impact of events in the wider Muslim world.
Professor Joffé is a former Director of Studies
at Chatham House (RIIA), and a leading expert on the
Middle East, North Africa, immigrant communities and transnational
violence, and currently a Research Fellow at the Centre
for International Studies, Cambridge University.
More information on this event here>>
E-mail
the Institute to request an invitation >>
Previous meetings
On 22 February 2006: Seminar Two “Demographic change in Ireland: the problem of policing ”
Guest speakers: Noel
Conroy, Commissioner of An Garda Siochana, Aidan Punch, Chairman of the Central Statistics Office, and Pat
Folan, Director of the Irish Naturalisation & Immigration Service.
More
information on this event here>>
On 5 December 2005: Seminar One
"The Immigration & Residency Bill"
Paul Burns, Principal Officer of the
Immigration Policy Unit at the Department of Justice and Law Reform. |
Top
IN BRIEF
Concern
over human trafficking and forced prostitution continues to mount as
the World Cup in Germany draws nearer. Estimates of the numbers of
women who will be illegally brought into Germany and forced to work as
prostitutes are very high (40,000). In March, JHA Commissioner,
Frattini, suggested that visa requirements should be re-introduced for
non-EU citizens travelling to Germany for the period of the tournament
to hinder human trafficking, but the Commission was forced to drop its
plan shortly thereafter. The level of concern is such that
Sweden's ombudsman for sexual equality is lobbying the Swedish national
football team to boycott the World Cup. As UK Minister for
Constitutional Affairs, Harriet Harmon, QC, MP, told the IEA Justice Group
in May 2005, "No country in Europe can afford to say 'this is none of
my business' or 'it’s not my problem'". A major seminar on EU
cooperation against human trafficking will be announced shortly by the
Institute, with the support of the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions.

RELEVANT LINKS
The
Institute of European Affairs >>
IEA
Justice Group >>
IEA
EU-US Group >>
Central
Statistics Office statistical overview of immigration in Ireland
>> Microsoft Powerpoint format
About
the new Irish Naturalisation & Immigration Service >> Microsoft Powerpoint format
The EU Commission for Justice & Home Affairs >>
NOTE 1: The Common Basic Principles are detailed in "A Common Agenda for Integration: framework for the integration of third- country nationals in the European Union" (PDF version). |