Latest news with #JuliaPascual

LeMonde
a day ago
- Politics
- LeMonde
In Greece, migrant registration sites 'have shifted from a jungle model to a prison model'
World Immigration By Julia Pascual (Samos (Greece), special correspondent) and Samuel Gratacap (Photos) Published today at 4:00 am (Paris) 6 min read Lire en français Deep in the mountains, a vast white expanse spreads out like a lake over 62 hectares. Upon closer inspection, you spot rows of small rectangles, surrounded by fencing and barbed wire. These are prefabricated shelters. Two children play by pulling a plastic crate tied to a rope. Adults wander between the blocks and join a line. They return with a pack of water. Police officers on patrol can be seen in the background. From inside the camp, located in the central-eastern part of the Greek island of Samos, nothing else is visible. Only those with authorization may enter. That does not include the press. Yet this is a site designed as a model for migration management in Europe. The "controlled and closed access" center in Samos opened in September 2021. On this Aegean island of 33,000 residents, close to the Turkish coast, more than 3,000 people were being held at the end of April, mostly Afghans and Syrians, over a third of whom were children. The situation foreshadows what the European Union (EU) aims to generalize at its external borders with the migration and asylum pact adopted in May 2024. People arriving on the continent are confined in these centers while their asylum applications are examined. Only recognized refugees are admitted; others are sent back. The approach replaces the "hotspot" model, while still adhering to its logic of sorting and containing migration flows. You have 85.59% of this article left to read. The rest is for subscribers only.

LeMonde
5 days ago
- Politics
- LeMonde
World Immigration In France, asylum seekers navigate labyrinth of Europe's Dublin Regulation By Julia Pascual and Samuel Gratacap Published today at 8:30 pm (Paris) 7 min read Lire en français Subscribers only Share Share on Messenger Share on Facebook Share by email Share on Linkedin Copy link Investigation '2015-2025: Europe's migration crisis' (3/5). In the 1990s, the European Union established the Dublin Regulation, aiming to prevent asylum seekers from filing applications in multiple countries. The massive influx of refugees over the past 10 years has shattered the system, which is no longer implemented in all EU member states. source https://assets-decodeurs.lemonde.fr/doc_happens/asile/2506-asile-00-texts-en.txt source https://assets-decodeurs.lemonde.fr/doc_happens/asile/2506-asile-00-structure.txt source https://assets-decodeurs.lemonde.fr/doc_happens/asile/2506-asile-00-styles.txt source https://assets-decodeurs.lemonde.fr/doc_happens/asile/2506-asile-03-texts-en.txt source https://assets-decodeurs.lemonde.fr/doc_happens/asile/2506-asile-03-structure-en.txt source https://assets-decodeurs.lemonde.fr/doc_happens/asile/2506-asile-03-styles.txt style https://assets-decodeurs.lemonde.fr/redacweb/lm-styles/lm-styles.v1.0.1.css The plane touched down on the tarmac of Marignane airport, near the southern French city of Marseille. Around 30 plainclothes police officers stood on the runway, ready to board five men. Turks and Afghans, they were escorted one by one, their wrists bound by handcuffs, their heads buried in their shoulders. As one of them prepared to board, he collapsed on the tarmac. The officers, used to seeing this happen, were unfazed. Mechanically, they turned the man on his side and strapped one belt around his ankles, another around his knees. Bound, the man was carried horizontally into the cabin. Within a few hours, he would land in Zagreb. His offense: applying for asylum in France, while according to his fingerprints, he had entered the European Union (EU) via Croatia. Under the Dublin Regulation, asylum applications are to be examined in the country of first entry, or the member state in which an asylum seeker initially sets foot in the EU. A few hours earlier, another of the five escorted passengers, an Afghan, had fainted and collapsed in the parking lot next to the prefecture in Marseille. His eyes rolled back and his body went stiff. "Come on, breathe, it's going to be all right," assured one of the officers, all of whom requested anonymity. "It's the fear of leaving," another said empathetically. You have 87.11% of this article left to read. The rest is for subscribers only.
World Immigration In France, asylum seekers navigate labyrinth of Europe's Dublin Regulation By Julia Pascual and Samuel Gratacap Published today at 8:30 pm (Paris) 7 min read Lire en français Subscribers only Investigation'2015-2025: Europe's migration crisis' (3/5). In the 1990s, the European Union established the Dublin Regulation, aiming to prevent asylum seekers from filing applications in multiple countries. The massive influx of refugees over the past 10 years has shattered the system, which is no longer implemented in all EU member states. The plane touched down on the tarmac of Marignane airport, near the southern French city of Marseille. Around 30 plainclothes police officers stood on the runway, ready to board five men. Turks and Afghans, they were escorted one by one, their wrists bound by handcuffs, their heads buried in their shoulders. As one of them prepared to board, he collapsed on the tarmac. The officers, used to seeing this happen, were unfazed. Mechanically, they turned the man on his side and strapped one belt around his ankles, another around his knees. Bound, the man was carried horizontally into the cabin. Within a few hours, he would land in Zagreb. His offense: applying for asylum in France, while according to his fingerprints, he had entered the European Union (EU) via Croatia. Under the Dublin Regulation, asylum applications are to be examined in the country of first entry, or the member state in which an asylum seeker initially sets foot in the EU. A few hours earlier, another of the five escorted passengers, an Afghan, had fainted and collapsed in the parking lot next to the prefecture in Marseille. His eyes rolled back and his body went stiff. "Come on, breathe, it's going to be all right," assured one of the officers, all of whom requested anonymity. "It's the fear of leaving," another said empathetically. You have 87.11% of this article left to read. The rest is for subscribers only.