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truths about the home secretary
October 2004
As a left-leaning kind of bloke, I had been
impressed at the Labour Party’s ability to reinvent itself and come in from the
cold. Looking in from overseas, I was pleased that the youthful Tony was
leading New Labour’s charge and I was full of hope that he would put Britain’s
creaking welfare and healthcare system into intensive care.
I rejoiced that he saw fit to appoint Britain’s
first disabled minister to his cabinet and the sight of David Blunkett arriving
at Downing Street with his guide dog warmed me towards the government.
Today, the dream has gone awry. It is as if
some dark magic spell has been undone. The Labour Party’s saviour prince has
visibly aged before our eyes under the strain of apprenticeship to the neo-con
grand wizards of Washington and trying to maintain – despite the steaming
cauldrons – the illusion that he is keeping his promise to build a better
Britain and a safer world, which has, in reality, brought war to the Middle
East and division and upheaval at home.
Mr Blunkett is growing into Tony’s sinister
sidekick – harmless at first sight but with a dangerous sting in his tail. When
talking about immigrants, Muslims and other ‘undesirables’, his voice has taken
on more clipped and threatening tones and one can just imagine him in a secret
underground chamber at home training his guide dog to sniff out asylum seekers.
Blunkett’s immigration policies are also a
dangerous deception – disguised in an ostensibly progressive outer skin, they
reek of reactionary populism designed to appease the right wing. But they way
to neutralise anti-immigrants and the far-right is not to take on their
policies, but to highlight how racist and divorced from reality they are.
It is unfortunate that Mr Blunkett should leap
with New Labour on to the asylum seeker bandwagon. Asylum seekers belong to one
of the most reviled groups in society and this is due, to no small extent, to
the tendency of politicians to blame this voiceless minority for everything
from the creaking of the welfare system, to stealing jobs, sponging of the
state, and being would-be terrorists.
Mr Blunkett is not alone and is a manifestation
of a Europe-wide trend. A plan he proposed last year to build processing camps
for asylum-seekers outside has garnered the support of Italy and Germany and
there is now talk of building one in Tunisia. France and Spain are opposed to
the plan. Although the aim is, ostensibly, to curb the rising death toll of
migrants trying to cross the Mediterranean, it will more likely reinforce the
wall around fortress Europe that keeps the poor and desperate out.
Instead of proposing more and more draconian
measures, Mr Blunkett should be highlighting that, although some asylum seekers
may really be economic migrants in disguise, the majority (as countless studies
have shown) have actually fled conflict zones. It wouldn’t go amiss to
highlight that Britain and Europe are not bearing the brunt of the world’s
refugee crisis but that it is poor countries which can ill afford it that host
most of them.
He
should also be exerting efforts to make it easier for those who would like to
migrate to the UK for economic reasons, to do so legitimately. As society
greys, Britain – like much of Europe – will need more skilled and semi-skilled
workers.
The ‘citizenship’ debate is another case in
point. Rather than expanding it to find an apt definition for a cosmopolitan
age, he is narrowing it. He has variously called for immigrants to be made to
speak English at home and to make them sit ‘citizenship’ tests.
In my view, we need to go beyond the narrow
confines of the stereotypes the home secretary is helping to propagate because,
nowadays, it's not so easy to pigeon-hole people.
This was driven home to me during a recent trip
to London. Although I grew up in the UK capital, was educated in the British
system, have worked for numerous British organisations, and am well-versed in
British culture, history and politics, this cannot be discerned from my
Egyptian passport and I have to jump through bureaucratic hoops every time I
enter the UK. Do, I then, deserve such tough treatment upon entering the
country?
Although I don't live in the UK, I think I
could quite easily pass one of Mr Blunkett's proposed tests. Does that make me
more eligible for UK citizenship than immigrants who have lived in the UK for
years and contributed to society and the economy? Does the fact that their
English isn’t so good or they don't know much about British history make them
less valuable to society? I know of UK citizens who have very little contact
with the UK and know next to nothing about what goes on in it and would
probably not pass the proposed exam. Should they, then, be stripped of their
British passports? The issue is a complex one in a complex world and pretending
that there are black and white answers does not help find solutions.
That's not to mention the obvious questions of
where do you set the bar and what does one do with all those English people who
don't know the words to 'God save the queen', have never been to a Shakespeare
play, and don't know when William, the Conqueror, invaded England.
ã2004 K. Diab. Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website
is the copyright of Khaled Diab.