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Around Europe Online
No. 251 April 2003
 
Contents
Browse below or click on the following to view an article

EU Citizenship Rights for Non-EU Nationals

Quaker Notes from the Caucasus

Promoting the Rights of Undocumented Migrants
Study, Listen, Ask Questions but Don’t Expect to Sleep: The QCEA Study Tour
 

EU Citizenship Rights for Non-EU Nationals 
QCEA continues its work on the Convention on the Future of Europe, as it gets deeper into the ‘drafting phase’. The Convention is now working on a second draft of the ‘constitutional Treaty’, incorporating amendments and comments made in debate by Convention Members, by the end of May. There is very little time for civil society to comment on this second draft and so there is a need for our messages to be clear.

One of QCEA’s recommendations to the Convention is the extension of EU citizenship rights to nationals of non-EU countries legally residing in the EU.

Citizenship of the EU is defined in Article 7 of the current draft of the Constitutional Treaty. EU citizenship was first included in the Maastricht Treaty of 1992, and it is now time to take it further in accordance with the EU values of tolerance, equality and non-discrimination.

EU citizenship creates a set of rights which are additional to, and do not replace, the rights and obligations of national citizenship. The set of rights proposed in the draft Article 7 is short and specific: freedom of movement within the EU; the right to vote and stand for election in local and European Parliament elections; diplomatic protection; and the right to petition the European Ombudsman. These rights are to apply to ‘every national of a Member State’.

This definition of citizenship excludes an estimated 15 to 20 million people legally resident in the EU who are not nationals of member states. These people are under the same obligations to obey the law and pay taxes as nationals of the member states.

This exclusion from the rights of EU citizenship reinforces discrimination that many already face as members of minorities. The European Economic and Social Committee, in their Draft Opinion on European Citizenship argues that “when a person or group of people are denied voting rights or the rights to political participation by the society in which they reside, this society is expressing a wish to exclude: it is refusing to let them belong to the community.”

The extension of EU citizenship rights would not impose significant obligations on these people, nor would it transfer further competences to the EU from the member states. However, it would send a very strong political message that the EU does not stand for discrimination and is serious about its commitments to equality, tolerance and human rights. QCEA believes that it is an important first step to ensuring that the rights of all people are respected and given equal weight within Europe.

Bronwen Thomas

Values Matter: Quakers Reflect on Europe

The report of QCEA’s project on The Future of Europe: Spiritual Values and Citizenship is now available. Contact the QCEA office to ask for a copy or visit the QCEA website

(English version only, other languages to follow shortly).

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Quaker Notes from the Caucasus
Roswitha Jarman of York MM was this March again working amongst displaced Chechen and Ingush peoples in the North Caucasus.

I have been in this region twice a year since 1991, sometimes for prolonged spells, and have grown to love and respect the people. Most of the people I work with are moderate Sunni Muslims. We share a common spirituality and respect each other’s modes of prayer.

Since the dissolution of the Soviet Union, people of about forty different ethnic groups, mostly moderate Sunni Muslims, in the many small republics of the north Caucasus between the Black and Caspian Seas have sought to resurrect their heritage, culture and language, and their rights to territory and self determination. This has brought about demands on the Russian government that have led to violence and war. A short war between Ossetians and Ingush in a disputed territory to the west of Chechnya in 1992 displaced over 60,000 Ingush many of whom have yet to return to their ancestral land because of hostility. Chechens have suffered two horrifically destructive wars from 1994 to 96, and from 1999 until now through their demands for independence from Russia.

The core of my service in this region is to provide training in psychosocial rehabilitation, and workshops dealing with conflict, healing and reconciliation. I work with a Chechen organisation, Agency for Rehabilitation and Development, ARD that is supported primarily by the Dutch government and Churches.

These wars have destroyed much in the psyche of individuals and in interpersonal relationships quite apart from damage to buildings and infrastructure. War destroys trust between individuals and communities. War robs people of a fulfilling present and replaces hope for the future with fear and apprehension. The foremost task I have found in this war-torn region is to be a witness to what people have experienced. This restores some of their lost dignity. People also yearn for skills that help them cope with the present and prepare them for the future, and I seek to help them through training exercises. These include listening skills, and the essential skills for coping with the trauma of war: confused behaviour particularly of children and young people. People also ask for skills to manage the conflicts that are an inevitable part of life.

Many Chechens have now lived for over three years in refugee camps in Ingushetia close to the western border of their republic. However many are still living within Chechnya and are experiencing extreme fears in what is, in practice, life in an almost lawless society: men vanish without trace; women go from office to office trying to find out where their loved ones are; people know of the torture in the filtration camps to which many men are taken on being accused of supporting terrorism; villages and houses are searched for terrorists with no regard for property or safety of the people living there. These crimes are well reported by human rights organisations such as the Russian Memorial, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, as can be seen in their reports and on their web sites.

The service of Quakers in the North Caucasus started in 1991 in response to an invitation from the Soviet Peace Committee to the British Quaker Peace and Service, QPS, to arrange exchange visits between community leaders of this region and Northern Ireland to help appreciate and manage their inter-communal conflicts non-violently. When Peter (my husband) and I became Quaker representatives in Moscow, later in 1991, we continued to make contacts with the peoples of the North Caucasus. Since then other Quakers have also given support, workshops and training in this region. The largest Quaker initiated organisation is the Centre for Peacemaking and Community Development, CPCD, for which the British Friend Chris Hunter has the main responsibility. Friends House Moscow, an international Quaker charity, occasionally works in this region. Peter and I are also supporting indigenous trainers and an American Quaker to facilitate the return of Ingush to their former homes in North Ossetia. This work is partly funded by German Quakers.

In mid-March the Russian President apologised on TV for the excesses of violence of the Russian security forces and military. This may have been a first good step for healing the tragedy of the Chechen people, or it may simply have been window dressing ahead of the referendum that took place on March 23. Chechens were asked to vote for a new constitution that would give them a measure of autonomy within the Russian Federation. Few voters had read it but most of them gave it a yes vote. Chechens are so tired of this long drawn out, terrifying situation. They want peace and are not now asking for independence.

I urge Friends to know more about the Chechens in the hope that the healing intentions of the new constitution are not just empty words. I would be glad to send Friends copies of my reports and details of appropriate organisations and their websites.

Roswitha Jarman

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Promoting the Rights of Undocumented Migrants
Forty-six individuals and organisations participated in the General Assembly of the Platform for International Cooperation on Undocumented Migrants (PICUM) which took place in Köln, Germany in April 2003. PICUM aims to promote respect for the human rights of undocumented migrants within Europe. The term ‘undocumented migrants’ is used to refer to people living in a country without legal status: it is used in preference to ‘illegal immigrants’ to avoid the derogatory connotations of this term.

Under the heading of ‘Undocumented Women’, two workshops preceded the General Assembly, one on Trafficking and another on Migrant Domestic Workers. Traditionally there are several institutions and bodies protecting and monitoring employment rights and labour conditions. A lack of legal status makes access to most of these organisations difficult for undocumented migrants. A lot of research is being done on trafficking and related problems but still very little is known about the estimated 500,000 undocumented domestic workers in EU member states. Mostly women, conditions for workers in individual families are very often exploitative, whereas physical and emotional abuses occur more frequently to women employed as domestic servants in the diplomatic world.

The General Assembly accepted the revised Action Plan 2003 which includes in its project work the publication of Volume 2 of the Book of Solidarity, a report of the practice of assistance to undocumented migrants in most of the EU member states. The Book of Solidarity tells the story of undocumented migrants in the EU through the eyes of help providers. Thousands of citizens extend solidarity to undocumented migrants, bringing into practice the values of solidarity and social security on which the EU is based. Simultaneously, assistance provided is an important indicator of the very real needs in society. Another project called Shelter seeks to make an inventory of shelter problems in Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, Austria and Great Britain.

A major project on the labour conditions of undocumented migrant workers in the EU is in its preparatory phase and will run over 2003-2004. This work will involve making an inventory of projects and good practices, networking with researchers and developing methodologies. Next year’s planning includes work on the education of undocumented migrants’ children and health care for undocumented migrants.

The General Assembly supported the PICUM Working Paper on Dentention and Deportation. Many NGOs have brought charges against the restrictive deportation policies of EU member states, very often involving detention of undocumented migrants. Deportations often take place under deplorable legal and material conditions. Much research has also been done on the pre-deportation detention conditions which undocumented migrants can be subjected to.

PICUM is against forced deportation of undocumented migrants. We encourage the focus on and the promotion of voluntary return. If there is to be deportation , all human rights standards have to be respected. PICUM recognises the importance of a society regulated by rules, provided that these rules can be followed. At present there is no migration policy in the EU; detention and expulsion cannot replace such a policy.

On 26 May 2003 PICUM is organising an important international conference on ‘Undocumented Migrant Workers’ at the European Parliament in Brussels. Several economic sectors (agriculture, domestic workers, construction, etc) in Europe employ large numbers of undocumented migrant workers. Why is this so and under what conditions are these people working? Which mechanisms are creating such precarious working conditions? What do public authorities do? What should public authorities do? NGOs, legal advisers, researchers and public authorities will make contributions.

The General Assembly thanked one of the Founder Members and the outgoing first president of PICUM, Pieter Muller, for his untiring dedication. The Assembly welcomed Johan Wets from the Catholic University Leuven as its new president.

Anita Wuyts

For more information on PICUM, see http://www.picum.org/

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Listen, Ask Questions But Don’t Expect to Sleep: The QCEA Study Tour 
The introductory information said that the course was strenuous, that you had to be active to do it and that accommodation was in a local guest house, ten minutes walk from Quaker House. The first two statements were correct – what wasn’t mentioned was that the ten minute walk was all uphill, and quite a steep hill at that!

On Sunday, sessions gave us the context for the Study Tour. Monday was given to understanding the complex inter-relations of the European Union (EU) internally and how it related to the Council of Europe (CoE) and NATO. Tuesday was matters of Peace and Security. We learned about how the EU gains early warning of potential trouble spots and about NATO and the new initiative to create an international nonviolent peaceforce.

Wednesday was a good example of Quaker co-operation in ensuring all were up in good time in order to catch the train to Strasbourg at 7.25am. A visit to the European Parliament followed, which included listening to the debate in plenary session; a session explaining some of the workings of the Parliament and a session with Neil MacCormick who was able to answer questions about being an MEP and the Convention. We ended the day with a meal at the hotel with some Friends from Strasbourg Meeting.

On Thursday was a very interesting visit to the CoE where we learnt how it is structured and its aims. Then on to the European Court of Human Rights for a wonderful lunch and a fascinating talk, after which we headed back to Brussels. In Friday’s sunshine, the morning sessions were devoted to issues relating to immigration and asylum seekers, particularly as they related to children and families. In the afternoon session, a clear presentation of the European Union’s role in trade and development was given by two speakers who were both lively and knowledgeable.

Overall, a very good and enjoyable week, made all the better by the people who attended. My motivation for attending was twofold – one to learn more about the EU which is increasingly having a say in our daily lives, and the second to learn how Quakers seek to influence decision making within the EU and the Council of Europe. The first came from the content of the Tour, the second from informal talks and observation. It was an excellent week and I would have no hesitation in recommending it to anyone – and if any young people want to attend the Tour in the summer I would really recommend that they do so.

Kim Bailey

Picture of the Study Tour Participants outside the Council Of Europe

Picture of the Study Tour Participants outside the Council Of Europe

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