The Border Harms of Human Displacement: Harsh Landscapes and Human Rights Violations
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Human Displacement, Human Rights, and Bordering Practices
3. The Syrian Civil Conflict: “The Regime Fired Back, and a Lot of People Got Killed”
This incident highlights not just the power relations that underscore border sites (see, e.g., Jones 2016; Weber and Pickering 2011), but also the intensified surveillance and armed attacks there.I lost my husband when we migrated to another town [in Syria]. It happened after two months, after we had relocated to a town nearby. I was with my family. We rented a house together … My husband … was at a checkpoint when he got wounded. He had two people with him. They were in a long line at this checkpoint. They [border security personnel] were taking IDs and checking them. The opposition took advantage of the fact that there was a regime checkpoint and they hit it. The regime fired back, and a lot of people got killed. My husband was one of them.(Interview, Mississauga, 2018)
4. Border Harms and the “European Refugee Crisis”
4.1. The Hardening of Borders: “There Was So Much Fear”
Samir recalled the violence on Symi, including how “the Greek [coastal security] got us out of the boat and started to beat the driver, who was Turkish. They kept beating him badly for a long time”. Exemplifying his recollection, Samir commented on the confiscation of their passports and mobile phones and sleeping under police control: “We slept on the floor near the harbour, under the control of the police, until noon time. There was not any space at the police station. It was full of Syrians. Then the police told us to book a hotel room on the island and … to come to the coastal [security] office to take our photos and fingerprints so we can get the Kharti paper [a 6-month permission permit to stay in Greece]”.So, we [Samir and his 19-year-old cousin] stayed in a hotel in Marmaris [Turkey] for three days. Then we went to the harbour as we were planning to leave on a yacht. We were 26 people, including 4 kids … We were going around in the sea as tourists … After six hours, we reached an isolated and unpopulated island. The smuggler wanted to put us there. All smugglers do this … They do this so they can escape and not get caught. Before reaching that island, the Greek [coastal security] appeared. They intercepted our boat. They asked for our passports. The boat driver showed them the fake passports. They were not convinced and asked the driver to follow them. They took us to the Greek island Symi. The captain jumped in the water and we were left with the driver.(Interview, Stockholm, 2016)
We arrived at the island [Rhodes] and it was totally abandoned. There was nothing there. I was so afraid and so tired. I could not catch my breath. I felt the blood stopping in my veins. We had to climb a very steep cliff in order to reach the populated part of the island. We then walked to the nearest house and asked the locals about the police station. The police came and loaded us in a lorry. We were 55 people in one lorry. They took us to a police station where they interrogated us individually … There was a police officer who kept shouting at us … On Monday, the police came and took our full fingerprints … They showed us how to book the tickets for the ferry that will take us to Athens.
In Athens, we stayed at a hotel for 35 Euro per night. My husband’s friend sent his passport and his wife’s passport to us with someone else. The passports were genuine European passports. We used them to reach Norway … So, we flew from Athens to Vienna where we spent a night at a hotel … Then we went from Vienna to Oslo … At the police station [in Oslo], they took everything from us …We slept on the floor … The place was full of people: Palestinians, Syrians, Africans, and other nationalities. We were interrogated by a police officer after we gave them all our identity documents including … the UNRWA white cards. Then they took us by a bus to a camp in a city called Moss. It is in the south … I had to stay in the women’s section and my husband was with the men. We were separated at this camp for 100 days, three months….(Interview, Stockholm, 2016)
4.2. The Extension of Borders: “Abuse, Mislead and Expel”
4.3. Pushback Practices: “Migrants Were Slapped and Kicked by the Coastguards”
At around 2.30 a.m., a grey metallic Greek coastguard vessel stopped them. A second coastguard boat arrived soon afterwards. The refugees and migrants were ordered to board the second vessel. As soon [as] they got on board, the crew switched off all the lights and using just a flashlight, ordered the men to strip and searched them in what they described as “a humiliating way”. They and other migrants were slapped and kicked by the coastguards. The coastguard crew took their money, mobile phones and documents. They kept the money and expensive mobile phones and threw everything else, including valuable documents such as passports, into the sea.
At round 4.30 a.m. the coastguards forced them back into the plastic boat and removed the small motor and fuel. They towed the boat for about 30 min towards Turkey and then abandoned them near Kuşadası. The men said they were picked up by a Turkish vessel about half an hour later.
5. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Ilcan, S. The Border Harms of Human Displacement: Harsh Landscapes and Human Rights Violations. Soc. Sci. 2021, 10, 123. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci10040123
Ilcan S. The Border Harms of Human Displacement: Harsh Landscapes and Human Rights Violations. Social Sciences. 2021; 10(4):123. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci10040123
Chicago/Turabian StyleIlcan, Suzan. 2021. "The Border Harms of Human Displacement: Harsh Landscapes and Human Rights Violations" Social Sciences 10, no. 4: 123. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci10040123
APA StyleIlcan, S. (2021). The Border Harms of Human Displacement: Harsh Landscapes and Human Rights Violations. Social Sciences, 10(4), 123. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci10040123