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>From Christian Science Monitor

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from the May 15, 2002 edition - http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/0515/p01s03-
woeu.html

Across Europe, the far right rises

Today's Dutch elections are the latest evidence of Europeans looking right on crime
and immigration.

By Peter Ford | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

PARIS - In life, Dutch populist leader Pim Fortuyn was an upstart maverick, playing
on xenophobic fears no traditional politician had dared to tap.

In death, following his murder, Mr. Fortuyn drew almost the entire Dutch cabinet to
his funeral, amid an outpouring of public sympathy. After parliamentary elections
today, his party could hold the balance of power.

Across Europe, in a violent wake-up call to ruling elites, far-right parties beating 
the
anti-immigrant drum have seized on people's concerns about crime and foreigners to
shape a new political agenda.

And as they move Europe's political center of gravity to the right, they are prompting
governments from one end of the continent to the other to toughen their stance
against outsiders. Especially after Sept. 11, with security a top priority, Europe's
multicultural vision of itself seems to be in doubt.

"Opinions that were seen as far-right 10 years ago are now voiced in the middle of
the political spectrum," says Philipp Sonderegger, spokesman for the Austrian anti-
racist group Mitmensch. Austria, where J�rg Haider's extremist Freedom Party
blazed a trail into coalition government two years ago, is about to put a virtual stop 
to
new immigration.

It was Jean-Marie Le Pen's shock success in the first round of French presidential
elections this month that threw the new mood into relief. At the head of the anti-
immigrant, anti-establishment National Front, Mr. Le Pen won 17 percent of the vote
and the right to challenge President Jacques Chirac in a run-off election.

But resentments against foreigners have been bubbling just below the surface of
European politics for several years. Yiannis Kolodos, an Athens university student,
speaks for millions of Europeans when he blames immigrants for taking jobs from
Greeks and making the streets of his city unsafe at night.

"I used to vote Socialist, to tell you the truth," he confides. "But now the mainstream
parties just can't bring themselves to admit that immigration is the main cause of our
problems." People like him, who have turned to the extreme nationalist Hellenic Front
"are not Nazis or fascists," he says. "They just have problems and they think that
immigration has something to do with them."

That is a message that the leaders of Europe's dominant centrist parties have been
reluctant to hear, or to counter. Fortuyn and his counterparts elsewhere "articulated
problems with immigration that other politicians refused to address," explains Hans
Wansink, a commentator with the liberal Dutch daily De Volkskrant.

"The problem of immigration and minority criminality have been ignored for too long"
and became taboo, he adds.

Traditional parties of both left and right feared that if they raised such issues they
would play into the hands of extremists. But that reticence has backfired.

"Right-wing parties have a chance only when the politicians don't do enough to win
over the understanding of the majority population," argues Klaus Bade, head of the
Migration Research Institute at the University of Osnabruck in Germany. "This has
been missing in Germany."

The German parliament passed the country's first ever legislation to regulate
immigration only two months ago, although more than 7 million foreigners live in
Germany. "The faster the law is instituted and the more pragmatically it is applied,
the more right-wing propaganda will lose ground," predicts Dr. Bade.

Elsewhere in Europe, several governments have found themselves boxed into a
corner by anti-immigrant parties, and obliged by electoral politics to borrow aspects
of their approach.

In Denmark, for example, the government depends on parliamentary support from
the Danish Peoples Party. That was forthcoming only because it promised last week
to tighten up its immigration policy, making it harder to claim refugee status, cutting
back on financial aid to new immigrants, and denying foreigners a "green card" for
seven years.

The socialist government in Greece, where migrants make up 10 percent of the
population, has not gone that far. But under heavy pressure from the opposition it put
an immigrant legalization drive on the back burner last December, and announced
plans to tighten border controls and step up arrests of illegal immigrants.

"There is a limit to the number of migrants our country can welcome. Greece is not a
free-for-all," Prime Minister Costas Simitis declared.

Spain cracks down

Spain, one of the main points of entry for illegal immigrants coming to the European
Union (they cross the dangerous Straits of Gibraltar from Morocco by the thousands
every year) has cracked down, too.

Though Spain's recent experience of a fascist dictatorship, under Gen. Francisco
Franco, has stymied the far right, conservative Prime Minister Jos� Maria Aznar says
he plans to further curb immigration so as to forestall the rise of a Spanish Le Pen.

Indeed, he has stolen some of the extreme right-wing's thunder, causing a stir last
month by announcing that 89 percent of those arrested and jailed in the first three
months of this year were foreigners.

In France, too, after beating Mr. Le Pen in the runoff earlier this month, President
Chirac directed his new government to make the fight against crime � a favorite
National Front theme � its immediate top priority.

"Undeniably, a growing number of foreigners are being arrested for delinquency,"
says Juan Aviles, director of a Civil Guard think tank that studies xenophobia in
Spain. "But the great majority of immigrants who come here are not criminals," he
adds, and politicians would do better to find ways of integrating newcomers into
society than stigmatizing them.

Certainly nobody believes that Europe's long southern coasts can be fully guarded
against immigrants sailing by night from Morocco or Albania. Nor can the European
Union's eastern border � often wooded and hard to patrol � be made impenetrable.
So long as poor Africans or eastern Europeans live close to prosperous Western
Europe, they will find ways to get in, says Mr. Aviles.

'Growth and prosperity'

And there are still some voices welcoming them, or at least some of them. "In the
modern world, an open and tolerant society that welcomes newcomers is a condition
for growth and prosperity," British Prime Minister Tony Blair said recently.

But the British government is also trying to plug holes through which would- be
asylum seekers sneak into the country, even as the authorities lay new stress on
integrating foreigners who have already arrived.

Under new legislation presented earlier this year, applicants for citizenship will have
to take a US-style test to prove that they can master the English language and that
they are familiar with British institutions and values. They will also have to swear
allegiance to the Queen.

Immigrants to Germany will have to pass a similar test under the new law due to
come into force this autumn. And the new Austrian "integration contract" contains
more such obligations.

All non-European Union nationals who have come to Austria since 1998 will have to
take (and pay for) courses in German and citizenship. If they don't attend, they will 
be
fined or deported.

"If someone wants to live in Austria, he has to respect Austria's traditions", says
Mario Stoiber, who voted for rightist candidate J�rg Haider's party at the last
elections. "It's easier for them, and easier for the Austrians."

Le Pen's electoral success, and Fortuyn's predicted posthumous success on
Wednesday, have forced European leaders to face up to realities they would rather
have ignored.

"In too many cities across Europe, people feel alienated, either because they are an
immigrant minority or because they are living alongside an immigrant minority which
they identify � very often wrongly � with increased crime and social problems,"
European Union commissioner Chris Patten said last week.

Sense of alienation

Governments have to heal that sense of alienation, he insisted. "Many politicians
have believed that we live in a post-ideological age, that we don't have to have
politics with ideas or principles any more, that it's about managing consumer
expectations," he said. "I think that is profoundly wrong. If you leave a vacuum,
people with simple solutions to complex problems fill it."

Grasping the nettle, however, is a risky business.

British minister Peter Hain ran into criticism when he suggested last weekend that
British Muslims could be isolationist, making their integration into British society
difficult.

Sept. 11 factor

The question is especially sensitive in the wake of Sept. 11. With investigators
uncovering alleged Al Qaeda cells in Germany, Italy, Spain, Belgium, Holland and
Britain, public suspicion of Muslims has deepened.

In Hamburg, where Mohammed Atta and some of his accomplices once lived, a new
party known as the Law and Order Offensive, led by judge Ronald Schill, won nearly
20 percent of the vote last autumn.

At a party congress last weekend, Mr. Schill insisted that "we have nothing against
Muslims," but he said he did "have a problem with 32,000 Muslim fanatics who live
here and hate us, because they hate our way of life."

Europe's rising right

Across Europe, far-right parties have used concern over rising crime and a growing
immigrant population to gather support. Voters are supporting these parties, say
analysts, because centrist parties have been unwilling to address these concerns.

Austria: Freedom Party

The anti-immigrant party of J�rg Haider joined Austria's coalition government in
200O. Support has eroded from 27 percent to 16 percent.

Britain: British National Party

The BNP is small and marginal. It won 3 local government seats in municipal
elections this month.

Denmark: Progress Party and People's Party.

When it was founded in 1972, the Progress Party called for all Muslims to be
expelled from Denmark. The breakaway People's Party holds 22 seats in the 179-
member parliament and is the country's main rightist party.

Belgium: Vlaams Blok

It favors independence for Flanders, Belgium's Dutch-speaking half, advocates an
end to immigration, and promotes the expulsion of immigrants who fail to assimilate
into Belgian culture.

Germany: National Democratic Party

Although the party is electorally insignificant, Chancellor Gerhard Schr�der has tried
to ban it, contending it promotes neo-Nazi ideology.

Italy: National Alliance and Northern League.

The National Alliance is a member of the ruling coalition government. It finished third
with 12 percent of the vote in last year's national elections. The Northern League
recently supported legislation to deport jobless immigrants.

The Netherlands: Pim Fortuyn's List

The rightist political party whose leader was slain this month could win some 25
seats in the 150-seat parliament in today's election, according to early polls. This
would make it the second-largest party in parliament. Fortuyn opposed new
immigration, called Islam "backward," and advocated "zero tolerance" of crime.

France: National Front

The party of extreme nationalist Jean-Marie Le Pen, who founded it in 1972,
advocates France for the French. Immigrants are often targeted and blamed for
French ills, such as high unemployment and violence. It won 18 percent in the
second round of the presidential elections this month.

Norway: Party of Progress

The party known for its anti-immigration views won 25 seats in the 165- seat
parliament in last September's elections.

Source: United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Reuters, AP, Staff

� Special correspondents Lucian Kim in Berlin, Coral Davenport in Athens, Sara
Miller in Madrid, and Sonya Lee in Vienna contributed to this report.

Full HTML version of this story which may include photos, graphics, and related links



Copyright 2002 The Christian Science Monitor. All rights reserved.
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