Saber-rattling in the Aegean Sea CADUS criticizes NATO mission against refugee boats
Published on 22. June 2017
from CADUS-PR

saber-rattling-in-the-aegean-sea-feature-cadus_search26rescue_Nato-5edf62c0
The European Union's policy of isolation enters the next round. Battleships are supposed to fix the situation. Instead of increased militarization, CADUS calls for a political solution that enables legal migration for refugees into the EU.
We took the news that NATO battleships are going to be sent to the Mediterranean Sea to track and disable human trafficking networks with grave concern. With the continuing flow of refugees across and around the Mediterranean and the drastic increase of European border protection (e.g. the Europe-Turkey-Deal), the new approach is going to make crossing the Aegean Sea even more dangerous and life-threatening.
"The people will continue to fly – on treacherous routes, under bad weather conditions and at night. So the number of casualties in the Mediterranean Sea will increase. The NATO's assurance to save refugees in distress is not going to change anything about that.", says Sebastian Jünemann, project coordinator for CADUS.
In addition to that, NATO´s practice is to send these refugees back to Turkey, instead of allowing them into the European Union.
The three-month time limit that the EU has imposed on Greece to improve its border protection, is an expression of the current dominating, political approach to the refugee situation. The Greek government, already under pressure, is left alone by its European allies and a single country is made responsible for a global issue.
CADUS is worried by this growing trend of treating the current refugee situation as a matter of (trans-) national security, which can be solved by the police or military.
Jünemann concludes: "We demand a solid united, political solution for the refugee issue and legal migration options for refugees instead of isolation, armament and problem shifting."
Published
Author: by Jonas Grünwald
About failure
At some point it seems, it had to hit us as well. For quite a time now representatives of other aid organisations active in North Syria kept asking us how we managed to get over the border of Turkey and Syria so easily.
Support at Slovenian-Croatian border
For the time being, state institutions, as well as the Slovenian Red Cross disallowed any support of the refugees arriving at the border. At this moment we, as CADUS, mainly try to concentrate on our work in the regions of North Syria. Nevertheless, as two weeks ago we were asked to support structures at the …
Good news from Sere Kanyie
It has been almost a year since our first training team in Rojava visited the border town of Sere Kaniye (Ras al Ain) and its local hospital. The city was occupied by the so-called Islamic State until the Kurdish YPG/YPJ forces liberated it in 2013.




