The Smuggling of Asylum Seekers into Western Europe: Contradictions, Conundrums, and Dilemmas /Khalid Kose/ ľm writing this introduction on Tune 19. zmmm, the dav of ihe-tragic dis-covery of fifty-eight dead migrants in the back of a truck in the port town of Dover in the United Kingdom. Although clearly their motivations and intentions will now never be known, these migrants have quickly come to be described in the media as '^svium^eekers." However inaccurate this description may be, the events in Dover have certainly brought to the attention of the media, public, and politicians a phenomenon that seems to have .hqen growing over the past decade '" TRW™ Europe—the .smue- ,r|inĽ ot asylum stokers. _____ , As ťarlv as"i994Tit,was ťsCjmaiCQ-LbaLjiĽtwť^ň iid,doo ant) 1 ao^uö^ asylLHTľJSľgli^rFT^TŕEeinfi smuga,ledjntti Western Európe annualtyTWitT gren,^994), and.there is a growing consensus that an increasing proportion of asylum seekers continues to be smuggled. The smuggling of asylum seekers presents a range of conceptual and policy challenges, which have been made all the more difficult to cope with given the shortage of empirical data. This chapter presents findings from one of the only research surveys conducted among smuggled asylum seekers in Western Eu- rope (Koser, 1997b). It tries to address some of the crucial questions surrounding the smuggling of asylum seekers: Is smuggling necessarily an evil? Is it really a new phenomenon? And why are policymakers finding it so hard to come to terms with smuggling? The study of smuggling is still in its infancy, and there is a lack of consensus about concepts, definitions, and terminology. One distinction that does seem to be emerging, both in the literature and in policy instruments, is between the concept of "trajfi^kjng" and the concept of ilsamgghjig." The trafficking of human beings is increasingly associated with coercion, exploitation, deception, violence, and physical or psychological abuse. The majority of the literature on trafficking, for example, has focused on women and prostitution. In contrast, smuggling is being defined simply as the illicit movement of people across international boundaries. According to this distinction, trafficking is a human rights issue, whereas Smuggling is a migration JSSUf ^alt and Hogarth -)r.r.n) This chapter, which focuses on a case study of Iranian asylum seekers smuggled to the Netherlands, takes issue with this distinction. There isjio evidence flf ^fiyon or violence or that the respondents were subsequently placed in exploitative industries in the Netherlands. Still, the smuggling exposed many of them to increased insecurity and vulnerability: in other words, smuggling can be both a migration and a human rights issue. The chapter is structured around this expansion of the concept of smuggling. In the first part, the smuggling of asylum seekers is analyzed as a migration issue. Empirical evidence on the interaction between smugglers and asylum seekers is combined with a broader analysis of the changing policy context in Western Europe to lend credence to the common assertion that an increasing proportion of asylum seekers are being forced to employ smugglers in order to escape their home countries and reach a country of asylum. In the second part, smuggling is analyzed as a human rights issue. It shows how the asylum seekers in this survey were exposed to forms of political, economic, and social insecurity as a direct consequence of smuggling. Although the phenomenon may not be new, there are qualitative differences from earlier periods, specifically relating to the changing composition of asylum seekers, the growing organization of smuggling, and the changing purposes of smuggling. 60............Historical and Conceptual Approaches Seeking Asylum in Western Europe: The Changing Political Context ________ Analysis of the changing political context for jsyium seektrrs in \ em Europe, combined with analysis of data on asylum applications,^ vides some insight into the interactions between smuggling and isyli In simple terms, asylum in Western Europe can be thought of as havia moved through three phases over the past thirty years. During the ijrfl! and 1970s—and particularly before the "oil crisis" 0/ 1573—thm two distinct legal migration channels into Western Eur opt, one fe migrants and another for refugees. The majority of refugees at iura were accepted in Western Europe on the basis of a " q unto" (Troeller, 1991). As economic recession and an environment of ire trench meat Western Europe during the mid-1970s, the demand fur overseas dried up, and most of the formal routes for labor jnip.ratmn—ii pie, through recruitment agreemencs with particular coiiiirrius of nrigii -were closed over the following decade (Cornelius, Mam::. an.l I i 1994). In retrospect, it is quite clear that one of the unintcti L(ijcnces of these policies was to force economic migrants into the.: • channel—which had become the only remaining legal channel fur into Western Europe. Such an analysis goes a Ion p way to wait! . ing the data presented in figure z, which show luiw asylum applies«« :n the main asylum countries in the liuropean Union (E-.t i:■, and aero ■■:.-EU as a whole, grew steadily through the late 19Sos, tu an overají in ťfájjbí more than^Tz^ooSfepphcations. The convergence in ihcarg lum channel ot refugees and economic migrants has nutormusly pressm policymakers with great problems of clarification, and many eights activists are concerned lhát at least sonic genuine asylum daiiiuqd have been ignored as the obsession with filtering out so-called'I) refugees has grown. f in-,»; m r.vii™»'/'1 ňňy ntmjňf^ ,*ndrÁt} ňnpiKxy/cm that äi& across Western Europe during :he miďi 990s to rry to piacejesn-iciioní upon asyium. One set ot policies was aimed at reducing the scale of asylum migration. This weluded the imposition or visas upon citizens from a growing list of countries, the promotion of so-called safe havens, the re- I Smuggling Asylum Seekers Into Western £urope IW* 1990 1B01 life 1«13 19M IMS Annual Asylum Applications m Selected EU Member States, 158B-19S9 CT Futostet. Wife: "Rest of f ij" is an estimate. .61 qairrment that asylum Seekers submit their applications at a consulate or raibiisy in their country of origin ("i n -c t j im try p roeessm^"). and carrier íanctiaás-These combined with another set oir policies targeted on changing spatial distribution of asylum applications, and specio"cal]y_un di-ationsfrom Western Europe Perhaps the best example is the mission Agree m cm s signed on a bilateral basis between cauiiirJt^^cátcTTTaTidTCHfrräl or Eastern Europe, whi ___________^_ jncilitaicü the reruriť oFäsý hi m "seekers from the former 10 tire latter (King,, x 954). Mm yčoTTlrn e iicators agjeetbat t be combined tíťect oi stich policies was to teducfc Ail dumber t>\ ai^Vum apjAuiatiims across ^Wtstetvi EAVtflPC alter .ihc-PCakoE t.nqxl^.C,^.^ ttina.V\rwy^ia(iy. Sah, lo^nwi: a\\ the countries oi tVve vLutopca.n Union, iVvls decrease vjas iatri^ uta matic, and jppnr.a^»ns had mote t\ianjialvel by iga&^&t the same time, the data in figure z indicate that across all the main EU countries of asylum except Germany, and across the EU as a whole, asylum applications began to re- ■_ ) 62 Historical and Conceptual Approaches bound in the late 1990s. This has been particularly sigfli United Kingdom, where estimates for asylum applications in ^ 959 a returned to the historical high in 1991. / s' One interpretation of these data íšlHar, fust as dosing doivajhe Ufa migration channel forced ťvnnomicjiiij-rancs inm rhe asylum rhacr.dirľ creasing restrictions upglljhjsjisylnm channel are now fnrj-j ryr_ fi<;y)i;nr / •1 e k t i- :ni" .. neu: illc^LiI .^Miiikl. An J 1 in [ndjcadt>iih. ;re duli tliii'iijfŕ nel is increasingly monopolized by smugglers and rrarnc Iters. Thirty-two Iranian Asylum Seekers To illustrate these trends better, this section d jaws on a scp.es flfa depth interviews conducted with thirty-twu Iranian asylum seekers in tl Netherlands, over a ptriüduiabuut a year in 3996 and ijjy?. Interne* data were supplemented by information gathered during open-ended dir-fissions with opinion fuimers and representatives from inside tlieasylua' seeker populations. The mtcr^ietation of such qualitative data isslwijv difficult and perhaps more so where the respondents can be con-idetiii vulnerable, as in tlie case ur asylum seekers. It is, therefore, helpful m rar: derstand the circumstances of the respondents and co assess die vallJiij of the data in this light. The respondents were interviewed in two Aziekoekerscentra (A.■'■ Asylum Seeker Centers) in the Netherlands, Twenty-one were wumoj the majority aged between twenty and thirty-ßve. This predo m mance at young&iJťhŤierna5 the research been able to consider the psychológia! in- i securities associated with being Smuggled clandestinely across burdcrs,« traveling across Europe in the back of a truck, or trying to board a plant with false documents. Disaggregating smuggling into a migration and li uma n rights issue hu highlighted a conceptual contradiction. On the one han J, it seems that smuggling can provide a valuable service, by enabling asylum seekers—.■ including at least some genuine refugees—to escape persecution and reach asylum. On the other hand, it seems mat at the same time smuggling can expose the already vulnerable tu even greater vulnerabiiiry. Herein Iíís a policy conundrum: how to protect asylum seekers from jheitisecurit) Smuggling Asylum Seekers into Western Europe. ťiatedjwh^sinugľjlini; without closing the door on what is one of the possibilities ior applying for asyium in Western Europe. Such conceptual contradictions and poliev conundrums are perhaps surprising veti that the smuggling of asylum seekers is not a new phenomenon. ticre. is clear evidence, for example, that many thousands of Jewish crudes were smuggled both westward andeastward frqmGermany and Occupiedjm rope before and J n ring World War II. re is itu straightforward answer to this conundrum; what is perhaps easier to explain—by breaking it dowu into a series of constituent policy dilemmas—is just why it is so difficult ro solve. Each of these, it might be I, arises in turn from a series of new characteristics that make the xntemporary smuggling of asylum seekers qualitatively different from Iter experiences: namel y, the contemporary composition of asylum frčke:*, the social organization of smuggling, and the emerging purpose of smuggling. One new characteristic is the complex composition of flows of smug-Ů asyium seekers. Most commentators would be unlikely to disagree n Jewish asylum seekers who were smuggled from Germany and Occupied Europe before and during World War II faced vile persecution and 'were in clear need of protection. But most commentators, however sympathetic, would also he unlikely to disagree char arleajit sou ie asylum seek-> arriving in Western fcurope today do not have a genuine claim on refugee sttjmiK^Analysis of rhe cha~ň~gTrig j^tjcTÜ ťoutexTíbr asylum sccfo ■ "as shown how 3 rarirc of migrant carecjories—from refugees to economic, migrants—have now_hcen forced to converge rm a single, illegal; auj^njjfl^Jiaimejyrhe policy dilemma that arises Jšliow to balance thity tijiins n* rf fnuppB ivhilf; Epntrobing the smuggling or" other migrants^--" * -^jeterrrdnew characteristic arises Irom the changing organisation or niggling. This chapter has alluded to a variety of ways in which even smugglers b one small case study are highly organized. Smugglers in Iran seem to have become proaetivsjn rreatina a market fur their services. diey seem to contro [ a closejni^n arton a 1 network nF;ipgnre, rhpv seem to ŕ^yervwdrrrľr^TTnTTfTrliniitasvlum proeedtires in Western European tuun-mrs,jind they have pmve.d-thamfiijfvtia to..bfrv-f-spxiiiaivet-te^wpeRiii^ and ^<*ingírpjíO^^ policy dilemma? ü is how to break out of rhe current vicious cycle,^yj^crcby smug-aglets consistently find tic™ responses to new poiieies 71 72...................Historical and Conceptual Approaches A final new characteristic arguably relates to che changing purpose of the smuggling of asylum seekers. AlthutEgh helping asylum seekers to ty cape persecution m theu t-uuiimes oí origin is still one important function served by smugglers, it is no longer the only function. Instead, stmiEfli have been sti"wn 'n tllis L7flFf ^»Iv tfi 1'ir invwlvil nrf "H1" ln -y IJ rutin t, gxjt rnutĽľ hi" "^" in íirľn])i?.injT rntry Tnrl rvrn trlf-r'Tinf' cfosiMStiom. The policy dilemma that arises is how tu Cjjšaj&rejafe the smuggling process, sn that üinugdJnK into Westem-Lnrnpp run 1lf nmirrolled but miiu^hng out uf some counfries can still be recognized as hiinĽ nci^surY for those being persecuted or denied fundamental human rights. Conclusion As mentioned, the introduction to this chapter was written on the day of the tragedy in Dover. It is now a week later; che events in Dover h^yc already disappeared from the rnedia agenda. Still, they have reinforced^ demand that policymakers respond to what is perceived in many circles. to be a growing problem in terms of both illegal ľ»try and obvious human rights issues connected tu the treatment uf asylum seekers; Tmschflp-'^ ter has tried to illustrate the complexities of the smuggling of asylum seet-crs and to highlight some o( the inherent contradictions, con u n drums, and'; dilemmas. The concern must be that in response to er;uWm to Qmilint Trafficking in Migrants .mil rhe-Role of JmeruatiuiuU Organisations." Discussion paper at the rrth t (J M Seminar on Migration, October, Geneva.