Anna Triadafyllidou
Anna Triadafyllidou

Anna Triandafyllidou

  • Welcome

    Anna Triandafyllidou is Professor (part-time) at the European University Institute in Florence, Italy and Senior Research Fellow at the Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP). She is currently on leave...

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  • Oι αντιπαραγωγικοί...

    1/16/2011 2:15:00 PM Comments 0
  • Αυτοί οι βάρβαροι είναι μια κάποια λύση...

    Η κατασκευή ενός φράχτη στον Έβρο έχει παρουσιαστεί τις τελευταίες μέρες ως απαραίτητη για τον έλεγχο των ροών μη νόμιμης μετανάστευσης από την Τουρκία προς την Ελλάδα. Τείνει να θεωρείται ότι η Ελλάδα δεν φυλά αποτελεσματικά τα σύνορα της. Αυτό δεν είναι αλήθεια. Οι πολυάριθμες συλλήψεις μη νόμιμων μεταναστών στα σύνορα αποδεικνύουν ακριβώς το αντίθετο. Πρέπει όμως να σημειωθούν ορισμένα επιπλέον στοιχεία για να έχουμε την πλήρη εικόνα του τι συμβαίνει στον Έβρο και στα νησιά.

    Σύμφωνα με τα στοιχεία του Υπουργείου Προστασίας του Πολίτη, στο πρώτο 9μηνο του 2009 έγιναν 30,000 συλλήψεις στα ελληνοτουρκικά ενώ στην αντίστοιχη περίοδο το 2010 οι συλλήψωεις ήταν 38,000 (αύξηση 20% περίπου). Ενώ το 2009 οι συλλήψεις εγιναν κατα κύριο λόγο στα νησιά το 2010 έγιναν στον Έβρο. Το 2010 οι κυρίαρχες εθνικότητες των μεταναστών χωρίς χαρτιά ήταν Αφγανοί, Σομαλοί, Παλαιστίνιοι, και σε μικρότερο βαθμό Ιρακινοί (συνολικά πάνω από 30,000 άτομα). Οι άνθρωποι αυτοί ειναι μη απελάσιμοι γιατί προέρχονται από ζώνες πολέμου και χρήζουν διεθνούς προστασίας σύμφωνα με τους κανόνες της ΕΕ και τους ελληνικούς νόμους.
     
    Επομένως το θέμα διαχείρισης των ελληνικών και δη των ελληνοτουρκικών συνόρων, τα οποία ήδη φυλάσσονται αρκετά καλά, είναι πρωτίστως ζήτημα εξέτασης αιτημάτων και παροχής ασύλου (το σχετικό νομοσχέδιο είναι προς ψήφιση στη Βουλή). Επίσης είναι ζήτημα συνεργασίας (απολύτως αναγκαίας!) με την Τουρκία γιατί αλλιώς οι ροές δεν θα μειωθούν – απλά θα επιστρέψουν στα νησιά ή μέσω του Έβρου ποταμού (ο φράχτης θα κατασκευαστεί στο μικρό τμημα όπου τα σύνορα είναι χερσαία).
     
    Αντί να ξοδεύουμε εκατομμύρια για τον φράχτη (ο αντίστοιχος φράχτης στην Θέουτα και Μελίγια της Ισπανίας κόστισε 33 εκατομμύρια για 11 χιλιόμετρα) πρέπει η κυβέρνηση να πιέσει και μέσω ΕΕ την Τουρκία να συνεργαστεί. Επίσης η κυβέρνηση πρέπει να πιέσει για αναθεώρηση της συνθήκης Δουβλίνο ΙΙ έτσι ώστε να υπάρξει μια πιο δίκαιη κατανομή των αιτούντων άσυλο μεταξύ των Ευρωπαϊκών χωρών. Οι φράχτες είναι ευρήματα προς εσωτερική πολιτική κατανάλωση και δεν είναι ιδιαίτερα αποτελεσματικοί για τον έλεγχο της μη νόμιμης μετανάστευσης.

     

    1/11/2011 2:31:00 AM Comments 0
  • Athens burning or where do we go from here?

     

    Images from the protest marches yesterday in Athens.

    The demonstrations were part of a general strike on the same day against the vote on the 2011 budget at the Greek Parliament.

    Although such a strike in mid December is almost customary in Greece, these last years such strikes and protest marches have seen unprecedented violence being unleashed.

    Two years ago it was the death of a young boy who was shot dead by two policemen after a sort of misunderstanding. This tragic incident had then led to widespread violence that burnt down the wider area of the Athens centre for about a week. Universities and schools were occupied and everything was disrupted. It seems that the tragic death of Alexandros Grigoropoulos and the events of the 'black December' (2008) have signalled a turning point for Greek society.

    Is it that Greeks can take no more? but no more of what?

    Two years ago, in 2008 the argument was that youth could take no more. No more of no hope, of inadequate education, lack of opportunity and underemployment.

    It was my feeling then (as a 40 year old) that it was my generation that could take no more, if anything. Those of us who had studied, worked for a long time, had kids, a mortgage and were really under pressure. it also seemed to me that Greek youth is rather spoiled, at least that middle class and lower middle class youth that was on the streets in December 2008 (some of whom were trhowing stones and custom made Molotov bombs) .

    The fact of the matter is that those incidents provoked a feeling of insecurity that was unleashed mainly targeting irregular migrants at the centre of Athens. The then conservative government went into enforcemeng big time, doing raids every day and every night in late spring and early summer 2009 throughout the neighbourhoods where irregular migrants, newly arrived from Afghanistan, Pakistan and Bangladesh or some sub Saharan African country were surviving.

    The conservative government went down a self-destroying and a country-destroying path, borrowing money which it misused, tyring to cheat the statistics and going into elections in September 2009 as if these would be a purgatory for all their sins.

    The Socialist government that took power (having hidden the truth - that they all knew - from the voters, notably that hard times were ahead and that money was tight, VERY TIGHT) started off with a lot of dynamism and many of us had hoped (and still hope) that if there is anyone who can get the country out of here it is this government of George Papandreou which includes many new people, with new ideas, not yet corrupted by politics and by clientelism, who really believed in him and in the possibility that the country can profoundly change.

    However, old habits die hard. Thus, after a painful year of salary cuts and other measures that have strangled the market in Greece, I am still waiting...

    for the structural reforms on the economy - the opening up of professions, the liberalisation of licenses, all these measures that economists tell us will re-launch the economy

    for a change of ethics among politicians: can't they give back their black cars and take the metro to work? can't they decrease the salaries of the Parliament's administration too?

    for a change of ethics among the population: can citizens start paying their taxes? can fonctionnaires start doing their job? can people accept that you cannot work for 20 years and be in pension for another 35 as we all live too long for that? can people accept that we all have to be evaluated in the work we do, starting from teachers and University professors for once?

    People will say again that violence is the natural reaction of people who have lost their hope. But one wonders whether all this fervour that is put into demonstrations, if it were put into making this country work, wouldn't it give better results?

    12/15/2010 5:16:00 PM Comments 0
  • Seasonal Migration: How to Regulate it?

    In the latest issue of ELIAMEP Thesis Anna Triadafyllidou states that the European Commission has recently issued a proposal for a Directive regulating the conditions of entry and residence of third-country nationals for the purposes of seasonal employment (COM (2010) 379 final). This Directive proposal is part of the Commission’s strategy to regulate labour migration through a piecemeal approach; notably through regulating specific categories of migrant workers. This paper discusses what seasonal migration is and how it differs from circular, temporary, or shuttle migration. It argues that seasonal migration is a form of temporary migration that has a seasonal character and hence concerns employment sectors which are characterised by seasons of high and low employment, including thus not only agriculture but also tourism and catering but normally excluding construction or domestic work for instance.

    The essay in hand reviews critically the Directive Proposal and argues that although it may be seen as a step forward in transparency and in bringing closer Member State provisions in the area of seasonal migration, it needs a boost as regards the protection of seasonal migrants’ labour conditions and employment rights. In view of regulating seasonal labour migration at the EU level, the Directive should also consider whether seasonal labour migrants should be allowed to move also between Member States. On the other hand, the proposal is evaluated positively for a number of features such as: not tying the worker to her/his employer, allowing for the right to join trade unions, and proposing a simplified bureaucratic procedure for multiple entry visas.

    11/18/2010 12:42:00 PM Comments 0

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Copyright 2009 Anna Triandafyllidou