The Econmist - USA (2021-10-30)

(Antfer) #1

44 Europe The Economist October 30th 2021


base  effectsandboomingexports.Butin­
flation  anddevaluationareravagingthe
wages  of  ordinaryTurks.Indollarterms,
gdp per person,whichgrewsteadilyuntil
2013, is backtowhereitwasin2009.Dur­
ing Mr Erdogan’sfirstdecadeinpower(he
first  becameprimeministerin2003)mil­
lions  of  Turksworkedtheirwayintothe
middle class.Overthepastcoupleofyears,
according totheWorldBank,3.2mofthem
sank into poverty.
Mr  Erdogan’sopponentssmellblood,
calling  (in  vain)forearlyelections,inthe
knowledge thattheywouldhavea genuine
chance to unseathim.KemalKilicdaroglu,
the  head  ofthechp, recentlyurgedoffi­
cials to stopfollowing“illegalorders”from
Mr  Erdoganandwarnedthatthose who
continued todosowouldbeheldaccount­
able when theoppositiontookpower.
Since  2016, when an abortive coup
rocked  Turkey,themainoppositionhas
deferred to MrErdoganonalmosteveryna­
tional­securityissue,fromthecountry’s
purchase  ofadvancedweaponsfromRus­
sia to its armedoffensivesinSyriaandLib­
ya.  That  changedonOctober26th,when
the chp saidit wouldopposerenewingthe
government’smandatetodeploytroopsto
Syria  and  Iraq.Businesspeoplehavealso
begun  to  speakup.Turkey’slargestbusi­
ness group, tusiad, recentlycalledfora re­
turn to central­bankindependenceandthe
separation ofpowers.

Knives out?
There are evensignsthatofficialsandrul­
ing­party  backbenchersmaybepreparing
for  the  endoftheErdoganera.Ankarais
awash  with allegations that a charity
linked to oneofthepresident’ssonsplaced
hundreds  ofsympathisersingovernment
jobs. Leakeddocumentssuggestthechari­
ty was allocateda numberofpropertiesthe
governmentseizedfromtheGulencom­
munity,  the groupinvolved in the 2016
coup.  Meanwhile,SedatPeker,afugitive
mobster, continuestoregalehis2mTwit­
ter followerswithstoriesimplicatingoffi­
cials in crimesrangingfromcorruptionto
drug  trafficking.Analystsbelieveatleast
some  of  theleaksarecomingfromdisaf­
fected ak typesorbureaucratseagertodis­
tance themselvesfromthegovernment.
But it is fartooearlytowriteoffMrEr­
dogan. Turkey’sleadercontinuestotower
over  the  country’s politicsand to com­
mand the loyaltyoftensofmillionsofpeo­
ple,  the  mediaandstateinstitutions,in­
cluding  thecourtsandthepolice. More
troublingly,heandhisentouragemaybe
capable of desperatemeasurestoclingon
to  power.  MrErdogan’slatestshowdown
with the Westwillnotbehislast.Another
military  offensive inSyria, andanother
wave of repressionathome,maybearound
the corner aswell.MrErdoganwillsurely
not go quietly.n

TheEU’sborders

Wire transfer


T


heeuropeanunionhasa firmstance
onpaying forborder walls:itwon’t.
Even after Europe’s migration crisis in
2015­16,when1.4mpeoplearrived,many
fleeingSyria’scivilwar,theEuropeanCom­
missionsentHungaryawaywitha fleain
itsnationalearwhenitaskedforreim­
bursementforfencingoffitsborderwith
Serbia,oneofthemainentrypoints.
NothingintheSchengenBordersCode,
which governs border management, a
sharedresponsibilitybetweentheeuand
itsmemberstates,stopsthecommission
frompayingfor fences.Buttheview in
Brusselsisthattheyarecostlyandineffec­
tive.Theycanbeclimbed.Theydivertrath­
er than deter migrants. And they get in the
way  of  genuine  refugees  with  the  right  to
asylum.  The  eu sends  border  guards  and
pays for higher­tech solutions instead. 
But the commission is now being urged
to  change  its  mind.  This  comes  as  the
number  of  first­time  asylum­seekers  this
spring has almost doubled compared with
2020  (when  covid­19  made  moving  hard).
Meanwhile,  Belarus  is  mischievously  try­
ing to herd Iraqi asylum­seekers into Lith­
uania, Latvia and Poland, perhaps in retali­
ation  for  eusanctions  on  its  election­rig­
ging  government.  And  many  Europeans
expect a lot of Afghans to arrive soon. This
month 12 member states wrote to the com­
mission requesting changes in how the eu
tackles  border  security.  Among  other
things, they want Brussels to pay for fenc­
es. A physical barrier “serves the interest of
[the]  whole  eu,  not  just  member  states  of
first arrival”, it argues. Such things, it says,
should be “adequately funded from the eu
budget as a matter of priority”.
The  group,  which  includes  Hungary,
Latvia, Austria, Poland and Greece, was led
by Lithuania, which wants eutaxpayers to
cover  75%  of  the  €152m  ($176m)  it  will
spend  on  a  three­metre­high  fence  on  its
border with Belarus. The project is sched­
uled  for  completion  next  September.  This
summer Politico reported that both Lithua­
nia  and  Greece  had  asked  for  funding  for
their  own  barriers.  Greece  wanted  help  to
pay for a €60m extension of its fence along
its north­eastern border with Turkey. This
is  a  pre­emptive  move,  in  case  those  Af­
ghans  arrive,  and  a  “necessity”  for  border
protection, said a Greek spokesman. 
The  commission  has  not  formally  re­
sponded. But last week its president, Ursu­
la  von  der  Leyen,  seemingly  rebuffed  the

requestata summitofeu leadersinBrus­
sels.  “There  will  be  no  funding  for  barbed
wire  and  walls,”  she  reportedly  told  the
leaders.  But  some  observers  think  that
could  change  if  enough  member  states
continue to push hard. 
The  commission  is  already  taking  a
tougher  approach  to  migration.  The  eu’s
joint border force, Frontex, is getting more
money  and  people;  and  the  commission
has  also  proposed  creating  a  union­wide
deportation  co­ordinator,  though  squab­
bling over which eu countries should take
how  many  asylum­seekers  has  held  this
up.  The  eu’s  commissioner  for  home  af­
fairs,  Ylva  Johansson  of  Sweden,  has
praised  fencing  as  a  tactic  to  slow  migra­
tion.  On  a  recent  visit  to  Lithuania,  she
called the country’s fencea “good idea”. eu
commissioners have learned from the mi­
grant crisis of 2015­16 that taking in lots of
asylum­seekers  comes  with  a  political
cost,  says  Roderick  Parkes,  of  the  German
Council  on  Foreign  Relations,  a  Berlin­
based think tank. Building a wall doesn’t. 
European  countries  have  built  about
1,000km (600 miles) of border fencing over
the past 30 years, the bulk of it since 2015.
Today, more than half of all eu states have
some  physical  barrier  at  an  external  bor­
der.  As  fencing  becomes  more  normal,  it
will be harder for the commission to refuse
to  fund  it,  Mr  Parkes  says.  Member  states
will  argue  that  physical  barriers  are  now
part  of  the  routine  border  protection  that
the eu shares a responsibility to fund. And
even  if  the  eu won’t  pay  up,  some  states
have  found  ways  to  build  fences  without
springing all the costs on their own taxpay­
ers.  Lithuania,  for  example,  won’t  be  pay­
ing for its barrier alone. The Czech Repub­
lic  has  already  committed  to  send the
country €530,000 to speed up the work.n

Several eu members want handouts for
barriers to keep migrants out

Build a wall and get Brussels to pay for it
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