Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2000-03-30-Speech-4-079"

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"en.20000330.4.4-079"2
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". On the pretext of contributing to building a European immigration and asylum policy, this resolution’s standpoint has nothing to do with freedom for the nationals of poor countries to travel and possibly settle in Europe, but is all about bolstering the slave trade which involves regulating the flow of immigrants as a function of demand from the manufacturing companies of Europe. When it comes to the right of asylum, statements of principle are one thing, the reality of the situation is quite another. In France, for example, only 2,000 of 7,000 asylum applications have been accepted. The rejected asylum seekers become stateless people, victims of the open season on migrants, which is no less disgraceful for being regulated. And what price the subtle distinctions in the report between ‘immigration’ and ‘asylum proper’, when social reality means that a surreal economic organisation condemns millions of people to torture or death by hunger as surely as in dictators’ dungeons? The only reason we are not voting against this text is that we refuse to be associated with the extreme right and their despicable ranting. But our institutions are organically incapable of eliminating the causes which force tens of millions of men, women and children into exile across the world, fleeing oppression or destitution, because that would require society to share the wealth it produces equally, instead of leaving that to the discretion of a few thousand financial groups and their shareholders."@en1

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1http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/rdf/English.ttl.gz
2http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/rdf/Events_and_structure.ttl.gz

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