[Peace-discuss] Collateral damage

C. G. Estabrook galliher at uiuc.edu
Sun Jan 11 19:46:21 CST 2009


	10 Jan 2009
	How a child dies in Venice
	11-year-old Afghan boy dies to avoid controls by the border police

He was fifteen years old. No, he was twelve. Maybe, in reality, he was only 
eleven. As the day progressed, his age changed several times, turning 
increasingly younger. In any case, he was a boy. He was found dead in Via 
Orlanda in Mestre, Venice, run over by the lorry under which he had hidden to 
escape the checks by the border police. Why, one would wonder, does an Afghan 
minor, a figure that is well protected by international conventions, by the 
ECHR, and even by the Bossi-Fini law [on immigration], risk his life in such a 
way in order to avoid being intercepted by the border police?

Because, by now, all the migrants, and also those Italians who want to know the 
truth about things, know: in the ports on the Adriatic [coast], anyone is sent 
back, in a summary way. Regardless of their age, status or their life story 
involving wars and persecutions. The boy who died on the past 22 June, also 
under a lorry, had been rejected five days earlier. He was an Iraqi Kurd, he 
could have sought asylum, but he did not find any interpreter, mediator or 
lawyer who could listen to his story and protect his rights. He did not meet the 
CIR (Consiglio Italiano per i Rifugiati, Italian Council for Refugees), which is 
paid by the Ministry precisely to do this, and has recently complained publicly 
about the difficulty of working in a place in which it appears that access is 
forbidden even to the people who need to be given information and possibly defended.

The nameless boy who died last night in Marghera came from Greece, a country 
where human rights are in serious jeopardy for everyone, as the latest episodes 
that have swept across the Hellenic republic show, but especially for migrants 
and asylum seekers. UNHCR and Amnesty have been urging the suspension of returns 
to Greece for some time, but it seems as though this practice continues 
constantly, on a daily basis, with all the violence and deaths that it entails.

On Saturday 29 November a citizens' assembly in Venice discussed these matters. 
The data presented is clear and authoritative, and its acts have been published 
on this website. What emerges from them is a border management system that is 
arbitrary and only tailored towards security concerns. A child attempted to 
escape this system to be free. He did not want to be returned, and died when he 
had almost succeeded. His hands did not manage to hold on, and it is not 
difficult to imagine that instant in which everything ended. The huge 
responsibilities of this tragedy begin in Afghanistan, passing through Turkey 
and Greece, but they end in the port of Venice.

[Source :: Unofficial Statewatch Translation - This article by Alessandra 
Sciurba first appeared on 11 December 2008 on the website of the MeltingPot 
Project, "Come muore un bambino a Venezia" (original, in Italian), available at: 
http://www.meltingpot.org/articolo13723.html]


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