# taz.de -- Migration policy in Algeria: Penalties for everything
       
       > Algeria is a role model of migration control: there are penalties for
       > leaving the country and the nation takes back its deported expatriates.
       > Yet its leadership is proving to be a difficult co-operation partner.
       
 (IMG) Bild: 2012: Syrian refugees camp in Algiers
       
       Algeria is a classic emigration nation. “Legal“ migration, meaning that
       which is officially accepted by the receiving countries, remains an
       important source of income for the Algerian state. In June 2012, the number
       of Algerian national citizens living abroad was indicated by authorities to
       be 1.886 million. 1.718 million were in Europe, among them 1.491 million in
       former colonial ruler France.
       
       While Algeria borders on the Mediterranean Sea, it is relatively distant
       from European shores, islands and territories. Direct pressure on Algeria
       from the European Union to prevent migration movements is not as starkly
       visible as in the cases of Morocco and Tunisia, or Libya.
       
       There are two further factors limiting EU pressure for Algeria's
       co-operation in migration control. Firstly, Algerian national leadership is
       concerned with preserving national sovereignty. Secondly, as a key provider
       of oil and natural gas, also to many EU countries, Algeria is not as
       economically weak and susceptible to blackmail as some other nations on the
       African continent.
       
       ## „Burn“ the borders
       
       In any case, Algeria's diplomatic representatives abroad often do very
       little on behalf of their national citizens living there illegally. The
       consular representative in France, for example, demands proof of legal
       residency status from all national citizens who come to the consulate with
       applications or requests for help.
       
       Attempting to leave the country illegally constitutes a criminal offence in
       Algeria and, in accordance with a law effective as of 25 February 2009,
       carries the threat of two to six months' imprisonment. As for refugee
       smugglers, they face up to twenty years in prison. In practice, however,
       suspended sentences are imposed on Algerians who undertake illegal
       emigration attempts.
       
       ## Secure origins
       
       Since the end of the civil war between the state powers and radical
       Islamists (1991/92 to 1998/99), Algerian citizens’ chances of being granted
       political asylum in any European nation have become very slim; the approval
       quota throughout Europe is at approx. 6 percent. Up to 8,000 people apply
       for asylum in the EU annually.
       
       Around 2013 in France, Algerian citizens ranked twelfth among the various
       nationalities applying for asylum, with 1,477 applications; in 2016 it was
       in sixteenth place with 981 applications. The proportion of decisions
       thereby leading to the granting of “protected status“ in France in 2015 was
       at six percent overall; it was over four times higher for Algerian women
       than for men. In Germany, the acceptance rate for Algerian asylum seekers
       is less than one percent.
       
       ## Sluggish implementation
       
       Between 1994 and 2007, Algerian authorities signed a total of six
       readmission agreements with European states that obligated the country to
       take back its citizens deported from EU nations, as well as citizens of
       third states who had entered via Algeria.
       
       On 3 June 2006, an agreement was signed with Switzerland that formally took
       effect on 26 November 2007. Yet the Algerian side dragged out negotiations
       over a technical “implementation protocol“ for years.
       
       Greater expulsions (there were 700 in 2006) took place especially between
       Spain and Algeria due to the relatively heavy migration between the Oran
       region and Spain's southern coast.
       
       On 8 December 2016, Belgian prime minister Charles Michel was in Algeria to
       negotiate over the state's co-operation in identifying Algerians staying
       “illegally“ in Belgium. So far, no comprehensive expulsion agreement as
       such with the EU has been forthcoming.
       
       ## The European model
       
       Yet Algeria is a country of immigration as well. On 25 June 2008, a law on
       immigration was passed (Law on the conditions for entry, residence and
       movement of foreigners) that, as stated by Algerian journalist Yassine
       Temlali in an article published on 18 December 2012, is modelled to a great
       extent on Fortress Europe's statutory regulations on the subject of
       migration.
       
       The numbers of immigrants are not so high. In 2011, foreigners officially
       authorised for residency were counted at around 114,500. Among them were
       about 41 percent Chinese workers, some eleven percent had come from Egypt
       and seven percent were citizens of Turkey. Additionally, there were smaller
       numbers of Moroccans, Italians, French and UK citizens (each at about three
       percent or five for Italians), as well as people from neighbouring Mali
       and, at that time, about three percent from Syria.
       
       The United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UNDESA), for
       its part, indicated a figure of 242,000 foreigners living in Algeria in
       2010. The UN authorities factored in not only foreigners registered to work
       in the country, but also refugees and asylum seekers under the care of the
       UN refugee aid organisation UNHCR. No legally established refugee status or
       protection exists in Algeria.
       
       The great majority of refugees view Algeria more as a transit country than
       an immigration destination. Since Algeria's coasts are relatively far from
       the European mainland, they generally attempt to travel further to Moroccan
       state territory. However, many migrants remain stuck in Algeria. On 13
       January 2016 Paris evening newspaper Le Monde, accompanying a photo essay
       on The invisible of Algeria, wrote that about 100,000 of them were staying
       in the North African nation at that time.
       
       ## Problems with the local population
       
       Even if Algeria more often serves as a transit point, the Algerian state
       treats the entry of migrants as a problem to be controlled at all costs.
       This is also related to the fact that Moroccan authorities in border
       regions tend to deport refugees caught on their side back to Algeria. This
       has resulted in a kind of ping-pong game played with refugees. In one
       instance from October 2013 a group of migrants from sub-Saharan Africa was
       blocked for a long period at the Moroccan-Algerian border near Maghnia and
       was forced to camp out on the borderland.
       
       On 7 August of the same year, the first state refugee camp was set up
       outside the city of Oran as a “Centre for New Accommodation“ for people
       from Niger. However, the refugees did not stay in the camp, which was
       located far outside Oran, but returned over the following weeks to
       Yaghmoracen. On 17 December 2012, the regional daily newspaper Le Quotidien
       d'Oran reported that the local population feared outbreaks of epidemics and
       accidents due to people from Niger begging in the streets.
       
       ## Impact of the terrors of Boko Haram
       
       Since October 2012, a total of 219 refugees from sub-Saharan Africa have
       been taken from Oran to the southern border of Algeria, two thousand
       kilometres away, or brought to a detention centre near the desert town of
       Adrar. After some of the migrants returned to Oran, on 8 April 2013 Le
       Quotidien d'Oran called for their internment near Adrar. On 11 April of
       that year, Algerian Minister of the Interior Dahou Ould Kablia stated that
       his government was not constructing camps or deportation centres. Yet a
       short time later, some 200 refugees were transported to Adrar. Le Quotidien
       d'Oran described “cleared streets“ and residents sighing in relief.
       
       The condition of refugees in Algeria is closely tied to the general
       situation in Niger, one of the world's ten poorest countries. More
       recently, however, particularly for the population's nomadic groups, the
       borders with neighbouring Nigeria and Chad, which had traditionally been
       open, have become impassable due to the terrors of the Boko Haram sect.
       
       At end of 2014 the Algerian government carried out a large expulsion
       operation of refugees from Niger, during which Algerian authorities claimed
       to be responding to demands from the Nigerien government.
       
       ## Repeated mass deportations
       
       On 24 December 2014 the local association of human rights coalition LADDH
       in the city of Oran protested that the expulsion actions toward Nigerien
       migrants were well on the way to openly becoming a collective deportation.
       In total, about 3,000 people were sent back to Niger through this
       operation.
       
       At the beginning of December 2016, great numbers of migrants from
       sub-Saharan Africa who were living in Algerian coastal towns, particularly
       in the capital of Algiers, were arrested. By the account of the Algerian
       League for the Defense of Human Rights (LADDH), 1,400 persons were arrested
       and taken to the southern Algerian town of Tamanrasset, from where their
       deportations began on 7 December. Those primarily impacted were citizens of
       Mali and Cameroon.
       
       During these events, especially noteworthy statements came from attorney
       Faruk Ksentini, chairman of the Commission for the Protection and
       Advancement of Human Rights, an organisation close to the government. In an
       interview with the newspaper Es-Sawt El-Akher (“The Other Voice“) on 5
       December 2016, he described sub-Saharan Africans as carriers of disease,
       placing them particularly in connection with AIDS, and called upon Algerian
       authorities to deport them to get these “problems“ off the backs of
       Algerians. These remarks caused some outraged reactions on social media.
       
       12 Dec 2016
       
       ## AUTOREN
       
 (DIR) Bernard Schmid
       
       ## TAGS
       
 (DIR) migControl
       
       ## ARTIKEL ZUM THEMA