Why Syria’s war has always been Europe’s problem
By Anelise Borges, Euronews' International Affairs Correspondent
March 15 will mark a decade since Syrians took to the streets to demand
political change. A decade since the regime of Bashar al-Assad crushed protests
and pursued a campaign of repression, turning the uprising into a bloody
conflict.
Nearly 400,000 people have been killed, according to the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights. Half of Syria’s population has been
displaced, the Danish Refugee Council has said.
Europe has felt the impact of the Syrian War more than any region outside
the Middle East. Millions have crossed into its borders in search of
refuge from death and violence. In ten years, an estimated 1.4 million
people found a new home in Europe, according to EU figures on successful
asylum applications.
Yet, the war rages on to this day. And, despite what many want to
believe, this crisis has been “Europe’s problem” from the start.
When demonstrations started in 2011, the EU (and other Western players)
promised to help protect Syrians’ human rights and fulfil their
aspirations of a new, democratic Syria.
But Europe stood idle and watched the civil war become a regional proxy
battle and Syria an area where a great power struggle grinds on. European
governments never seemed in a position to weigh in as Russia, Iran or
Turkey wreaked yet more havoc in the region.
While these powerful foes fuelled the flames of the war in Syria, Europe
emerged as the bystander in a catastrophe it did not see coming – nor
have the means to avert.
Syrians were caught in the crossfire of geopolitics and their country was
brought to its knees.
Today, the country is a fragile state
plagued by poverty, hunger, illiteracy, radicalism, combined with an ever
more oppressive Syrian regime. And it is under the influence of more and
more regional and international powers.
This will also have major consequences for European security, domestic
policies and our societies at large.
Many Syrians who have fled to Europe hope to one day be needed by the
countries where they now reside. To mark the anniversary of the civil war
breaking out, I went to meet some of them. “This place opened its arms to
me from the beginning. There are people here who support me. So, of
course, I hope that one day they will say: ‘This is the man we need’ or
‘this is the man we’ve been looking for’,” Dorado Jadiba, a Syrian living
in France, told me.
It’s time Europe finally develops a cohesive policy that gives hope for
Syrians: Those in Syria who still dream of building a secular and
democratic state where free and fair elections are the standard and
dissent is tolerated, as well as those in Europe who are striving for
integration and a new life in a peaceful nation.
“Finding refuge” is a series of exclusive reports that
tell the story of the Syrian War through the personal experiences of
Muhammed, Khaled, Ismail, Hamza, Mohammed, Ahmed and Dorado – some of the
Syrians who have fled to Europe. The first instalment will air on
Euronews from Monday, March 15.
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