‘Don’t let them drown’: London protestors demand EU immigration policy change

Still fom Ruptly video

Still fom Ruptly video

Dozens of protestors gathered outside the European Commission’s office in London on Saturday to condemn the EU’s policies towards non-European migrants, which are blamed for the deaths of hundreds of people in a shipwreck in the Mediterranean last week.

The demonstrators chanted, “Don’t let them drown” and carried
banners, reading, “Syrian refugees welcome here,” “Blood on your
hands,”
as well as other placards.

They called on the EU to restart the Mare Nostrum search and
rescue operations in the Mediterranean Sea, which helped 150,000
migrants safely arrive in Europe in 2013.

The Migrant Lives Matter protest in the British capital was
organized by the Movement Against Xenophobia and supported by
groups including Stop the War Coalition and Stand Up To Racism.

The deadliest migrant tragedy in the Mediterranean Sea
“exposed the appalling human cost of the ‘Fortress Europe’
immigration policy imposed by [the] European Union and the
British government,”
the organizers of the rally said in a
statement.

Activists blame figures like the Sun newspaper columnist Katie
Hopkins and the anti-immigrant UK Independence Party (UKIP)
leader, Nigel Farage for a rise in anti-immigration sentiment in
Britain.

“Anti-migrant rhetoric of the establishment politicians, UKIP
and the Katie Hopkins obsessed media has led to thousands of
people, many of whom are fleeing nations torn apart by Western
intervention, drowning in the sea,”
they added.

The United Nations condemned Hopkins on Friday after she
described migrants as “cockroaches” and “feral
humans”
in her column in the Sun.

READ MORE:
UN human rights chief compares UK tabloids to ‘Nazi’
propaganda

At least, 800 people fleeing Africa through Libya lost their
lives on April 19 when a migrant boat capsized and sank after
leaving Tripoli.

The incident was preceded by a similar shipwreck, in which 400
drowned a week earlier.

The migrant death toll in the Mediterranean has already reached
1,700 this year. 4,000 bodies were recovered from the sea in
2014.

Thousands more await in Calais

Nearly 25,000 people applied for asylum in the UK last year. Many
travelled through mainland Europe, before ending up at a
makeshift camp at Calais, the main terminal for border crossings
into the UK.

RT has visited the camp, known as the Jungle, which has been
rebuilt several times, and is currently on land allocated by the
French government. The approximately 2,000 people who live there,
the majority of whom are Eritreans, Afghans and Syrians are
having to endure atrocious conditions, which encourage disease
and crime. There is no easy access to clean water and
electricity, a tactic that discourages them from staying.

“These people want to go to Britain, this is Britain’s
responsibility and a result of wars in other parts of the world.
We can’t cope with the influx, Calais is besieged. More people
are coming. The situation is getting worse,”
Philippe
Mignonet, the deputy mayor of Calais told RT.

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