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FILE -- In this March 7, 2011 file photo, a boat loaded with migrants is spotted at sea off the Sicilian island of Lampedusa, Italy. The odyssey often begins in an Eritrean refugee camp in Sudan where smugglers offer a deal too good to refuse: Transport to Libya and the chance of a boat trip to Europe, sometimes with no money down. But once in the lawlessness of Libya, the desperate and the dreamers are essentially held hostage by their traffickers until payments are extorted from relatives or they come up with the cash themselves. (AP Photo/Antonello Nusca, File) Image Credit: AP

While travelling up the US-Mexican border several years ago, I met an anti-immigration campaigner in Columbus, New Mexico, who went by the name of Quasimodo and who had carried a .38 pistol around with him ever since he went into an abandoned house and found some Latinos there.

“I looked around and there were 12 guys just 10ft away looking at me,” he explained.

“Did they attack you?” I asked.

“No,” he said.

“Did they look as if they might attack you?”

“No.”

“Has an illegal immigrant ever attacked you?”

“No. But they could have ... if they wanted to.”

They were not interested in him. They had more basic needs. As we wandered the cactus-studded desert around his house we saw bottles of water hung on trees that pro-immigration campaigners had put out for the migrants who had made it that far.

“I know they think they’re doing a good thing,” Quasimodo explained. “But they’re really just encouraging people to make this dangerous journey and put their lives at risk.”

And so it was that, in order to satisfy a baseless fear, Quasimodo created a rationale where depriving the thirsty of water was in their own interests.

It would be comforting to blame [the anti-immigration culture] solely on Tory policy. It would also be dishonest.

The British government’s response to the boatloads of refugees trying to make it across the Mediterranean was driven by the same warped logic. Tory minister Baroness Anelay’s claim last year that supporting search and rescue missions for sinking vessels was a “pull factor”, encouraging more migrants to attempt the dangerous sea crossing” , convinced others in the European Union. Sure enough, when they stopped trying to save drowning people, they drowned. It took that very predictable, horrific fact to actually occur – more than 1,000 people have died in the Mediterranean over the past fortnight – to force a panicked reverse in EU policy.

It would be comforting, in an election season, to blame this solely on Tory policy . It would also be dishonest. The reason the Tories thought they could get away with pushing such a heinous plan is because they felt there would be no electoral price to pay for beating up on foreigners. Labour, with its “Controls on immigration” mug , has wilfully contributed to a political culture whereby immigration is understood not as an enriching opportunity but a sickness of which migrants are the most obvious symptom. Generally speaking, the opposition has not challenged the prevailing misconceptions but pandered to them.

What drives these fears is not difficult to fathom. Throughout Europe, xenophobic and racist parties shape the agenda, preying on people’s ignorance and fear. According to Ipsos/Mori, Brits and Spaniards believe they have twice as many immigrants in their country as there actually are; in Italy, Belgium and France it’s closer to three times; in Hungary it’s eight times; in Poland, more than 30. No wonder they are freaked out.

The truth is, the facts on immigration do not fit easily on a mug, whereas the politics of xenophobia can be condensed into a single sentence. “They’re coming here to get what’s yours.” This is, of course, a lie, stemming from a system in which borders reflexively open for capital and close for people.

In so far as last week’s shift — a return to search and rescue missions and more funding for patrols — will save more lives in the short term, it is welcome. The European Union (EU), the foundations of which emerged from the Second World War, was rooted in the desire to prevent inhumanity ever again blighting the continent. Leaving poor people to die on its shores in the hope it will discourage more poor people from coming hardly qualifies for the social democratic ideals of its architects.

But such a plan is also clearly inadequate for anything other than the shortest of terms. It seeks not to cure the problem but to placate the consciences of those who have been most problematic. No substantial immigration policy is possible that does not engage with foreign policy, historical inequity, international trade and environmental calamity. Around three billion people live on less than $2.50 (Dh9.19) a day. The global 99 per cent did not come about by accident. It is the result of centuries of colonisation, decades of imperialism and the current corruption that has allowed a handful of people, in different ways at different times, to steal natural resources and pilfer public goods. As Winston Churchill once said of Britain: “This small island [is] dependent for our daily bread on our trade and imperial connections. Cut this away and at least a third of our population must vanish speedily from the face of the earth.”

In more recent times, these inequalities have been reinforced by a global trade system that operates according to the golden rule – that those who have the gold make the rules. Put bluntly, Europe is rich (even if those riches aren’t evenly divided) in no small part because other nations are poor.

On top of that, a large number of these people are displaced by wars. The top three nations from which maritime refugees to the EU come are Syria, Afghanistan and Eritrea. The country where they are most likely to start their journey is Libya, which is now effectively a failed state. In other words, many are running for their lives through countries we have bombed. Those in the west who insist we cannot take in “the world’s misery” must, at the very least, acknowledge how much of that misery we are responsible for.

This is not a question of guilt, but responsibility. Many need to come here precisely because we insisted on going there.

That is not the whole story. As my exchange with Quasimodo illustrates, this is not a solely European issue. Indeed, it is not even just a western issue. The countries bearing the heaviest challenges with refugees are poor, developing world nations such as Pakistan, Lebanon and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. And xenophobia is not a preserve of wealthy, white nations. South Africa is still recovering from an outbreak of anti-immigrant violence that left many dead last week.

Nevertheless, the fundamental issue, as David Wearing points out in his excellent recent article in Open Democracy, is not what is pulling migrants but what pushes them. By the time they have boarded these rickety vessels they have often paid thousands of dollars to be led through the desert. People do not make that kind of journey so they can come to the West and draw benefits. Their aim is not to capsize and be rescued, but to get to the other side.

Herein lies the basic, ugly folly behind so many short-term immigration policies throughout the developed world. If you build a 10-foot fence to keep out people who are hungry, they will build an 11-foot ladder to climb over it. If you weaponise a fortress to repel people who fear hunger or war, they will seek ever more desperate ways to penetrate it. They have no choice. They are fighting for their lives. And we should support them.

— Guardian News & Media Ltd