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| Saturday, 6 January, 2001, 12:13 GMT Turkey's human traffic ![]() Rescuers deal with victims of the Turkish disaster By Chris Morris in Istanbul Abu Kalam Ajad emerged from the rubber dinghy like a wounded animal - slumped on all fours, bewildered - his face cautiously scanning the shoreline in front of him. He was just one of the many illegal immigrants in the ship which sunk off the coast of Turkey on New Year's Day, more than 50 of whom are believed to have died. The incident has focused attention on human smuggling - a lucrative business run by highly organised criminal gangs. Abu Kalam was lucky - the 27 year-old from Bangladesh was found alive nearly 30 hours after he was plunged into a nightmare. Shipwreck Huge waves and high winds sent the Georgian-registered ship Pati thumping into the rocks, spilling its human cargo into the sea.
Other young men, from India and Pakistan, died in the water a long way from home. They must have known they were on a dangerous journey, but they must have dreamt of success. And for Abu Kalam and others like him, success means reaching the hallowed ground of the European Union - the land of opportunity. While Europe grows increasingly concerned about how to keep illegal migrants out, the numbers are continuing to grow. Abu Kalam said he entered Turkey by crossing the border from Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq. The mountains are dotted with smuggling routes, the back roads of the lucrative trade in human beings. Once he has recovered from his ordeal, he will be deported back to Iraqi territory. But he probably won't stop trying to get to Europe, and Turkey still looks like his best bet. Lucrative smuggling trade Because of its porous eastern borders, and its geographical position on the edge of the EU, Turkey has become a centre for the smuggling trade.
So the smugglers are feeding a growing demand. They have the power and the money to corrupt, and the ruthlessness to abandon anyone whose luck deserts them. Make no mistake, getting to Europe is a hazardous business and it costs money - thousands of pounds with no guarantee of success. Some people arrive in Turkey and then get stuck, forced to eke out a life outside the system in grinding poverty.
Now they live in a rented room with no source of income, and no means of escape. "We can't go back to Iran because my husband could face the death penalty," said Nashmi. "But we haven't got the money to go any further. We can't even buy clothes for the children." Nashmi regards herself as a political refugee - but it can be a hard point to prove. Others may see her family in a different light - part of the wave of unwanted economic migrants heading remorselessly westward. Global inequality In one form or another, the problem is bound to get worse as long as inequality in the global economy is so striking. And when images of Western affluence are fed by television into huts and shanties across the world, who can blame those who want to take to the road, convinced that on the other side of the divide the streets really are paved with gold.
Migrants come in all shapes and sizes, some good, some bad, but all of them united in their search for a better life. I used to get phone calls from a Ugandan refugee in Istanbul called James, a deserter, he said, from the Ugandan army. Could I get him a passport, he wondered, or have a quiet word with the local United Nations office. They might help him if he knew the BBC. James used to call once every few weeks until his pay phone cut him off. Speaking perfect English, he never asked for money, only for advice, and for help which I could not provide. A few months ago, the calls stopped as suddenly as they began. Perhaps he made it to Europe - he said he had family in Holland. Or perhaps he became another victim of the smuggling gangs who ply their trade in the currency of human hope. |
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