# taz.de -- Migration policy in Chad: In the middle, on the edge | |
> More people are seeking refuge in Chad than trying to emigrate. This is | |
> why the country has received less focused attention from the EU so far, | |
> despite its central location. | |
Bild: Refugees from Nigeria in Camp Baga Sola in Chad | |
The Republic of Chad, which has been independent from the former colonial | |
power of France since 11 August 1960, holds no specific bilateral agreement | |
on migration with France and/or the EU at present. However, most recently, | |
the Republic of Chad is also becoming involved in the EU's efforts toward | |
migration control at the borders of the Sahel, as well as on the national | |
borders of Libya. | |
When Chad gained independence as a state, the French Republic and the | |
Republic of Chad signed an agreement that comprised the central African | |
country's entry into the Multilateral Convention, a multilateral agreement | |
on the basic rights of the members of states in the French-speaking | |
community. On the basis of the Convention, members of these contracting | |
party states enjoyed the effective freedom to settle within the borders of | |
France. | |
Beginning 10 March 1961, this agreement was valid for members of all French | |
ex-colonies in Africa, excluding only the Republic of Guinea, which was to | |
be “punished“ for political reasons. The agreement guaranteed them freedom | |
to enter the country as long as they carried a carte d’identité – a form of | |
personal identification – or a passport, even if the passport had expired | |
up to five years earlier. Furthermore, members of these relevant states | |
were guaranteed access to all employment positions on French soil, even in | |
public service. | |
When compulsory possession of a residence permit and a work permit became | |
established law in France, via two simple ministerial ordinances (from the | |
ministries of labour and the interior) starting on 30 November 1974, the | |
French Republic unilaterally put an end to the previous legal status. In | |
the same time period, the agreements with the African Francophone states in | |
question began to be renegotiated. Incidentally, just prior to this in | |
1973, Chad, for its part, had already announced its revocation of the | |
multilateral convention from 22 June 1960. | |
In Chad's case, this phase led to a complete elimination of all special | |
distinctions for citizens of Chad, in a shift to the “general“ law for | |
national foreigners, which had already been issued as significantly more | |
restrictive. This was not the case for all former French colonies in | |
Africa. | |
## Minimal migration to the EU | |
On 6 March 1976, several new co-operation agreements between the French | |
Republic and the Republic of Chad were signed, all of which took effect in | |
1978. From then on, citizens of Chad in France lived juristically under the | |
“normal“ law on national foreigners. At first, in a transitional phase, the | |
previous regulations that had been more favourable to entry and settlement | |
still applied to Chad nationals. After January 1981, however, they | |
definitely fell under the “usual“ foreign national law, which is still the | |
case today. More favorable regulations that deviate from the norm, such as | |
those in France for citizens of the Cameroon, do not exist. | |
The European Union (EU), for its part, has not reached any specific | |
agreement with the Republic of Chad on the subject of migration. The issue | |
still has an influence on common bilateral co-operation. One reason for | |
this could be that migration by Chad nationals to the EU has been minimal | |
in numbers to date. Statistics from 2016 from the European office Eurostat | |
count 50 to 80 asylum applicants from Chad per month for the entire EU. | |
The European Union (EU), for its part, has not reached any specific | |
agreement with the Republic of Chad on the subject of migration, although | |
the issue still influences general bilateral co-operation. One reason for | |
this could be that migration by Chad nationals to the EU has been minimal | |
in numbers to date. Statistics for 2016 from the European office Eurostat | |
count 50 to 80 asylum applicants per month from Chad for the entire EU. | |
In France, the National Court of Asylum – the court of appeal for asylum | |
procedures – issued decisions on 108 cases from Chad nationals in all of | |
2013, out of a total of 38,540 decisions. Of these 108 asylum applications, | |
the court of appeals approved only 17; the rate of rejection stood at 84 | |
percent. Visa applications of all kinds submitted to the French consulate | |
in Chad numbered 4,568 overall in the year 2010 and 4,417 overall in 2011. | |
Where numbers are concerned, therefore, the country is not a “marked“ | |
migrant country of origin. | |
The EU's collaboration with Chad, which was financed in the period from | |
2008 to 2013 in the amount of €328 million from the European Development | |
Fund, EDF, officially focused mainly on the following points: Constructing | |
a transparent justice system, “good government leadership“ and improved | |
transparence in the financial administration; improvement to living | |
conditions, primarily for the rural population; better provision of food | |
supplies; better provision of health services. In the inspection reports | |
for the EDF, however, remarks on the subject of “migration movements“ can | |
also be found, such as those in Appendix XII of the annual report for 2003. | |
## Focus on neighbour countries | |
Represented by its authoritarian president, Idriss Déby Itno, who has held | |
office since 1990, the Republic of Chad took part in the summit between the | |
EU and African states in the Maltese capital of Valletta. Yet the country | |
does not appear on the list of those states to whom preferential | |
“partnerships“ or “pacts“ on migration control were to be offered in the | |
framework of the so-called Valletta Process, such as Niger and Nigeria – | |
two countries that directly border on Chad – as well as tSenegal, Mali and | |
Ethiopia, plus Jordan and Libya with regard to refugees from Syria. | |
Chad is a founding member of the so-called “Sahel G5“ group of states in | |
the Sahel zone. The group was founded on 16 February 2014 in the | |
Mauritanian capital Nouakchott. A summit of the G5 group took place on 20 | |
November 2015 in Chad's capital N’Djamena; the UN High Representative for | |
Foreign Affairs and Security, Federica Mogherini, also took part. On this | |
occasion, the issues of “areas of security policy, of border | |
administration, migration, counterterrorism, as well as the prevention of | |
(Note: Islamic) radicalism“, among others, were defined as topics for a | |
“regional coordination“, as well as for the “co-operation between Sahel G5 | |
and the European Union“. | |
On 19 May 2016, the EU Commission presented 20 new actions to benefit | |
stability and combat the underlying causes of illegal migration in the | |
entire Sahel region. These were to be financed by the EU Trust Fund for | |
Africa that had been launched at the Valletta summit, for a total amount of | |
€280 million. Chad was not listed as a specific target country; however, | |
eight of the actions affect the “Lake Chad Basin“, which is bordered by | |
Niger, Nigeria and the Cameroon as well as Chad, with a focus upon | |
“combatting the Boko Haram sect“. | |
## Police of the Sahel zone | |
On 13 June 2016 the EU Commission in Brussels outlined a further “six | |
actions“ for the Sahel area for which total costs to the Africa Trust Fund | |
were estimated at €146 million. The following trans-national goals were | |
listed: “managing/controlling migration movements, combatting human | |
trafficking“ as well as the favouring of “return and reintegration“. | |
Additionally, at a cost totaling €41.6 million, trans-national “robust, | |
flexible, mobile and interdisciplinary“ police units – bearing the French | |
acronym GAR-SI Sahel, which stands for “Rapid Action Groups for | |
Surveillance and Intervention“ were to be established. As specific | |
expenditures for Chad, moreover, €10.3 million were earmarked for | |
vocational integration for young Chadians “with poor or non-existent school | |
education“. | |
Precedents for these actions could be evidenced in a response by the German | |
government on 13 July 2016 in the Bundestag to a minor interpellation from | |
the Bündnis 90/Green Party lobby, titled, “Measures for Chad“ in the | |
context of the Valletta Process, such as employment policy “around Lake | |
Chad“ with financing in the amount of €27 million. From the side of the | |
German federal government, promotional policy measures were specified on | |
the one hand, (€20 million for the livestock farming sector), and on the | |
other hand, a programme to manage the impacts of the crisis in the | |
bordering Central African Republic (€12 million) as well as “security and | |
counterterrorism“ (€8 million). | |
On 17 June 2016 , EU Representative Mogherini and the foreign ministers of | |
the Sahel G5 countries met with the press in Brussels. Together with | |
Chadian Minister Moussa Faki Mahamat, Mogherini held a specific press | |
conference in this context. The goals cited by Ms. Mogherini were | |
“development, the creation of jobs – especially for young people – but | |
also, counterterrorism and the fight against human trafficking (and) | |
illegal migration“. At the occasion of the joint press conference, | |
Mogherini went into further detail on EU missions in Mali and in Niger, | |
however, in regards to Chad, she spoke of “the control and management of | |
the borders in the South of Libya“ as the task of urgent priority, also in | |
regards to dealing with “waves of migration passing through Libya“. | |
## More engagement | |
The Chad regime, for its part, is calling for collaboration from the | |
European side “to curb the influx of migrants toward Europe“, as formulated | |
by the authoritarian President Idriss Déby Itno on 12 October 2016 in | |
Berlin – where he was visiting at the invitation of Federal Chancellor | |
Angela Merkel. On this occasion, Déby claimed that the EU should seek | |
“broader solutions with all the Sahel states“ instead of favouring only | |
“bilateral agreements with Mali or Niger“. | |
This could, and should, be understood as a call to involve his country more | |
intensely than before in multilateral efforts toward migration control. In | |
any case, up until now, Chad has played a minor role in this matter, | |
compared to Niger, Mali or Senegal. One reason for this may lie in the fact | |
that the number of Chadian citizens living or arriving in Europe is | |
relatively small, while at the same time, the country is more of a refuge | |
and receiving location than an exit country for refugees. | |
Due to the conflicts in neighbouring countries and regions such as the | |
Sudan (Darfur) and especially in the Central African Republic, Chad is | |
currently hosting about 700,000 refugees. In this context, Federal | |
Chancellor Merkel met with authorities in N’Djamena in October 2016 and | |
approved €8.9 million in aid money. From the standpoint of the EU powers, | |
their primary concern is that refugees from the Sudan and Central African | |
Republic will be able to find reception and support in their neighbour | |
country of Chad, but will not hit upon the idea of moving on toward Europe. | |
12 Dec 2016 | |
## AUTOREN | |
Bernard Schmid | |
## TAGS | |
migControl | |
## ARTIKEL ZUM THEMA |