Iceland review - 2019, Page 47

Iceland review - 2019, Page 47
45 Iceland Review avoided. As it became understood that all modern states should bear more responsibility toward asylum seekers, Iceland granted asylum to 52 Hungarian refugees in 1956. Between 1956 and 2012, the country welcomed a total of 525 refugees. Asylum applications increased from just a few dozen only a decade ago to over a thousand in 2017. In the last two years, most asylum seekers have come from Albania, Macedonia, and Georgia. Because these countries are not con- sidered dangerous to live in, however, their citizens generally do not qualify for humanitarian protection. Nearly all of these were rejected, although 75 refugees from other countries were granted asylum in 2019, a significant increase over previous years. Despite the fact that most applicants for asylum in Iceland are rejected and duly sent away, the vast majority of Icelanders are not only friendly but openly welcoming of vulnerable people from war-torn countries. LGBTQ+ refugees from intolerant nations have fared better in the asylum-seeking process, as have families originally from Syria who had been languishing in refugee camps in Lebanon and Turkey. In a recent poll, some 67% of Reykjavík residents expressed a desire to welcome more war refugees and other asylum seekers. However, as asylum applications have skyrocketed, the time-consuming process of reviewing applications has slowed to a crawl. The greater number of deportations has not gone unnoticed by the media and sympathetic members of the public. Several high-profile cases have led to a greater awareness of the government’s controversial use of the Dublin III Regulation to send applicants back to the countries where they originally requested asylum before coming to Iceland. Coming to Iceland Deciding just how many refugees should be granted asylum in Iceland continues to be a hot button issue, but research shows that the majority of Icelanders believe that more should be done for them. As for the reality of what asylum seekers experience while trying to settle in Iceland, looking back in history reveals some peculiar episodes. In 1982 some two dozen politically- oppressed Poles fled their Eastern-bloc country amidst growing unrest between the labor unions and the dictatorship. Due to a radical and welcome shift in the Icelandic government’s policy from previous decades, the Polish refugees were duly granted asylum. Many managed to blend into Icelandic society quickly, but in the intervening years only one of these Poles has remained in Iceland. The rest returned to a free Poland after the conclusion of the Cold War. In the aftermath of the Vietnam War, some 45 refugees were welcomed to Iceland through the efforts of the Red Cross in the early 1990’s. Great pains were taken to train the Vietnamese in the Icelandic language and culture, with mixed results. While some of these former refugees flourished and successfully founded businesses and families, they were clearly in the minority. Most former refugees decided to move on to the United States, Canada, and Australia where there were already thriving Vietnamese expat communities. With refugee families of mixed ethnicity fleeing the oppression and violence of the Yugoslav Wars in the 1990s, there was a similar outcome. The small Westfjords town of Ísafjörður furnished several families of refugees with apartments, schools, mentoring and language training for one year before they were expected to find gainful employment. Jobs in the fish processing industry were plentiful and the quiet town was a welcome relief for the war refugees. But 20 years later not one is left. In the last decade the small yet vibrant town has welcomed economic migrants from Poland who were attracted to the relatively high-paying jobs in sea-food production. But where did the former refugees end up? Some moved to the capital area in Reykjavik for higher education and a wider choice of jobs, while most moved to North America or back to mainland Europe. Nevertheless, Ísafjörður’s residents continue to welcome new refugees and are reportedly very happy to have been of assistance to others in their time of need. A language barrier The majority of Icelanders are patriotic and cherish their language. They take well-deserved pride in Icelandic as a guardian of the nation’s ARRIVING IN THE TINY EASTERN ICELANDIC PORT OF DJÚPIVOGUR, HANS JÓNATAN MANAGED TO FIND EMPLOYMENT AS A MERCHANT AND EVENTUALLY BOUGHT A FARM, MARRIED A LOCAL AND LIVED OUT THE REST OF HIS LIFE WITH HIS FAMILY.
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