Financialised migration control: Bureaucratisation and irresponsibility for refoulement and border violence
The financialisation of migration control has contributed to the bureaucraticisation—and thus irresponsibilisation—of EU migration control policies, both at the EU’s external borders, e.g. Greece, and at its externalised borders, e.g. in Libya and the central Mediterranean. The legal struggles we have undertaken with others to challenge these cooperative frameworks for the mass and structural violence against migrants that they enable and perpetuate date back to 2019, seeking much-needed transparency and public accountability for their harmful impacts.
These include two sets of interventions. The first set of legal interventions, submitted in April 2020, challenges financialised migration cooperation with Italian and Libyan authorities on grounds of financial mismanagement and maladministration, before the European Court of Auditors and the European Parliament’s Petitions Committee respectively, for enabling a host of abuses against migrants making their way to Europe, including their return to and containment in Libya. The second set of interventions, launched in July 2023 with the European Ombudsman, seeks redress for the harmful impacts of the EU’s funding and support for border control operations by Greece as an EU external border Member State.
Despite legislative and institutional reforms over the past years, the Commission has remained unable and unwilling to ensure proper fundamental rights monitoring and continues to wrongly rely on both Member States and third parties to enforce its border regime.
INTERVENTIONS
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Systemic unaccountability for EU-funded ‘pushbacks’ in Greece
Submitted to the European Ombudsman on 24 July 2023—together with Legal Centre Lesvos, Mobile Info Team, HIAS and Equal Rights Beyond Borders—the complaint challenges the legality of the European Commission’s material and other forms of support to Greece’s border enforcement operations and infrastructure of illegal expulsions (‘pushbacks’) at Greece’s Evros river and Aegean sea borders.
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EU-funded refoulement and containment in the Central Mediterranean and Libya
Two interventions—before the European Court of Auditors (ECA) and the European Parliament’s Petitions Committee (PETI)—make up the first set of challenges to legally expose and challenge the structures of the EU’s externalisation, orchestration, and financialisation of migration control in the Central Mediterranean.
UPDATES
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Systemic unaccountability at the EU’s external border: missed opportunities of the European Ombudsperson’s decision on Frontex’s SAR role and obligations in the Aegean region
The statement is in response to the European Ombudsperson’s decision, published on 28 February 2024, following its own-initiative strategic inquiry concerning the role of Frontex in the context of search and rescue operations. The statement draws on the Joint Contribution the organisations made during this inquiry.
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European Ombudsperson opens inquiry into the Commission’s administration of EU funding used in Greece’s illegal expulsion of migrants
The inquiry is based on the joint submission of a complaint against the European Commission by de:border // migration justice collective, Legal Centre Lesvos, HIAS Greece, Equal Rights Beyond Borders, and Mobile Info Team, with the support of several investigative and research partners—including Dr. Lena Karamanidou, Border Violence Monitoring Network, Forensic Architecture and Lighthouse Reports.
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Joint statement on the Pylos shipwreck: Abolishing borders, ending violence, transforming justice
In the weeks following the Pylos shipwreck, together with members of the Feminist Autonomous Centre for research and participants of the Feminist No Borders Summer School: Abolitionist Care, de:border co-drafted and signed this statement—‘Abolishing Borders, Ending Violence, Transforming Justice’.