Governments are cracking down on immigration throughout the E.U. BY AATISH TASEER | Paris
Posted Sunday, February 20, 2005; 12.03 GMT Denmark Though only 6.8% of Denmark's 5.4 million are foreign-born, immigration was a key issue in this month's election. Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen's coalition won easily, thanks in part to policies that have cut asylum seekers by 74%. The right-wing Danish People's Party, traditionally an ally of the government, wants to go further by stripping citizenship from naturalized Danes found guilty of a crime and revoking foreigners' right to vote in local elections.
France Twelve hundred Muslim clerics are now encouraged to attend courses in French language and culture and secular law. Nicolas Sarkozy, a likely presidential candidate, is pushing for U.S.-style affirmative-action programs and has proposed quotas for immigrants based on skills and nationality.
Germany Opposition leader Edmund Stoiber suggested that immigrants take a mandatory oath of allegiance. Though Stoiber's suggestion was rejected, a new law imposes a ban on unskilled workers from European and non-European countries.
Ireland The government is recruiting immigrant workers to satisfy the economy's labor needs. Last year some 34,000 work visas were issued, most to workers from Eastern Europe. Resentment against immigrants is rising.
Willkommen, Ausländer [Jun. 07, 2004]
Chancellor Schröder hopes to boost the German economy by inviting skilled foreigners to immigrate
The Desperate Journey [Dec. 12, 2003
]
TIME tracks one man's path from Somalia to Italy
Human Traffic [Oct. 28, 2003]
Italy's Interior Minister tells TIME how he plans to tackle one of international crime most substantial businesses
Fed Up In France ... [Sep. 06, 2004]
The talk of Paris synagogues: immigration to Israel. Are anti-Semitic attacks triggering a new exodus?
Reversal Of Fortune [Jan. 20, 2003]
Their ancestors left Italy generations ago to make lives in the New World. Now Argentines are moving to Veneto to make lives in the Old
Manning the Gates [Jan. 06, 2004]
How the EU uses technology to nab asylum cheats
Mogadishu at 60 Miles an Hour Arms merchants are once again doing brisk business after a rapid change of power in this tough town, but so far the peace has held
The Year of The Nuke A rundown of the world's nuclear powerhouses, and what to expect in the coming months