186 organisations demand EU leaders change course and end your war on migrants

In October 2024, 70+ migrant-led organisations and 140 supporters wrote to EU institutions to demand alternatives to the EU’s deadly border regime. Following further announcements of rollbacks on asylum rights and of deportation plans, and in a context of an ever-accelerating global fascist shift, we reiterate our call for EU leaders to change course and end their war on migrants.

Attacks on migrants’ rights are the beginning of attacks on everybody. Anti-migrant politics and the subsequent degradation of rights have opened the door for rollbacks in women’s rights and the right to abortion, anti-gender movements, youth movements, anti-worker shifts and the widespread repression of civil liberties. Collectively, these trends disproportionately impact communities at risk of state violence, including poor people, (undocumented) migrants, women, racialised, queer and trans people, young people, and sex workers.

We, organisations led by migrants and racialised people, along with our supporters, reiterate our call to European leaders to condemn the violent, punitive and immoral turn in European migration politics in recent weeks. 

In recent months, we have watched the acceleration of a global fascist shift. Trump’s victory in the United States and the electoral breakthrough of the far right in Germany further legitimise hate narratives and exclusionary politics all over the world. By imposing their racist and imperialist agenda, far right forces normalise attacks on migrant and racialised communities, including in countries governed by alleged centrist governments. These trends spur the erosion of international law and of the protection of human rights. 

In Europe, we already see the rights of asylum seekers severely harmed. From the suspension of the right to asylum in Poland, to Austrian plans to halt family reunifications for refugees, Germany’s reintroduction of the payment card for asylum seekers, Italy’s attempt at offshore processing of asylum applications, and to the hasted freeze of Syrian asylum requests in several countries, European governments have reached a point of no return. 

The demonisation and the criminalisation of our communities is also embodied in plans to facilitate the deportation of migrants. Germany’s new deportation centre for asylum seekers at the border with Poland, as well as its pilot programme to transfer refugees to Greece, along with the Netherlands’ proposal to send failed asylum seekers to Uganda are just a glimpse into the wider EU strategy to accelerate the pushback of migrants. 

On March 11, the EU announced a new legal proposal called the “Return Regulation” which is another brick in Fortress Europe’s inhumane and punitive approach to human movement. Under the guise of “efficiency” and “innovation”, it proposes an insidious new approach that increases racial profiling and surveillance to ‘detect’ migrants, promotes off-shore detention centres, and even allows child detention. 

The EU is not only declaring a war on migrants within its own boundaries, but also turning neighbouring countries, such as Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt and Morocco into yet another frontline, with devastating consequences for those seeking safety and those showing solidarity. For instance, the Tunisian government, bolstered by EU funding under the guise of migration control and economic development, has escalated its repression, targeting not only migrants and people on the move but also those who dare to help them. Activists, aid workers, and even ordinary citizens offering assistance and denouncing racism, are being imprisoned and are facing charges of treason and conspiracy against state security. 

This criminalisation of solidarity mirrors the EU’s own growing hostility towards humanitarian action, as Member States vilify and obstruct those who challenge their inhumane policies and endorse authoritarian governments in doing so as well. The EU’s new Facilitator’s Package presented in November 2023 further criminalises migration and acts of solidarity with migrants, using the fight against people smugglers as pretext for police power grabs and punitive laws that target migrants and humanitarian actors. In general, Member States are increasingly repressing and policing activists showcasing solidarity. Recently, Germany has weaponised migration laws to order the deportation of three European and one American citizens over their alleged actions at pro-Palestinian, anti-genocide demonstrations. Police brutality is also escalating during protests, with threats to the right of peaceful assembly across Europe. These attacks against those who organise are facilitated by increased spending on policing infrastructures, including on surveillance and digital tools. 

Instead of wasting billions on new offshore detention centres, illegal and costly deportation procedures, and the militarisation of borders, European leaders could implement policies in compliance with human rights, toward economic wellbeing, safety and community care, and invest in long-term solutions to address climate degradation, conflict, and economic decline. 

We reiterate our call on leaders to change course and present a meaningful alternative to current EU migration policy, which is illegal, immoral, and unworkable.

We need:

  • Safe and legal routes for migrants, asylum seekers and refugees;
  • Pathways to regularisation and an end to the criminalisation of people on the move;
  • To address the root causes of why people flee their countries, including by ending EU investment in the militarisation and securitisation of borders, the weapons trade, fossil fuels, and other industrial strategies contributing to conflict and climate degradation in the global South;
  • To develop policies and redistribute resources to focus on addressing the needs of all people (including migrants, shift and gig economy workers, unpaid carers, and those in precarious work) instead of prioritising corporate profits;
  • A comprehensive economic and social strategy for everyone living in Europe.

We call on European leaders to change course and end their war on migrants. Instead, reorient your policies to centre a politics of care, protection and safety for all, including migrant communities.

Signatories

  1. Equinox Initiative for Racial Justice
  2. International Women* Space
  3. Greek Forum of Migrants
  4. #DiasporaVote!
  5. ACAT Belgium
  6. Africa Advocacy Foundation (Mi-HealthEurope)
  7. Afrosocially
  8. AlgoRace
  9. All African Women’s Group
  10. All Faiths and None
  11. Anti-Racist Forum ry
  12. Antizionist Jewish Alliance in Belgium
  13. Apna Haq
  14. APROSEX
  15. ASAMBLEA PLAZA DE LOS PUEBLOS
  16. Asociación Por Ti Mujer
  17. Association Tunisienne des Femmes Democrates
  18. Avocats Sans Frontières
  19. BARAC UK
  20. Chaska asbl
  21. Chkoun Collective
  22. Climate justice Berlin kollektiv
  23. Collectif des Femmes
  24. Comitato 3 Ottobre
  25. Dalla Parte Giusta della Storia
  26. DeZIM
  27. Diaspora Climate Platform
  28. Documatism
  29. European Network against Racism
  30. European Sex Workers Rights Alliance
  31. Feminist Collective of Romani Gender Experts
  32. Feministas en Holanda
  33. Flüchtlingshilfe Iran e.V
  34. Garaldea Ecofeminista
  35. Glitch
  36. Global Asylum Seeker Human Rights Defenders Committee (GASHDC)
  37. Global Women Against Deportations
  38. Greek Forum of Refugees
  39. Hidden Goddess
  40. Humanity Diaspo ONG
  41. Infokolpa
  42. International Civil Society Working Group for the PFPAD
  43. International Coalition for People of African Descent ICPAD
  44. Kopanang Africa Against Xenophobia (KAAX)
  45. Migrant Tales
  46. Migrationsrat Berlin e.V.
  47. Missing Voices (REER)
  48. Mouvement Uplited Africa -MUA
  49. Movement of Asylum Seekers in Ireland
  50. New Horizons Project
  51. New Women Connectors
  52. Northern Ireland Council for Racial Equality
  53. Pacific Migration Partners
  54. Racism and Technology Center
  55. Refugiados Bienvenidos España
  56. Revibra Europe
  57. Romanian Women’s Association in Italy (Associazione Donne Romene in Italia – ADRI)
  58. Romnja Feminist Library
  59. Siempre ong
  60. Sobre los Margenes
  61. Soectrum
  62. SOEPIC
  63. SOS Racismo
  64. Sos Racismo Madrid
  65. Space2Grow
  66. TAMPEP Network
  67. The Channel Monitoring Project
  68. UNESCO IPL- People of African Descent & the SDGs E-Team
  69. VERVERIPEN
  70. We Are Monitoring Association
  71. WIDE+ Gender and Migration Working Group
  72. Women of Colour in the Global Women’s Strike
 
Supporters
  1. Abolish Frontex
  2. Abolish Frontex Belgium
  3. Academics for Peace-Germany
  4. Access Now
  5. Agora Association
  6. Ariadni Lesvos
  7. Aspiration
  8. Avocats Sans Frontières
  9. BIDs Belgium
  10. borderline-europe – Human Rights without borders e.V.
  11. Catalyst Institution of Arts and Technology
  12. Center for Legal Aid “Voice in Bulgaria”
  13. Centre for Peace Studies
  14. CITAD
  15. Collective Against Environmental Racism (CAER)
  16. Comisión Legal Sol
  17. Coordinadora Obrim Fronteres
  18. Dreaming Beyond AI
  19. EAPN – European Anti-Poverty Network
  20. Egala
  21. Equal Legal Aid
  22. Equinet
  23. European Alternatives
  24. European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR)
  25. European Civic Forum
  26. Flüchtlingshilfe Iran e.V
  27. Flüchtlingsrat Niedersachsen
  28. Flüchtlingsrat Schleswig-Holstein
  29. forRefugees
  30. Fundacja Inicjatywa Dom Otwarty
  31. Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women
  32. Guerrilla Foundation
  33. Hoffnung leben e.V.
  34. ILGA Portugal
  35. Infokolpa
  36. InterAlia
  37. InterEuropean Human Aid Association 
  38. Kif Kif vzw
  39. KISA – Action for Equality, Support, Antiracism
  40. KOK German NGO Network against Trafficking in Human Beings
  41. La Cimade
  42. Life Quality Improvement Organisation FLIGHT
  43. Louise Michel
  44. Migrant Tales
  45. Migration Consortium
  46. Mobile Info Team
  47. Network for Children’s Rights
  48. No Name Kitchen
  49. Nomada Association
  50. Ocalenie Foundation
  51. Panoptykon Foundation
  52. Podróżnych Ugościć
  53. Polish Migration Forum Foundation
  54. Pour la Solidarité 
  55. Queerowy Maj (Queer Maj)
  56. ReFOCUS Media Labs
  57. Refugee Legal Support (RLS)
  58. Samos Volunteers
  59. SCI Catalunya
  60. Sea-Watch
  61. SOLIDAR
  62. Solidary Wheels
  63. Steunpunt Asielzoekers Lubbeek
  64. STOWARZYSZENIE EGALA
  65. Students for Palestine Finland
  66. TAMPEP, European Network for the Promotion of Rights among Migrant Sex Workers
  67. To Proste Foundation
  68. Transitional Justice Institute
  69. Transnational Institute
  70. Über den Tellerrand e.V.
  71. URGG
  72. We Are Community
  73. WeMove Europe
  74. Women Against Fascism
  75. Women Against Violence Europe
  76. Yoga and Sport with Refugees
  77. Alexandra Keiner 
  78. Alyna Smith
  79. Andrea Soler 
  80. Andreas Beyer Gregersen
  81. Angeliki Polatidou
  82. Ann Singleton
  83. Anna Troeng
  84. Barbara Pomfret
  85. Cecilia Wachter
  86. Clementine Zill
  87. Denisse Vasconez
  88. Dorrie Wilson
  89. Erika Piazza
  90. Francesca Spinelli
  91. Gisela Murillo Guinart
  92. Ilaria Aversa
  93. Ioana Turcan
  94. Jasmina Al-Qaisi
  95. Josefine Laule
  96. Joseph-Éléazar Duhot
  97. Juliette Goulet
  98. Klara Körbi
  99. Kloé Marin
  100. Kristiāna Bruce
  101. Lea Höppner
  102. Leïla Dimou
  103. Leticia García Fons
  104. Lisa-Marlen Gronemeier
  105. Lucy Alice Thomas
  106. Marga Burgui Artajo
  107. Maria Pisto
  108. Marina Pico Cabiro
  109. Marlene Scholkmann
  110. Nidzara Ahmetasevic
  111. Peter Ebbinghaus
  112. Sarah Diedro Jordão
  113. Theresa Klettke
  114. Viliam Matomäki
  115. Zina Weisner