
AN OUTRAGE THAT DARE NOT SPEAK ITS NAME
by Kenan Malik
This essay, on the EU’s outsourced migration controls as the new imperialism, was my Observer column this week. (The column included also a short piece on easy answers in the wake of the London Bridge attack.) It was published on 1 December 2019, under the headline ‘When refugees in Libya are being starved, Europe’s plan is working’. A hospital that finds its patients so burdensome that it denies them medical care. A homeless hostel that turfs its residents out on the […]
Categories: International, Philosophy & Ethics, Race & Immigration • Tags: africa, european union, immigration, immigration policy, janjaweed, khartoum process, libya, niger, refugees, sudan, unhcr