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Spain
- Franco Is Back: Treatment Of Travelers Of Moroccan
Appearance
19 November 2009
By Mustaqim Sahib Bleher
As British
expatriates are abandoning the Spanish sunshine due to
the devaluation of the pound against the Euro, Spain,
predominantly dependent on tourism, is sinking deeper
into recession. With the economic downturn comes a
rise in right-wing politics, as is also the case in
other countries of Europe. Whilst some countries view
this development and its concomitant racism as a
threat, Spain seems to embrace it with open arms. For
the erstwhile dictatorship where fascism lingered
another three decades after the end of the second
world war, being a police state seems only too
natural. For foreign visitors to Spain the arrogance
of the Guardia Civil, the Spanish paramilitary police,
and the deference showed to them by civilians and
officials alike are becoming more evident.
Case
study
Girona airport: an airport entirely dependent
on Ryanair who fly to numerous European destinations
as well as
Morocco
from there. Many come here for the sun, but many are
transit passengers on a stop-over to another Ryanair
destination, since in spite of the substandard
service, queuing system and hand luggage checks
bordering on harassment,
Ryanair flights, heavily subsidised by the
regions to which they fly, remain the cheapest way to
get around
Europe
at the moment. Whereas most
airports in Europe only have X-ray machines for
departure check-in, Spanish airports also feature
X-ray machines for arrivals, which are used
discretionary.
Discretion always leaves
room
for abuse, and where nationalist tendencies
prevail, this takes the form of
racial
profiling.
From observation it appears that travellers of
Moroccan appearance (and for the Spanish police that
includes all manners of Asians) stand a much greater
chance of being asked to put their hand luggage
through a scanner on arrival. So far, this is only a
minor inconvenience, but the scanning, although
showing that no contraband is being carried, is
frequently followed by a passport check after which
the inspecting officer walks off with the document to
a security office room where he photocopies the
passport and enters details on his computer for a
purpose undisclosed to the perplexed passenger. Any
attempt to question the purpose or even legality of
the move is swiftly followed by the questioner being
subjected to prolonged questioning (exclusively in
Spanish and often deteriorating into being shouted at)
before he is eventually released without explanation.
There have been cases where police locked the door of
the examination room from the inside before
intimidating the "suspects". Demands for an
interpreter are regularly ignored.
A similar treatment is sometimes also meted out to
passengers on departure check-in, although it is less
serious since the passenger wants to leave Spain
anyway and non-cooperation could hardly have the more
damaging result of being denied entry to the country.
Nonetheless, it is disruptive and may eventually turn
the visit to, or stop-over in, Spain into an
experience the weary traveller does not want to
repeat. One should think that Spain can hardly afford
turning people away who might help save the Spanish
economy by spending their money there, but the police
at least have no such scruples.
On an occasion, when I challenged their inappropriate
behaviour, they responded by subjecting me to the very
same treatment of running off with my passport and
subjecting me to questioning, the process being
prolonged by the fact that the examining officer was
unable to operate his own computer equipment! I did
manage to arrange for an interpreter who, however,
seemed clearly awe-stricken by the
police
officers and more intent on arguing their case
than translating between the parties. What I was
repeatedly told was that when you are in Spain,
Spanish police can do whatever they want, basta. A
reminder that Spain was a signatory to numerous
European conventions cut no ice.
Officers with the following badge numbers currently
have an official complaint filed against them with the
municipality of
Catalunya or the
airport
authority: 2510, 84613, 88336, 99142. It
remains to be seen whether they are at all accountable
and effective checks on an abuse of
police
power exist in Spain - the historic evidence is
not encouraging.
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