Другое : The People Trade
The People Trade
ПОВОЛЖСКАЯ АКАДЕМИЯ
ГОСУДАРСТВЕННОЙ СЛУЖБЫ
Кафедра иностранных языков.
ДОМАШНЕЕ
ЧТЕНИЕ
Предмет: английский
язык
тема :
“THE PEOPLE TRADE”
Выполнил : студент 2-го курса
208 группы очного отделения
специальности 0211 Чернов Вадим Александрович
Проверил:
Cалеева Л.П.
г.
САРАТОВ 2000
Статья из журнала NEWSWEEK JULY 3, 2000 :
"THE PEOPLE TRADE".
"THE PEOPLE TRADE".
Special report.
Europe needs workers:
immigrants want a better life. Inside the shadowy - and dangerous - world of
human smuggling.
Indide the customs
office in Dover, England, a fax machine chirruped.
Out came a message
from the European Pathway, a P&O Stena Line ferry that was churning across
the channel from Zeebrugge, Belgium. The crew was dutifully alerting British
authorities to a suspicious truck, a big white Mercedes-Benz tractor hauling a
refrigerator unit supposedly filled with tomatoes. One of the last to board the
ferry, the truck bore the name Van Der Spek TRANSPORT. The name of the firm (it
would later emerge that the company was only four days old ) triggered
misgivings - perhaps because it was close, but not identical, to that of an
established Dutch trucking company. The track, said a British customs
spokesman, "fit the profile of one that could be used to smuggle
cigarettes, drugs or contraband... It was a hunch."
It was just
before midnight, Sunday, June 18, the hottest day of the year, when the
European Pathway pulled into Doverunder the city's landmark chalk cliffs.
Customs officials were waiting for the Mercedes truck as it trundled off the
ferry. They told the driver to back into Bay 9 of the inspection shed. Opening
the big doors to the airtight refrigeration container. they first came across
pallets of crated tomatoes. Muscling the tomatoes aside, the officers
found one body. Then they found another body, and then another and another. In
all, they found 54 dead men, four dead women and two traumatized men clinging
to life - all of them young Chinese, probably from Fujian province, who had
been headed to Britain in search of jobs. "I will never forget the sight
that greeted us when we opened the back doors," one of the customs
inspectors said, "There were just piles and piles of bodies."
The
calamity in Dover shook not only Britain, where nothing on such a scale, had
ever happened before, but all of Europe. From the boot of Italy to the bords of
Norway, immigrants are entering Europe in record numbers. Pushed out of their
own countries by economic hardship or political turmoil, they are drawn to
Europe's robust prosperity, especially within the 15 countries of the European
Union. "There is a strategic equetion that produces a massive push to
immigrate," says Jean-Claude Chesnais at the national institute for Demographic
Studies in Paris. Europe is relativelly small and very rich, with a population
that barely reproduces itself. "And all around - in the former Soviet
bloc, in Asia, in South Asia and Africa - you have massive poverty, an absence
of human rights and enermous population pressure, "says Chesnais.
European
business desperately needs foreign labor - at the high and low ends of the
skills scale. But the people of Europe are often uncomfortable with foreign
workers. In the eyes of the electorate, the line between undocumented
immigrants looking for jobs and asylum-seekers looking for political protection
can become blurred. This is especially true if the man who slips into Britain
to work illegally in a Soho kitchen is likely to apply for asylum if he's caught;
most Europe countries that feel prosperous. So last week in Dover grief over
the fate of the Chinese immigrants mixed with anger about the number of people
on the outside who seem to want in. "The hospitals are always full of them
and their children," says Jonn Keith, a taxi driver. "They are
cloggin up the system. They just want everything for free."
Politicans
are caught between the demands of the bottom line and the ballot box. "We
are not in a position to be a lifeboat for the whole world," says Gwyn
Prosser, Labour member of Parliament for Dover. In Britain, the pressures on
the Labour government to do somethinggare mounting. Last year, the number of
asylum seekers was up 55 percent over 1998, reflecting a steep rise in the
number of people trying to enter the country illegally. The government is
responding by making the lifeboat a little less comfortable - climinating, for
instance, such perks as cash benefits to anybody applying for asylum. In the
particular case of Chinese migrants, their numbers are also rising right now
for reasons that have nothing to do with Europe: the United States has cracked
down on illegal Chinese immigration, and Europe is taking up the slack. The
French experience is a case in point: the number of Chinese seeking asylum in
France in 1999 was double that of the year before.
People-smuggling
networks are the travel agents of illegal immigration. Their business is big
and growing. The networks trafficking in Chinese migrants alone are said to
take in three billion dollars a year. As the stakes and numbers rise, so do the
risks. Last year 300000 undocumented immigrants made it do Italy. Many died
trying. So far this year 180 people are known to have died in Italian waters -
often pushed into the sea and left to drown by smugglers trying to lighten
their boats to get away from Italian coast-guard patrols. Four days before the
deaths at Dover, a Dutch organization, United for Intercultural Action,
announced that more than 2000 refugees and migrants have died trying to get to
Europe. Perhaps an incident like the death truck in Dover was inevitable.
"It is True you would treat your tomatoes better then [ the smugglies ]
treated these people," says Wim De-Bruin, a spokesman for the National
Public Prosecutor's Office in Rotterdam. "But the difference is that with
tomatoes and other goods, you get paid when you deliver them in good
condition."
At the end
of last week, the bodies found in Dover remained unidentified. But British
authorities believe the Chinese began their journey in Fujian 30000 Dollars a
head clients of an extensive smuggling network that move them from home to the
English Channel lush coastal province in southeast China, Fujian is the main
starting point on China's emigrant traik ( box). Fujian is by no means China's
poorest province, but it sends an estimated 100000 emigrants abroad each year.
People call one town "widows' village" because so many men have left
their women behind. The Pressure to leave Fujian is social as well as economic.
"It's like if you are not a lazy person, then you shouldn't be in mainland
China," says Ko-Lin Chin , a professor at Rutgers University in the United
States. "People will say, "You're not in your early 20s: why are you
still here?"
As news of
what happened in Dover reached the province, grieving spread quickly. Fujian
has sent so many of its sons and daughters abroad that nobody was sure who had
perished or not in the death truck. He Xiaohong was terrified that her 24 -
year old husband, and odd job painter named Cao Xianxin, was among the dead in
Dover. On May 10 he left home for Britain, comforted by a promise that on his
long journey he would be "as safe as a tourist." He Xiaohong was in
tears last week as she vowed: "If my husband returns safely, he'll have to
beat me to death before I ever let him travel abroad like this again."
The journey
to the West is called "sneaking across the water." It's made possible
by Fujainese guides known as "snakeheads." They are important figures
in their homeland. "Everybody knows who the snakeheads are," says
Chen Mei Xing, a Fijianese who slipped into England a few weeks ago. "He's
a businessman with a very hihg status." According to USA authorities,
snakeheads are also part of Chinese gangs known as Triads or Tongs. They Charge
as much as 60000 dollars for a trip to the United States; half as much for
Britain. Typically, a down payment of 5 to 19 percent is made up front. A
migrant who uses the snakehead's services can spend years repaying the debt.
The Fijianese who emigrate see the fee as a smart investment. In the end Fujian
benefits too. Fujianese migrants pump large sums of money into the economy they
left behind. City officials in Changle ( population: 600000) estimate that
locals who have gone abroad put 100 million dollars back into the city's
economy each year in remittances to their families and property investments
back home.
Not that
long ago the destination more often than not was America ("The beautiful
country"). But in 1993 a freighter called the Golden Venture ran aground
off Long Island, and 10 Chinese immigrants drowned trying to swim to shore. The
incident promted a series of crackdowns by the U.S. government. Thousands of
Chinese still migrate to America - earlier this year, three Fujiance were found
dead in a shipping container in Seattle - but some of the traffic had shifted
to other countries.
Increasingly,
Britain seems to be the alternative country of choice. The largest Chinese
community in Europe is there. Language is an important draw. Even though the
government is cutting back benefits, they are still relatively generous: food
vouchers (instead of cash) and housing ( though asylum seekers can no longer
choose where to live). Another reason for the rise in asylum seekers to Britain
is that Germany has tightended up it is border controls. Anyone can claim
asylum in Germany and stay for years while the case goes through the courts.
But under a 1994 law German authorities can turn away refugees along it is
border before they set foot on German soil and have a chance to apply for
asylum. This has caused the annual number of refugees coming into Germany to
plunge from 513000 in 1993 to fewer than 100000 last year.
People -
smuggling networks adjust quickly to such changes. In Fujian, one family's 18
years old son left home in April. Jin Xicai (not his real name) wanted
something more then this job repairing mobile phones in Fujian. The family
couldn't afford to send him to the Unites States, so it settled for the less
costly trip to Britain. On April 3, Jin hopped a train to Beijing, joining
other would-be emigrants in the capital. Snaakeheads had promised him a plane
ride to Europe, but instead Jin was hustled onto a train for the week - long
trans - Siberian trek to Moscow. He crossed the China - Russia border using a
genuine Chinese passport. It had been procured on the black market; the
original photograph had been carefully razored off and replaced by a photo of
Jin.
When Jin
phoned home from Moscow; he said he was being held under armed guard.
Snakeheads had confiscated his documents, luggage and spare clothes to prevent
him from escaping. His next phone call came from somewhere in the Czech
Republic. To get there he had apparently traveled by train, truck, even a horse
- drawn cart. Then came a few more phone calls - from Germany and, finally,
Holland.
Jin's phone
calls point to a well - traveled route from Fujian to Europe (map). Moscow is a
fovered transit point because of relaxed visa requirements for Chinese
citizens. At any given time there are said to be more than 200000 Chinese in
Moscow en route to other countries. Belgrade is another favorite, for the same
reason. Serbian press reports say that 40000 Chinese have settled in Yugoslavia
since 1995. From Belgrade it's easy to slip into Western Europe via Bosnia's
porous frontiers.
Краткое содержание.
"THE
PEOPLE TRADE".
Special report.
Europe needs workers:
immigrants want a better life. Inside the shadowy - and dangerous - world of
human smuggling. People-smuggling
networks are the travel agents of illegal immigration. Their business is big
and growing. The networks trafficking in Chinese migrants alone are said to
take in three billion dollars a year.
Fujian – the most
impotant place in the China, from people illegally emigrate on west.
Fujian – the center of human smuggling. In the Asian countries life very heavy and the people search of more
worthy existence. They choose the countries which are very rich and in which it
is possible to earn. The people try to get over through border by any ways.
They are ready even to go in inhuman conditions to get in other country. Many
died trying. The emigrants often choose England and Italy, as the country of
the future residing, but these countries do not want them to see at themselves.
Because many emigrants, which come, render harm to economy, they fill in all
hospitals, all parks, all premises of city, are engaged in illegal earnings,
and some who could not find job, become criminals. England and Italy actively
struggle against illegal entrance of the emigrants on territory of the country.
It is favourable
business - human smuggling. Many try on it to earn. For the large money they
promise to transport the people in other countries, even without the documents.
These organizations search for ways to these countries not directly through
China, and transit through Russia or Czechia for example. Therefore it is very
difficult to the countries to trace a flow of the emigrants. Now countries of
Europe have a new task. To struggle not it is so much with the emigrants, how
much with organizations, which carry out an illegal way of emigration of the
people.
The end.
The dictionary:
Smuggling – контрабанда.
Suspicious –
подозрительный.
Authorities – власти.
Hunch – догадка.
To trundle – ехать.
Piles - груды.
Calamity – бедствие.
Political turmoil - политическая суматоха.
Europe's robust
prosperity - здравое процветание Европы.
Desperately –
отчаянно.
Asylum-seekers - ищущие убежища.
Blurred – cтертый.
Prosperous –
преуспевающий.
Pressures – давления.
Lifeboat - cпасательная
шлюпка.
Benefits – выгоды.
Slack – слабый.
Experience – опыт.
Trying to lighten - попытка облегчать.
Lush – пышный.
To estimate – оценивать.
Grieving – огорчение.
Terrified –
испуганный.
Increasingly - все
более и более.
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