Recent gains by European right-wing political parties advocating
halts in immigration from Muslim countries signal a growing resentment
against foreigners as Europe faces an economy with fewer jobs to go
around. Anti-immigrant parties have received unprecdented shares of the
vote in famously tolerant Sweden and the Netherlands. Mainstream
politicians in France, Germany and Britain have vowed to cut
immigration, complaining that many immigrants -- especially conservative
Muslims -- fail to integrate into maistream society. Ironically,
anti-immigrant fervor is rising just as the economic downturn is slowing
immigration to many countries. Some economists argue that aging Europe
needs young immigrants to fill its work force and support its growing
pension costs Other experts say governments need to do more to integrate
Muslims, many of whom are native-born. As governments pass laws to ban
burqas, headscarves and minarets, many are asking how much cultural
conformity Europe can demand in an increasingly globalizd world.
Immigrant advocates say language requirements and citizenship tests
discriminate against Muslim immigrants and, together with immigration
caps, send a hostile message to the skilled workers Europe needs to
attract from abroad. CQ Global Researcher Europe's Immigration Turmoil v.4-12 |
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