Post by Liza Schuster, Reader in Sociology, City University London. Liza is currently in Afghanistan, exploring how fears and perceptions about the presidential elections and the withdrawal of international forces in 2014 is affecting emigration. This post describes a few days in her voyage over to Afghanistan earlier this year, meeting with Afghani women and men in transit.
On my way overland to Afghanistan in September 2013 to continue research into migration, I stopped in Istanbul. I met up with a smuggler, Asad. He had left Afghanistan seven years earlier, but got stuck in Greece, where he started helping others for a fee until fearing arrest he had fled back to Turkey two years earlier.
He takes me to his home, knocking before he opens the door a little, clearly warning the young men inside there was a visitor. I walked into a hot, steamy room painted red, with the red curtains and the windows closed. I greeted the men in Dari and explained that I had worked in Afghanistan and with Afghan migrants, and that I was travelling their route to better understand what they experienced and to write about it. As I talked, I realized I could not interview in these conditions, but thought I might be able to do a focus group. However, as the evening wore on, more and more men arrived making even that impossible. Soon there are 30 men aged from 16 to 35. At least three of them had already attempted the crossing to Mytilini, but been picked up by the police and sent back to Turkey. I heard that tears had been shed two nights ago when they had returned here.
I gave up any idea of asking questions and instead offered to respond to any they might have. Slowly people began to ask questions about Europe – often "which is the best country? Where should I go?" or "what about Belgium? I am going to my cousin" or "what about minors? How old do you think I am?" One man in his 30s stroked his smooth chin and said "I'd pass for 17, wouldn't I?" I studied him seriously and announced that if he could pass for 17 so could I. In spite of the situation, there was much laughter. But as my responses to their questions were invariably not what they wanted to hear, the mood became sombre.
We arrived into a narrow street and Rahim made a call on his phone. We climbed the stairs to the 4th floor and I was shown into a bright one bedroomed apartment where there were 20+ people. Again conditions meant rather than asking questions, I spent a little more than an hour trying to explain the rules governing entry to and residence in Europe. Again there are questions about minors, and I notice about three teenage boys sitting listening. I explain they cannot rely on their youth; if they do not have a well-founded fear of persecution, they may well be deported when they reach 18. After a while, Rahim says we should go – there is another place to visit. I ask if I can go to say goodbye to the women who are all in the bedroom. Five women are sitting or lying on a double bed or the floor, surrounded by four or five children. The women look strained, tired and worried. One, who sits up to greet me from where she was lying on the floor, has a migraine – unsurprising considering what she will have gone through in the last few days or weeks.
Walking to the next place, we meet another big stout man in his early-mid 30s, a contrast with small neat Rahim. In this apartment, the women come out to join the conversation. Explaining that for those past their early 20s and unable to read or write, life will be extremely difficult, a serious man looks hurt and frightened. He says something I don’t catch and the others laugh. He is insisting he is young - he's late 30s, and that he will find work and care for his children who sit at his feet. I tell him as gently as I can that if he is allowed to stay, his life will be difficult, but his children will have opportunities they would not have in Afghanistan or Iran. I give him the number of a father in Paris and hope he will call him for advice. I pass the women the number of a woman who had arrived in Paris and tell them to call her. I try to give as much information as possible. The women tried to insist I stay for lunch but Rahim says we should go. I must continue to Afghanistan, but the urge to stay here is very strong.
For more on Liza's research on return to Afghanistan see her recent article published in Migration Studies, co-authored with Nassim Majidi, What happens post-deportation? The experience of deported Afghans.
To see other photos by Daniel Etter of migrants en-route click here and here.
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How to cite this blog post (Harvard style):
Schuster L (2013) On My Way to the Field. Available at: http://bordercriminologies.law.ox.ac.uk/on-my-way-to-the-field (Accessed [date]).
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