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Asylum in
Austria
By Mehru Jaffer

Many an Indian abroad may have
made it as a millionaire but I am not one of them. I do not even
look like one. Otherwise why would this greasy looking guy, a
complete stranger, walk up to me in the middle of the street one
day to say, “You from India?“
“Yes. How do you know?“ I was irritated but still wondered if he
had recognised me from the movie I have always dreamt of
starring in? But ignoring my own question to him, the guy
continued to throw his ones at me.
“You want job? You want visa? I get you job, I get you visa.“
“I have a job and I have a visa, thank you,“ I say and try to
move away from this rude intrusion who does not either say
excuse me, lift his hat or küss die hand (kiss your hand) while
addressing a lady. He is definitely not Viennese.
“What job you have?“ he kept talking as he trailed after me.
“I am a writer.“
“But I get you good job. Very much money. In very big house.“
“Where, why, what...?“ I don't know what else to say to this man
who just will not go away. I want him to go away also because I
am nearing the corner where a smiling gentleman from Turkey
makes the most mouth watering doner kebabs in town that are best
downed with a glass of Ayran, a thin yoghurt drink. I find the
presence of these recently mushroomed stalls on the roadside far
more appetising than those that traditionally sell sausages and
beer. Some of my Viennese friends do too, you know.
But then what is a Viennese? Once upon a time everyone was an
immigrant here like everywhere else. German barbarians used to
roam this area before the Romans brought Christianity and the
concept of a castle and the telephone directory today is prove
enough that a majority of residents living here have a name that
has its origins in some other corner of the world.
“You can not cook curry... Never mind. You can clean house. Very
rich house. Very much money OK.“
“Not OK! Now go or I will call the police,“ I look back a second
after saying that and the guy is gone. At the mention of the
word police perhaps.
It is people like us, the tall, thin man with a distinct and
even an attractive Mediterranean tan and me with my champa,
chameli smells who prefers kebabs to cold cuts that makes the
Viennese a little uncomfortable today. It was alright when there
were fewer of us a few decades ago. But with the collapse of the
Soviet Union and the former Yugoslavia a lot of Eastern Europe
has trickled into Austria. While Turkish workers always found
work here there are just that many more of them now. Immigrants
are said to make up 10 percent of the population of tiny Austria
with an entire population of less than all of Delhi. And the
figure of asylum seekers runs into thousands and the number of
cases pending is growing faster than those actually granted
asylum.
The country itself admits that it needs to attract more than
2000 immigrants every year but with specialized skills to keep
the wheels of the economy well oiled. But with an increase in
crime and in chaos in certain parts of this country that adores
its peace and quiet and law and order, the instinct of an
ordinary Austrian is to look upon the dribbling stream of
foreigners with a bit of a frown.
The populist view of right wing politicians is that the country
is already home to enough refugees and that precious federal
resources should now be spent on those that are already living
here. The longest list of asylum seekers today is mainly from
Afghanistan followed by Iran, Iraq, Yugoslavia and even India
who have fled their country of origin due to political
persecution but more due to poverty. The only skill that they
are armed with is a powerful will to survive.
A problem facing this tiny but traditionally generous country is
to screen all applications of asylum seekers as thoroughly as
possible but a bigger problem remains to keep the immigrant
issue from being hijacked by politicians who are opportunists
really with another name. Despite the fact that the streets of
Vienna may be stalked by a few more greasy looking characters
like the one I bumped into the other day. And of course also by
the likes of myself.
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