jueves, 30 de marzo de 2017

NEWSLETTER 31/03/17: FIGHTING FOR OUR RIGHTS AS THE CLOCK TICKS.....

EuroCitizens demonstrating last week
   Tomorrow we are holding the 6th group meeting of EuroCitizens (1 April, 12h: Centro Gallego, C/ Carretas, 14, Metro Sol). Since our last get-together on 18 February (more information), we have been very busy.   
    On 22 February two of our members attended a working lunch organised by the European Movement and explained to a select group of politicians, lawyers, economists and journalists our objectives and how both UK nationals and Spanish citizens were being used as bargaining capital in post-Brexit Britain (more information). This proved an excellent springboard which put us on the map in terms of the press and gave us useful contacts.   During this period we cooperated with a coalition of UK nationals British in Europe to produce an Alternative White Paper on citizens' rights and to carry out intensive lobbying of MPs and Lords (and Ladies) at Westminster. Unfortunately, our initially successful efforts were thwarted by the government's hardline Brexit agenda.
    Over the last few weeks we have also had further contact with British officialdom. A meeting was held with the director of consular services and four EuroCitizens, in which we expressed our concerns about the possible impact of Brexit on our lives (more information). In another meeting with a top civil servant in the Brexit department, we asked questions about UK government policy and what was going to happen to us. Unfortunately, we did not receive any clear answers.
    Our first big event as a group was a round table in the offices of the European Parliament on 8 March (more information). This gave us the opportunity to communicate our demands: the full maintenance of existing citizenship rights for both Spanish and British citizens affected by Brexit. In the round table, politicians like José Montilla and Enrique Guerrero and experts like Robert Robinson and Ralph Smith analysed the potential impact of Brexit on citizens. Vanesa López Román from Españoles en el Reino Unido gave the point of view of Spaniards in the UK. The event was well reported in the Spanish press.
   On Saturday 25 March we participated in a demonstration in Madrid to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the Treaty of Rome. There was a good turnout of EuroCitizens, complete with banners and some imaginative face painting. We proved that we can get out on the streets and stridently put forward our point of view! (more information / photos on Facebook). On Monday 27 March a representative of EuroCitizens took part in a round table of trade unionists (Spanish and European) in Valladolid. Our demands were received sympathetically by union leaders like Ignacio Fdez Toxo (CCOO) and Pepe Álvarez (UGT) (more information).
    During the week of the activation of Clause 50 we have been involved in frenetic media activity and have appeared in national newspapers and TV programmes. In the last few weeks, we have also intensified our activity on social media. The figures for our blog are illuminating: January - 2,300 hits; February - 14,000 hits; March - 61,000 hits.
    Without doubt, we have achieved our initial objectives in terms of making our voice heard both in Spain and the UK. Now we need to carefully consider our next steps. The next few months will be crucial in determining what kind of package is offered to UK and Spanish citizens after Brexit.
   And remember, we want to keep ALL our existing EU citizenship rights!

martes, 28 de marzo de 2017

LA ACTIVACIÓN DE LA CLÁUSULA 50: ¿CUÁNDO TERMINARÁ LA INCERTIDUMBRE PARA LOS CIUDADANOS AFECTADOS POR EL BREXIT?

La cláusula 50, 1: 'cualquier estado puede decidir salir de la Unión....'
  Hoy el gobierno británico activa la Claúsula 50 para comenzar la salida del Reino Unido de la Unión Europea. Para EuroCitizens es un día triste, especialmente porque la mayoría de nuestros miembros no pudieron votar en el referéndum por llevar más de quince años fuera del país. Sin embargo, nuestros esfuerzos no están dirigidos a revertir el resultado de esa polémica consulta sino a luchar por los derechos de la ciudadanía británica y española afectada por el Brexit.
  Desde el 24 de junio del año pasado, el futuro de estos ciudadanos se ha convertido en incierto; no sabemos que pasará con nuestros trabajos, estudios, pensiones, cobertura sanitaria y, en algunos casos dramáticos, nuestras familias. Nos hemos convertido en rehenes, ‘capital’ para utilizar como palanca en las negociaciones segun un ministro del Brexit. Y si el gobierno británico sale de la UE sin acuerdo, como amenaza Theresa May, todos nuestros derechos europeos se extinguirán de golpe.
  Varias veces la primera ministra ha prometido ‘garantizar’ los derechos de los europeos en el Reino Unido y así los derechos de los británicos en Europa. Sin embargo, en nuestras reuniones con dos ministerios británicos no hemos conseguido respuestas a nuestras preguntas: ¿Mantendremos nuestra ciudadanía europea?, ¿Qué derechos vamos a conservar y cuáles perderemos?, ¿Cuáles son los plazos para las negociaciones? ¿Comenzarán solo después de solucionar el problema de la ‘factura de divorcio’? ¿Qué mecanismos garantizarán la aplicación de un acuerdo sobre la ciudadanía?
  Hasta que se formalice un acuerdo que garantice los derechos de los más de cuatro millones de ciudadanos del Reino Unido y otros países europeos, EuroCitizens luchará para reducir el coste humano del Brexit. En las negociaciones
entre la Comisión y el gobierno de Theresa May que arrancan a partir de hoy, las personas deben ser lo más importante.

FIRST EUROCITIZENS MEETING AFTER THE ACTIVATION OF CLAUSE 50

  On Saturday 1 April, an apt date considering the present circumstances, we will be holding our next group meeting (Centro Gallego, C/ Carretas, 14, Metro Sol).Time: 12:00 noon to 14:30.
  Since our last meeting in February we have made enormous strides and are now on the map in terms of Spanish, British and European media. We will send you a newsletter with a summary of our activities before Friday.
  Now we need to decide on our next moves, such as approaching the Spanish government and other administrations like the Comunidad de Madrid and the city council.
  Because of the problems holding meetings in cafés, we have decided to rent a room in the Centro Gallego. Let's hope the bar's open this time!
  Please share with your family, friends and colleagues.

lunes, 27 de marzo de 2017

31/03: DEBATE EN LA UCM SOBRE EUROPA CON VICEPRESIDENTE TIMMERMANS

Europa decidiendo su futuro, una llamada a la próxima generación: debate con el vicepresidente Frans Timmermans
El viernes 31 de marzo, Primer vicepresidente de la Comisión Europea, Frans Timmermans, participará en un debate sobre Europa en la Universidad Complutense.

Bajo el título "Europa decidiendo su futuro: una llamada a la próxima generación" el vicepresidente de la Comisión Europea, Frans Timmermans participará en un debate organizado conjuntamente por la Universidad Complutense y la Comisión Europea. El encuentro será moderado por Jose Ignacio Torreblanca, responsable de Opinión de El País y contará con una introducción de Patxi Aldecoa, Catedrático de Relaciones Internacionales y Catedrático Jean Monnet.

El Diálogo tendrá lugar el día 31 de marzo en el salón de actos de la Facultad de Ciencias Políticas y Sociología de la Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Campus de Somosaguas,  de 10:45 a 12:15.

Los estudiantes tendrán así la oportunidad de hacer preguntas al vicepresidente Timmermans sobre los principales temas de debate europeos, como el futuro de Europa y el momento político actual, el Brexit, el papel de la UE y el mundo, las migraciones o cómo consolidar el modelo social Europeo…

Se ruega confirmar asistencia : COMM-MAD-PRENSA@ec.europa.eu

¿Por qué los diálogos ciudadanos?
Los Diálogos Ciudadanos que organizan la Comisión Europea representan la contribución práctica a la reflexión en torno al futuro de Europa y la mejor manera de transmitir las opiniones de los ciudadanos a las Instituciones Europeas. Un debate que el Presidente de la Comisión Europea Jean Claude Juncker ha lanzado a principios de marzo, con su Libro Blanco sobre el Futuro de Europa.
Visita del Primer vicepresidente de la Comisión Europea a España
El primer vicepresidente Timmermans estará en Madrid el 30 y el 31 de marzo. El día 30 dictará la XIII Lección Conmemorativa Carlos de Amberes en la Fundación Carlos de Amberes.





Contacto:  equipo de prensa de la Comisión Europea en España


 

LOS SINDICATOS ESPAÑOLES APOYAN LAS REIVINDICACIONES DE GRUPOS CIUDADANOS COMO EUROCITIZENS

Elena Crasta (TUC), Michael Harris (EuroCitizens), Enrique Berzal (moderador- periódico Norte de Castilla), Esther Lynch (ETUC), Ignacio Fdez Toxo (CCOO), Pepe Álvarez (UGT)
   Ayer EuroCitizens participó en Valladolid en un coloquio sobre el impacto del Brexit en el mercado de trabajo organizado por el periódico Norte de Castilla, la Fundación Fermín Carnero y la UGT
    Javier Fdez Carriedo, el consejero de empleo de Castilla y León presentó el coloquio y habló de los efectos negativos sobre su región autónoma de la salida del Reino Unido de la Unión Europea, especialmente sobre las exportaciones de coches y productos agrícolas.
   Esther Lynch (ETUC), Elena Crasta (TUC), Ignacio Fdez Toxo y Pepe Álvarez (UGT) comentaron el posible impacto del Brexit sobre el empleo en España y en los derechos laborales. Coincidieron en reclamar la participación de los sindicatos en las negociaciones entre la UE y Gran Bretaña para evitar cualquier merma en los derechos de los trabajadores.
   Michael Harris de EuroCitizens destacó la complicada situación de británicos en España y españoles en RU, rehenes en las negociaciones y con la posibilidad de perder todos sus derechos. Todos los representantes sindicales expresaron su apoyo para la ciudadanía española y británica afectada por el Brexit y por nuestra lucha.

Enlaces: 
 

miércoles, 22 de marzo de 2017

UK NATIONALS WILL LOSE ALL CITIZENSHIP RIGHTS ON BRITAIN'S DEPARTURE FROM THE EU

Professor López Garrido, ex-secretary of state for European Affairs
   UK nationals in Europe will automatically lose all their citizenship rights on Britain´s departure from the EU, unless there is a specific agreement to the contrary, according to a report by two Spanish legal experts carried out for the European Parliament. This will mean the end to a whole raft of rights: freedom of movement; the right to live, work and study; the right to receive social benefits; consumer and political rights.
    These are the shocking conclusions of Antonio Fernández Tomás and ex-secretary of state Diego López Garrido, lecturers in international law at the University of Castilla La Mancha. According to the two experts, these rights cannot be considered as 'acquired' by citizens individually, but as a result of their nationality and thus they will be 'extinguished' immediately on the UK's departure. They say there are no legal precedents for the rights of individual citizens to be prolonged after their country has ceased to be a signature of the relevant international treaty. López Garrido highlighted the importance of a 'wide agreement' between the UK and EU to put an end to uncertainties faced by citizens.
   This report clearly contradicts the complacency of the UK government and prominent pro-Brexit politicians who routinely say that British expats 'have nothing to worry about' after Brexit. It also makes it even more vital for groups like EuroCitizens to fight for the rights of citizens who moved to the EU in good faith, but who have had their futures blighted by Brexit. 

Remember:  Saturday 25 March, 17,30 Plaza del Callao, Demonstration to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the Treaty of Rome.

Links:

http://www.rtve.es/noticias/20170321/britanicos-no-podran-conservar-derechos-libertades-tratados-europeos-segun-informe-juridico/1507447.shtml

http://www.elconfidencial.com/mundo/2017-03-21/brexit-derechos-union-europea-britanicos-negociacion_1351932/

GET READY FOR THE DEMONSTRATION ON SATURDAY!

Print this out to make your own placard for the demonstration!!!!!!!
   EuroCitizens is one of the organising groups of the demonstration in Madrid this Saturday 25 March (Plaza del Callao 18h) to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the signing of the Treaty of Rome. Above is a poster to print out (A4 or A2) to create your own placard. It is important for us to be visible as a group.
   Please get there at 17,30 to warm up and get your face painted! There will be music and short speeches from different groups like Españoles en el Reino Unido, EuroCitizens and various pro-European groups. The demonstration will finish at 19.10 with the singing of Beethoven's rousing 'Ode to Joy'.
  The weather forecast is not great so bring your umbrella. We are going to have fun and at the same time make our demands clear. We want to stop being bargaining chips and have our full EU citizenship rights confirmed. NOW!


EUROCITIZENS PARTICIPA EN UN COLOQUIO SOBRE EL IMPACTO DEL BREXIT EN EL MERCADO DE TRABAJO


EUROCITIZENS: PLEA FOR DONATIONS

Madrid, 22/03/17  
     The activity of EuroCitizens has risen dramatically in the last three months as the UK moves inexorably towards Brexit, leaving its EU emigrants in limbo, bargaining chips in what promise to be complex and divisive negotiations.   
    Two weeks ago we organised a successful round table on the impact of Brexit on citizens, held at the offices of the European Parliament and with the participation of top-ranking politicians and experts. This Thursday, two EuroCitizens members will be meeting a senior civil servant from the Department for Exiting the EU at the British Embassy. On Saturday (18h Plaza del Callao, Madrid), we are participating in a demonstration of European groups to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the signing of the Treaty of Rome. Next week, we will be at a round table in Valladolid with Spanish and British union leaders to discuss the impact of Brexit on employment.
  All the people working for EuroCitizens are unpaid volunteers, but we have incurred growing expenses. Despite the generous contributions of our members, we need further support. We are a non-profit-making organisation and our bank account number is:
 
ES35 2100 1658 2602 0028 9449 (Caixabank) 

Please give what you are able contribute, however small the amount.

lunes, 20 de marzo de 2017

EUROCITIZENS PETITION: 'GUARANTEE THE RIGHTS OF ALL EU AND UK MIGRANTS NOW!'

EuroCitizens is one of the signatories of a new petition to Antonio Tajani, President of the European
Parliament: 

'Give a formal guarantee now to all EU citizens currently residing in the UK and all British nationals currently living in the EU, to maintain their existing full rights of residence and work after the UK has formally left the EU, that they currently enjoy as EU citizens. This guarantee needs to be made in a way that does not exclude hundreds of thousands of citizens who may not be considered ‘lawfully resident’ as a result of bureaucratic technicalities such as the conditions around ‘Comprehensive Sickness Insurance’ in the UK.'

With the activation of Clause 50 next week, it is crucial that the politicians on both sides put citizens first and end the anxiety and uncertainty suffered by nearly 5 million people.

Please sign the petition:

https://you.wemove.eu/campaigns/brexit-guarantee-the-rights-of-eu-uk-migrants-now

Open letter signed by EuroCitizens

jueves, 16 de marzo de 2017

EUROCITIZENS TAKES PART IN THE 'MARCH FOR EUROPE' IN MADRID

Saturday 25 March will be the sixtieth anniversary of the signing of the Treaty of Rome which later led to the creation of the European Union. For Europeans it is an important date and demonstrations will be held in various capital cities such as Rome and London.
In Madrid there will be a demonstration in the Plaza del Callao at six pm on Saturday 25 March, organised by various pro-European groups. EuroCitizens will be taking part in the event and it will be an excellent opportunity for us to get across our message in defence of British and Spanish citizens whose European rights are under threat from Brexit. We will also defend our vision of a more open and tolerant Europe.



EUROCITIZENS PARTICIPA EN LA MARCHA POR EUROPA EN MADRID

El sábado 25 de marzo se celebra el 60º aniversario de la firma del Tratado de Roma, que dio origen a la Unión Europea. Para los europeos es una fecha histórica y habrá marchas en varias capitales como RomaLondres. En Madrid habrá una concentración en la Plaza del Callao a las 18h el sábado 25 de marzo, convocada por varios grupos pro-Europeos. 
Euro-Citizens participará en este acto público y será una excelente oportunidad para lanzar nuestro mensaje en defensa de los ciudadanos británicos y españoles cuyos derechos europeos están amenazados por el Brexit. También defenderemos nuestra visión de una Europa abierta y tolerante.
     

domingo, 12 de marzo de 2017

ECREU CAMPAIGN TO TARGET TORY REMAINERS

Anna Soubry, Tory remainer  Photo: The Times
After the success of our lobbying of the Lords, EuroCitizens is supporting a campaign by  ECREU (Expat Citizen Rights in the European Union) to write to Conservative MPs who voted Remain. You can download a list of these MPs form this link:

 http://www.ecreu.com/pdfs/mp-mailing-list.pdf

The Commons discussion is next week,  so please write by  Monday evening. We ask you to email as many as you can, or just those you think you might know. If you have more time available, please also consider emailing the SNP MPs as well. Your letter should ask the MP to support amendments 9B and 17 (now 1 and 2) on the return of the Article 50 Bill to the House of Commons. Ask for concrete action on EU citizens¹ rights now, not vague promises. Please draw their attention to the Government's own Select Committee report and its conclusion that the rights of EU citizens should be unilaterally guaranteed, and include this link to the report:

 http://www.ecreu.com/pdfs/1071.pdf

No reciprocal deals! Please don't be put off by any automated replies asking if you are a constituent. Your email may still get though!

jueves, 9 de marzo de 2017

EUROCITIZENS ROUND TABLE: 'WE WILL NEED TO FIGHT FOR OUR RIGHTS'

Camilla Hillier-Fry of EuroCitizens leads the round table
On Wednesday 8 March, EuroCitizens organised a round table discussion in Madrid about the impact of Brexit on citizens.Top-ranking politicians, experts and campaigners took part in the event, expressing their concern for the loss of rights of UK nationals in Spain and of Spanish citizens in the UK. They highlighted the need to lobby national governments and the EU Commission in order to guarantee the rights of the people affected by Britain's coming departure from the European Union

    María Andrés Marín, director of the European Parliament offices, introduced the seminar by describing the negotiation process between the EU and the UK and explaining the role of the European Parliament. She said that the parliament was ready to help European citizens fight for their rights. 
    Michael Harris of EuroCitizens emphasised the concern amongst Britons in Spain about their futures: work, pensions, healthcare, the education of their children. He said that, for British politicians, expats in Europe seem invisible, perhaps because 90% cannot vote in the UK or because of lazy stereotyping. This means that the British government can ignore the plight of their own nationals abroad. Harris demanded the full maintenance of EU citizen rights for Britons in Europe and Spaniards in the UK.

    Senator José Montilla, ex-president of Catalonia and member of boh EU and Brexit committees in the senate and congress, warned that the negotiations could be very difficult. Theresa May has made vague promises to protect the rights of EU citizens to stay in Britain, but has done nothing. Montilla asked for realism, reciprocity and transparency in the negotiation process and said that pressure from citizens was going to be vital to ensure a positive outcome.
   Tim Hemmings, deputy head of the British Embassy in Spain, expressed the government line about Brexit and said that 'Great Britain was a country that listened to its people'. Maybe that is true for residents living in the UK, but it does not seem to be the case for British expats.      
     Camilla Hillier-Fry of EuroCitizens introduced the round table, warning that hundreds of thousands of British and Spanish citizens have become bargaining chips in UK-EU negotiations.
    The MEP Enrique Guerrero, vice-president of the Progressive Alliance (socialists and democrats) said that the European Parliament was concerned with protecting Europeans everywhere. He warned of the danger for many citizens of Theresa May's threats that 'no agreement is better than a bad agreement'. Guerrero said that the key to everything was the battle over free movement of people, something which the British government is determined to terminate and which will have major consequences for citizens around Europe. 
     The lawyer Ralph Smith, of Gómez-Acebo y Pombo, declared that there was a need for a practical solution to deal with the problems of citizens affected by Brexit. Over the issue of double nationality between the UK and Spain, he said that this would need a change in the civil code. This is not something easy to achieve, but it has been modified recently to accommodate dual nationality for Sephardic Jews.
     Vanesa López-Román, spokeswoman for Españoles en el Reino Unido, said that members of her group felt 'betrayed' by Brexit. She criticised the increase in xenophobia in Great Britain and described the anxiety that Spaniards in the UK feel about their futures, with their lives 'on hold'. She said that, despite commitments such as mortgages and steady jobs, many Spanish residents were considering returning to their home country.  
    Agustín Reoyo of the union Comisiones Obreras described the situation of Spanish health workers in the UK and expressed his concern about their future. He explained the impact of Brexit on the healthcare of Britons in Spain. When Britain leaves the EU, there will be no Spanish NHS cover for UK pensioners or for any other groups of Britons currently outside the Spanish national insurance system. The only solution will be a bilateral and reciprocal agreement between Spain and Britain. 
     Robert Robinson, vice-dean of the Universidad Pontificia de Comillas, described the important exchange of talent between Spain and the UK. He mentioned the future of research programmes like Erasmus Plus and Horizon 2020, both of which will need continuing finance from Britain. The UK's participation in the Erasmus programme for undergraduates is only guaranteed until the end of 2018
   
   EuroCitizens would like to thank all the participants in the round table event and the European Parliament for their help and generosity. Guaranteeing the rights of Britons in Spain and Spaniards in the UK is not going to be easy. However, at least we now know that we have the support of influential institutions and individuals and our voice is beginning to be heard.
  
   In the next few months, we must persistently repeat our key messages:

1. Spanish and British citizens cannot be bargaining chips in the negotiations between the UK and the EU. Our lives and futures are at stake.

2. The British government and the European Commission should immediately guarantee all of the existing EU citizenship rights of both groups, Spaniards and Britons.

miércoles, 8 de marzo de 2017

COLOQUIO DE EUROCITIZENS: ‘LOS CIUDADANOS NO PUEDEN SER LOS REHENES DEL BREXIT’

El discurso del senador José Montilla   Foto: EuroCitizens
El miércoles 8 de marzo EuroCitizens organizó un coloquio sobre el impacto del Brexit sobre la ciudadanía en la Sala Europa de las oficinas del Parlamento Europeo en España. Los politicos, expertos y activistas que participaron en el acto expresaron su preocupación por la pérdida de derechos de los británicos en España y los españoles en el Reino Unido. Subrayaron la necesidad de presionar a los gobiernos y a la Comisión Europea para garantizar el futuro de los ciudadanos afectados.

La directora de la oficina del Parlamento Europeo en España, María Andrés Marín, introdujo el coloquio, explicando el proceso de las negociaciones entre el Reino Unido y la Comisión Europea y el papel del Parlamento Europeo. Dijo que hay mucha incertidumbre sobre el futuro de Europa, pero que es muy importante la lucha de los ciudadanos por sus derechos y que el Parlamento Europeo está dispuesto a ayudar.

Michael Harris de EuroCitizens subrayó la enorme preocupación de los británicos en España: sobre sus puestos de trabajo, sus pensiones, su cobertura sanitaria, la educación de sus hijos… Comentó que, para los políticos y el gobierno de su país, sus emigrantes son casi invisibles, quizás porque no pueden votar y por los estereotipos que existen. Acusó al gobierno británico de abandonar a sus ciudadanos. Reivindicó para los británicos en España mantener todos sus derechos actuales como ciudadanos europeos.

El senador José Montilla, viceportavoz de la Comisión sobre la Unión Europea y vocal en la Comisión sobre el Brexit (Congreso y Senado) analizó el proceso de negociaciones, y auguró que sería ‘muy dificil’. Comentó que, en su discurso del 17 de enero y en el Libro Blanco posterior, Theresa May dijo que quería ‘garantizar los derechos de los europeos en el Reino Unido’ pero sin especificar nada. Comentó que sería posible una pérdida retroactiva de los derechos de los ciudadanos británicos y españoles, aunque no debería pasar. Pidió realismo, recipricocidad y transparencia en las negociaciones y declaró que los ciudadanos no pueden ser rehenes en el proceso. Subrayó la importancia de la presión ciudadana y terminó diciendo ‘cuenten con nosotros’.

Tim Hemmings, el ministro consejero de la Embajada Británica en España, habló poco de los ciudadanos y siguió la línea del gobierno británico, hablando de los vínculos comerciales entre el Reino Unido y España. Dijo que, en el futuro, ‘el talento europeo será bienvenido en Gran Bretaña’, augurando una política de inmigración selectiva como aplican actualmente países como Australia. Dijo que ‘Gran Bretaña es un país que escucha a su gente’, algo evidentemente falso dado los intentos fracasados de grupos de británicos en Europa de ponerse en contacto con su gobierno y sus politicos.

Camilla Hillier-Fry de EuroCitizens presentó la mesa redonda avisando que los ciudadanos se habían convertido en moneda de cambio en las negociaciones.

El eurodiputado Enrique Guerrero, vice-presidente de la Alianza Progresista en el Parlamento Europeo, resaltó la importancia para el parlamento de proteger los derechos de los europeos de todas partes. Avisó del peligro para los colectivos afectados de la declaración de Theresa May: ‘ningún acuerdo es mejor que un mal acuerdo’. Comentó que la clave era la batalla sobre la libre circulación de personas, algo que quiere terminar el gobierno británico.

El abogado Ralph Smith, Gómez-Acebo y Pombo Abogados, no pudo dar un mensaje tranquilizador pero pidió una solución práctica para los ciudadanos afectados. Sobre el tema de doble nacionalidad entre España y el Reino Unido, dijo que hace falta un cambio en el código civil, algo que no es sencillo aunque se hizo hace poco para el colectivo de los Sephardíes.
 

Vanesa López-Román, Españoles en el Reino Unido, declaró que ‘nos sentimos traicionados’ por el Brexit. Lamentó el auge de la xenofobia en Gran Bretaña y la gran ansiedad que sufren las personas con vidas paradas por la incertidumbre actual. Dijo que, a pesar de tener hipotecas y otros compromisos, muchos españoles estaban barajando volver a España.

Agustín Reoyo de Comisiones Obreras describió la situación de los trabajadores españoles en el sector sanitario del Reino Unido y su gran preocupación por el futuro. Explicó el impacto del Brexit sobre la cobertura sanitaria de los británicos en España: sin la Unión Europea no habrá cobertura para los pensionistas que no han cotizado en España y para otros colectivos que están fuera del sistema español. La única solución es buscar un acuerdo recíproco entre España y Gran Bretaña.

Robert Robinson, vicedecano de la Universidad Pontificia de Comillas, recalcó la importancia del intercambio de talento entre España y el Reino Unido. Comentó el futuro de los programas Erasmus + y Horizonte 2020, que necesitan la financiación británica. El programa Erasmus (para universitarios) solo está garantizado hasta el año 2018.

EuroCitizens quiere agradecer a todos los participantes en este acto y al Parlamento Europeo por su gran ayuda. El camino para garantizar los derechos de los británicos en España y los españoles en el Reino Unido no será fácil. Pero, por lo menos sabemos que contamos con el apoyo de personas e instituciones con influencia.

En los próximos meses tendremos que repetir nuestros mensajes hasta la saciedad:

Los españoles en Gran Bretaña y los británicos en España no podemos ser rehenes en las negociaciones de la salida del Reino Unido de la Unión Europea.

El gobierno británico y la Comisión Europea deberían garantizar todos nuestros derechos ya.


 Más fotos:

martes, 7 de marzo de 2017

BREXIT AND LAZY STEREOTYPES OF BRITISH EXPATS

The image of expats in The Guardian  (2015)       Photo: Alamy
Tanned women stretched out in the Mediterranean sun, red-faced men swilling beer, wealthy retirees playing golf or sipping gin and tonics next to the pool. The life of Riley, not a care in the world. This is how UK nationals live on the Continent. Right? A member of EuroCitizens explodes the myth that allows our politicians to ignore the rights of 1.2 million British citizens.
 

More expats in The Guardian (2017)  Photo: David Ramos/Getty Images
     British expats have never had the political weight of their  counterparts elsewhere. In Spain and France, emigrants can vote in their national elections for as long as they live, as can their children or grandchildren if they keep nationality. In contrast, UK emigrants who have spent more than fifteen years abroad are disenfranchised. In the Brexit referendum, UK nationals in the EU were among those most affected, but 90% could not vote.

   This has continued after the referendum. While there has been widespread (and deserved) media attention to the three million EU citizens in Britain, UK nationals in the EU remain largely invisible. Groups of Britons in Europe have written an Alternative White Paper for the Brexit bill, they have lobbied MPs and peers. It has had little impact in the press. They have written to David Davis and the department for leaving the EU. They have received no reply. EuroCitizens, a group of Britons in Madrid, contacted the all-party group of peers and MPs visiting Spain last week. They were too busy discussing business to meet them.

    To find out why this is happening we need to delve into stereotypes about expats. We are accustomed to the dehumanising of 'swarms' of immigrants, the 'cockroaches' or 'feral humans’ of the toxic tabloids. Albeit on a much milder scale, the same process is applied to British citizens abroad. In her book, Identity, Ideology and Positioning in Discourses of Lifestyle Migration, Michelle Lawson analysed the language used in newspapers to describe British emigrants in France. She found frequent mentions to 'waves', 'influxes' of Britons, of 'the new British invasion’, of areas 'swamped by Britons'. 'British expat' consistently collocated with negative words and phrases. The term 'expat' itself was derogatory.

   A note of envy is clear: these Britons have 'esconded' from their responsibilities, ‘escaped’ the UK weather and job market. They are living a 'dream' or an idyll' in their 'simply divine Tuscan villa'. A 2012 Daily Mail article, titled 'The expats who are far too happy to be homesick,' comments on a survey of Britons abroad. 'You might expect them to pine for the countryside, hanker after the beer or at least wonder what's happening on EastEnders' writes the journalist. 'But these days, it seems British expats are too busy enjoying the customs and cuisine of their adopted countries to feel homesick in the slightest.' The article goes on to describe how these heartless renegades do not even miss their nearest and dearest. Such discourse logically leads to the most extreme Little Englander view that expats are traitors to their own country.

    The reality of British emigrants in the EU is starkly different. To start with, nearly half live in rainy northern Europe. Around 800,000 of the 1.2 million are workers or their dependants (Migration Watch). Even in sunny Spain, only a third are UK pensioners and most of these live on modest incomes; over 60,000 Britons in Spain are in work (UK Embassy, Madrid). As well as retirees, there are business people, language teachers, academics, scientists, tour guides, hotel workers, IT specialists, students. Most British expats in Europe are hard-working citizens who have taken advantage of the EU to find a better job and a better life for their families. Many work for British companies and their work contributes to the UK's role in the world and the country’s balance of payments. 

   Lazy stereotyping by the press, including The Guardian, has enabled politicians to forget about the 1,2 million Britons in the EU, to use them as bargaining chips. It must stop. And the UK should start caring about its emigrants, as other civilised countries do.