he form of current cooperation with autocratic states such as Turkey creates dependencies that further exacerbate the refugee problem. Nor will the EU’s planned “return patents” as part of the current migration pact work. People who have nothing to lose after a civil war or the consequences of climate change will continue to be in the hands of smuggling gangs.
We are also wary of the fact that most European families have their own refugee history and that Europe has a historic responsibility, particularly with regard to Africa. It was only through the emergence of the Black Lives Matter movement and the heightened discussion of everyday racism that we were painfully reminded that we all have a special obligation to make a lasting effort to resolve the mistakes of the past. The cause of the unresolved refugee problem is therefore not only in skill but in wanting.

