site.btaRefugee Crisis Test for True European Leadership - Expert
Refugee Crisis Test for True European Leadership - Expert 
Sofia, August 28 (BTA) - The refugee crisis is a test for true 
European leadership, political scientist Anna Krusteva told BTA 
in an interview. She is head of New Bulgarian University's 
Centre for European Refugee, Migration and Ethnic Studies. 
The only country which currently demonstrates clear leadership 
is Germany, she says, explaining that Mekel stood bravely in 
front of the booing neo-Nazis and firmly stated that the 
solution does not lie within hatred, but within efficient 
policies. 
The current refugee crisis is the biggest Europe has seen since 
WWII, and poses a huge challenge for the governments and 
peoples, she noted. Krusteva summarizes the tendencies as 
follows - crises becoming more frequent and of larger 
proportions, states with no experience with refugee integration 
becoming transit and even host countries.
The saddest paradox is that today's refugees completely are a 
classical example of people fleeing war, violence, persecution, 
the political scientist notes. Krusteva recalls that economic 
immigrants took advantage of the refugee status when times were 
calmer. The current situation is radically different. The number
 of victims in the Mediterranean exceeds 2,000 people for just 
the first half of 2015. They are fleeing death and finding 
death. There is not a more categorical and tragic proof that the
 refugees have no way back. The 20th century was considered the 
century of refugees, however, the 21st century might claim this 
title, Krusteva notes. 
Bulgaria also set its own records in the refugees category - 
350,000 Bulgarian Turks were expelled in 1989, becoming the 
largest displaced population in Europe since the end of WWII. 
This record was later claimed by the Western Balkans, where wars
 and ethnic cleansing displaced some ten million people. 
Bulgaria is a transit country for most refugees, with the 
exception of those who seek to settle in this country 
permanently. The majority want to immediately leave for Germany,
 Sweden, the Netherlands, Krusteva comments. "We Bulgarians are 
proud that although poor, we have given asylum to the Armenians,
 to the Whites escaping the Bolsheviks, that we have saved the 
Jews. I would like to believe that our children and 
grand-children will be proud of the way we are meeting the 
Syrian refugees today," Krusteva says.
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