The Guardian: Hungarian fence is a ‘pointless PR exercise’

History

MTI / Sándor Újvári

The fence currently being built by the Hungarian government on the border with Serbia to stop the influx of immigrants is “simply a pointless PR exercise”, award-winning journalist Patrick Kingsley writes in an opinion piece published on the website of The Guardian earlier today.

(Photo: MTI/Sándor Újvári)

In questioning the practicality of the fence, which the Hungarian government hopes will in part solve the issue of immigration in the European Union, and especially Hungary, Kingsley writes that “at its most effective (from a Hungarian point of view), the thousands of migrants heading up from Greece and Bulgaria will simply make their way through Croatia or another neighboring country. At its most pointless, the wall simply acts as a public relations exercise aimed at the Hungarian public, rather than at foreigners.”

Citing recent reports, the journalist says that, since only “very little of the fence has actually been built”, it only serves as a “mental blockage, rather than a physical one”. Kingsley believes the fence “creates the illusion for a domestic audience that something is being done about migration, even when it isn’t – and even when it can’t.”

In reference to the many fences and walls that have been built with “limited effect”, he argues that “it is inconceivable that a slender fence will stop people who will soon cross the Mediterranean, and the Libyan civil war.”

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