Portrait 2
Nasredin Rabi Abdu: Being Black in Bulgaria
17 07 2007 The
Sudanease refugee is not afraid of skinhead attacks in Sofia; he
worries more about the future of the child he is having with a
Bulgarian partner.
By
Ekaterina Petrova in Sofia
“Maybe
I can become the first black policeman in Bulgaria,” Nasredin Rabi
Abdu ponders, adding: “No, that could never happen.”
A
refugee from Sudan, he has lived in Bulgaria since 2001. The first
time we meet, on the eve of World Refugee Day, passersby stare as we
shake hands – a black man and a white woman.
Those
who usually stand out in Bulgaria’s generally homogeneous society,
veiled women, Roma children, beggars in wheelchairs, attract far less
attention.
We
are standing in one of Sofia’s most diverse areas, where Orthodox
churches, a synagogue, a Catholic church and a mosque stand within
metres of one another.
But
this was also the site of Nasredin Rabi Abdu’s latest encounter
with Bulgarian skinheads. In May, they set on him in the street,
attacking him with fists, kicks and a knife.
Passersby
watched but looked the other way. Nasredin and his Sudanese friend
escaped without serious injuries but the bruises remain – another
sign that he is not wanted in Bulgaria. His friend left the country
for Western Europe soon after.
Nasredin
Rabi Abdu is one of the roughly 4,500 people with refugee and
humanitarian status currently residing in Bulgaria. These uprooted
people are not economic migrants and unlike them, cannot safely
return home, where they face the threat of persecution, torture, or
even death.
On
arrival in Bulgaria, refugees initially face legal battles,
logistical problems and a wretched existence. These obstacles can be
overcome with time and a lot of paperwork. Some eventually receive
asylum status, learn some Bulgarian and get a job.
International
law defines a refugee as “any person who, owing to well-founded
fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality,
membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is
outside the country of his nationality and is unable or […]
unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country.”
Bulgarian
law provides different kinds of status to asylum-seekers. Based on
the above definition, it sometimes grants refugee status, usually for
an indefinite period. More often, they offer humanitarian status.
It
is given to people who have been forced to leave their country of
origin as a result of threats to their life, security or freedom,
because of armed conflict, or because they are in danger of torture
or other forms of inhumane and degrading treatment or punishment.
This status is not indefinite and can be revoked if the circumstances
it was granted upon change.
Nasredin
Rabi Abdu left Sudan, where he worked in the army, after taking part
in a failed plot against the country’s president. Escaping by ship
via the Red Sea he tried to enter Bulgaria officially from Turkey.
The border policemen turned him and his wife away, he says, after
sexually molesting his wife and beating him up.
The
second time, the couple took no chances and crossed the border
illegally on foot. They walked through the darkness all night. His
wife had a miscarriage en route.
When
they made it to Sofia, they were granted humanitarian status for
three months. But at the end his wife left, deciding she couldn’t
live in Bulgaria as a black woman. He hasn’t had contact with her
since. He stayed. He has to reapply to renew his status every few
years.
The
Bulgarian State Agency for Refugees says a total of 15,716 people
have sought asylum in the country since 1993. In 2001, the year
Nasredin Rabi Abdu came, 2,428 people applied, almost half of whom
received humanitarian status, while 15 per cent received refugee
status.
After
growing steadily through the 1990’s, the number of asylum-seekers
peaked in 2002 and has since fallen. Only 1 to 3 per cent of
applicants have been recognized as refugees since then, while those
receiving humanitarian status made up around 20 per cent of
applicants in 2002-4 and 10 per cent in 2005 and 2006.
Most
of the asylum-seekers came from Afghanistan, followed by Iraq,
Armenia, Serbia and Montenegro and Iran. The only African states
among the top ten countries of origin are Nigeria and Algeria.
The
1990s was not the first time Bulgaria was exposed to black people.
During the communist era, according to an article by Boyko Boev, a
lawyer at the Bulgarian Helsinki Committee, “We accepted black
African students as a show of solidarity in the struggle of their
nations against colonialism and world imperialism.”
But
this relatively prolonged, albeit limited, exposure clearly did
little to alleviate the climate of racism and xenophobia in Bulgaria.
Because
of their immediately apparent difference in appearance, black
refugees fare
worst. For example, Afghan refugees are visually unrecognizable as
non-Bulgarians and rarely meet much hostility, Bilyana Zaharieva, a
researcher on the Afghan community in Bulgaria, said.
At
the construction site where Nasredin Rabi Abdu works, the other
workers call him “Bambucha”, after the popular slogan in a Fanta
commercial, featuring a happy-go-lucky faintly dark man on a vaguely
exotic island backdrop. Even this seemingly innocent likening serves
as a reminder of his black skin and “otherness”.
“Even
when it doesn’t get to the point of violence, a display of racism
and suspicion from all sides is almost a daily occurrence,”
journalist Denitsa Kamenova noted in a 2005 academic article on the
African community in Bulgaria.
Kamenova
noted characteristic “looks of disgust in public transportation
(obviously the vicious association ‘black = unclean’), refusal of
service in stores or of a ride in a taxi, and the apparently
innocent, yet insulting assertion, that all ‘blacks’ look alike
and cannot be told apart”.
Nasredin
Rabi Abdu laughs off some of his more comic experiences, like the
time he was invited to an acquaintance’s hometown to be shown off
to friends. They rubbed his arm to see if the “paint” would come
off.
Other
incidents aren’t so comical. He has been slapped in the face and
had ice thrown at him in a club for no known reason apart from his
skin.
In
its 2006 report on the rights of migrants in Bulgaria, the Bulgarian
Helsinki Committee noted: “There is almost no black immigrant who
hasn’t been a victim of physical violence or verbal harassment
during his stay in Bulgaria”.
Some
75 per cent of black immigrants said they had been attacked by
skinheads at least once, according to the Committee’s 2004 study,
cited in the same report.
The
second time I see him, at the rented apartment he shares with his
girlfriend and another Sudanese refugee, Nasredin shows me the marks
on his jacket sleeve from the time when a skinhead tried to stab him
with a broken beer bottle.
His
Bulgarian girlfriend is eight months pregnant. Since the pregnancy,
people’s remarks have become more aggressive. “They ask me, ‘Why
are you with this negro, this monkey - are there no Bulgarian men
left?’” his partner says.
A
slight fall noted in racially motivated violent crimes, noted in the
Helsinki report, seems to have had little to do with a growth in
tolerance or decisive counter-action on the part of the authorities.
It
reflected the “cautious behavior adopted by the majority of the
black immigrants, resulting from the bitter experience of previous
incidents,” the report suggested. Such behaviour includes avoiding
public transportation or crowded public places.
Nasredin
Rabi
Abdu likes going out to clubs,
dividing
Sofia’s nightspots into two categories – those that black people
can go to without being harassed and those frequented by skinheads
looking for a fight.
The
Helsinki Committee report also noted that perpetrators of racist
crimes are rarely brought to justice, which “creates a feeling of
insecurity and a lack of trust in the will and capacity of the
authorities to fight such crimes.”
“Here,
there is no law,” Nasredin Rabi Abdu asserts. “There is no one to
tell people this is bad, or this is good… if somebody beats up a
‘nigger’.”
The
Committee’s study found that 85 per cent of black immigrants were
the subject of xenophobic statements and acts committed by the
police. It also identified a “disproportional” number of identity
checks on black immigrants carried out by the police.
The
police disagree. In a public discussion organized by the Helsinki
Committee earlier this year, a representative of the Migration
Directorate of the Police Service said he was unaware of any cases of
human rights violations or of different attitudes to Asians and
blacks on the part of the police. “We will continue not to divide
people by race, religion or other characteristics,” the
representative asserted.
As
I leave their flat, Nasredin Rabi Abdu accompanies me to the taxi
downstairs. With a bag of trash in one hand, he uses the other to
check his pocket, making sure his ID card is on him.
He
is not that scared of the skinheads and the police harassment but as
he awaits the birth of his first child, he worries how it will be
treated. “We want to give him a short name, a name that is neither
Bulgarian nor Sudanese,” he says.
“We
will teach him about Christianity and Islam but he can choose what he
wants to be when he grows up,” he adds. “That doesn’t matter so
much anyway. We only want him to be a good person.”
Ekaterina
Petrova is a journalist at BIRN’s Bulgarian
office.
Balkan
Insight is BIRN`s online publication.
This
article was created with the support of the US State Department and
is part of the special package “Minorities in Bulgaria.”
Komentari:
Nema komentara.