{"id":639,"date":"2025-07-09T17:27:28","date_gmt":"2025-07-09T17:27:28","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/?p=639"},"modified":"2025-09-26T17:03:24","modified_gmt":"2025-09-26T17:03:24","slug":"horizonte-de-sucesos","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/?p=639","title":{"rendered":"Horizonte de sucesos"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>En la teor\u00eda de la relatividad general, el horizonte de sucesos \u2014tambi\u00e9n llamado horizonte de eventos\u2014 se<br>refiere a una hipersuperficie frontera del espacio-tiempo, tal que los eventos a un lado de ella no pueden<br>afectar a un observador situado al otro lado.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><\/p>\n\n\n<p>Horizonte de sucesos, 2018<\/p>\n<p>Impresiones inkjet en papel Hahnem\u00fclhe.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>120 x 80 cm<\/p>\n<p>Inkjet print on Hahnem\u00fclhe paper.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone size-medium wp-image-646\" src=\"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/IMG_0029.heic\" alt=\"\" width=\"1\" height=\"1\" \/><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone  wp-image-647\" src=\"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185030-354x480.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"240\" height=\"325\" srcset=\"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185030-354x480.png 354w, http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185030.png 442w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 240px) 100vw, 240px\" \/> <img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone  wp-image-648\" src=\"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185039-356x480.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"241\" height=\"325\" srcset=\"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185039-356x480.png 356w, http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185039.png 483w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 241px) 100vw, 241px\" \/><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone  wp-image-649\" src=\"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185054-359x480.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"241\" height=\"322\" srcset=\"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185054-359x480.png 359w, http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185054.png 665w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 241px) 100vw, 241px\" \/> <img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone  wp-image-650\" src=\"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185103-360x480.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"242\" height=\"322\" srcset=\"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185103-360x480.png 360w, http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185103.png 666w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 242px) 100vw, 242px\" \/><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone  wp-image-651\" src=\"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185111-355x480.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"239\" height=\"323\" srcset=\"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185111-355x480.png 355w, http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185111.png 462w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 239px) 100vw, 239px\" \/> <img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone  wp-image-652\" src=\"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185120-361x480.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"243\" height=\"323\" srcset=\"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185120-361x480.png 361w, http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185120.png 671w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 243px) 100vw, 243px\" \/> <img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone  wp-image-653\" src=\"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185213-352x480.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"486\" height=\"663\" srcset=\"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185213-352x480.png 352w, http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/07\/Captura-de-pantalla-2025-07-15-185213.png 450w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 486px) 100vw, 486px\" \/><\/p>\n<p>Seg\u00fan el \u00faltimo n\u00famero de la revista Refugiados que publica la Agencia de la ONU para los Refugiados (ACNUR), a inicios de 2018 hab\u00eda 65,6 millones de personas en el mundo que se han visto obligadas a huir de sus casas a consecuencia de la violencia o la persecuci\u00f3n. En los \u00faltimos a\u00f1os se han llegado a cifras tristemente hist\u00f3ricas, debido sobre todo a la guerra de Siria y a los numerosos conflictos que inundan una importante parte del \u00c1frica Subsahariana. Para visualizarlo m\u00e1s claramente podemos decir que durante 2016 una persona tuvo que abandonar forzosamente su hogar cada segundo seg\u00fan datos del IDMC (1). Desde hace m\u00e1s de cinco a\u00f1os Siria ha sido el pa\u00eds m\u00e1s castigado a nivel mundial (5\u20195 millones de refugiados y m\u00e1s de 6 millones de desplazados internos (2)), \u00fanicamente superado por Colombia (7,7 millones de refugiados) y seguido por Afganist\u00e1n (4,7 millones), Irak (4,2 millones) y Sud\u00e1n del Sur (3,3 millones).<\/p>\n<p>El an\u00e1lisis global en lo que se refiere a peticiones de asilo contin\u00faa una tendencia que parece irreversible: son los pa\u00edses en v\u00edas de desarrollo, y no los m\u00e1s ricos, los que acogen a un mayor n\u00famero de personas refugiadas. En el caso de Siria, en 2017 m\u00e1s de 3 millones de refugiados huyeron a Turqu\u00eda y 1 mill\u00f3n se traslad\u00f3 a los campos de refugiados libaneses, un pa\u00eds que acoge a 183 refugiados por cada 1.000 residentes. Les sigue Jordania, con m\u00e1s de medio mill\u00f3n, Irak y Egipto (3). Seg\u00fan datos de la Comisi\u00f3n Europea, en 2015 se aprobaron algo menos de 300.000 de las m\u00e1s de un mill\u00f3n de peticiones de asilo que recibi\u00f3 la UE en ese a\u00f1o.<\/p>\n<p>Aunque se podr\u00eda decir que algunos pa\u00edses europeos parecen responder lentamente a la crisis, hay datos que hacen dudar de que los fondos y las medidas necesarios para solucionar el problema est\u00e9n siendo convenientemente dirigidos. Desde que en 2016 la UE firmara con Turqu\u00eda un acuerdo por el que todo inmigrante irregular captado en la frontera europea ser\u00eda inmediatamente conducido a territorio turco, la situaci\u00f3n se ha hecho m\u00e1s grave si cabe. Este tipo de pol\u00edticas de contenci\u00f3n, detenci\u00f3n y deportaci\u00f3n, junto al levantamiento de nuevos muros y vallas fronterizas, est\u00e1 costando a la UE unos 13.000 millones de euros al a\u00f1o (4). En concreto, se destinan alrededor de 75 millones anualmente a asistir t\u00e9cnicamente a pa\u00edses como T\u00fanez, Libia, Egipto, Argelia y Mauritania. Pa\u00edses todos ellos dirigidos por gobiernos dif\u00edcilmente calificables de democr\u00e1ticos en los que ya es un hecho el escandaloso papel de las mafias para con los refugiados. S\u00f3lo con la firma del acuerdo UE-Turqu\u00eda, este pa\u00eds se embols\u00f3 6.000 millones de euros para poder atender a la casi insostenible cantidad de refugiados que se hallan dentro de sus fronteras: 3,8 millones seg\u00fan datos de la Organizaci\u00f3n Internacional para las Migraciones (OIM) de enero de este a\u00f1o. Europa tambi\u00e9n dedica mucho dinero a proyectos sobre tecnolog\u00edas y sistemas de detecci\u00f3n m\u00e1s eficientes: una media de 230 millones de euros anuales (5).<\/p>\n<p>Conscientes del gasto que conllevan las pol\u00edticas de deportaci\u00f3n y los incentivos para animar a los inmigrantes a acogerse al retorno voluntario, que llega a los 11.300 millones de euros anuales, es comprensible que crezcan los presupuestos destinados a la vigilancia y la contenci\u00f3n, sea de la forma que sea. FRONTEX (6), que desde 2016 dispone un nuevo y m\u00e1s efectivo cuerpo de guardia de frontera, ofrece datos presupuestarios peri\u00f3dicos que crecen paulatinamente: 250 millones en 2016, 281 millones en 2017 y 320 millones en 2018. Seg\u00fan algunos investigadores este crecimiento, en general, de la inversi\u00f3n en seguridad fronteriza, llegar\u00e1 hasta los 50.000 millones de euros en 2022 (7). Pero este esfuerzo no impide que miles de personas traten de entrar en Europa cueste lo que cueste. Es m\u00e1s, el cierre de fronteras terrestres y el soborno de pa\u00edses extracomunitarios, no ha hecho sino empeorar la situaci\u00f3n, empujando a estas personas a tomar rutas a\u00fan m\u00e1s peligrosas. Seg\u00fan la OIM (8), en 2017 se contabilizaron en todo el mundo 6.142 muertes y desapariciones, de las que la mitad correspond\u00edan al Mediterr\u00e1neo. En 2015 se ofreci\u00f3 la cifra oficial de 3.784 y en 2016 se lleg\u00f3 a 5.143. Hasta el 18 de marzo de este a\u00f1o, ya se han contabilizado 495 casos (3 personas de cada 100 que logran llegar por mar a Europa). M\u00e1s de 12.000 mujeres, hombres y ni\u00f1os han muerto en el Mediterr\u00e1neo en algo m\u00e1s de tres a\u00f1os.<\/p>\n<p>El n\u00famero de personas que consiguen sobrevivir a las inhumanas traves\u00edas terrestres o mar\u00edtimas fluct\u00faan de un a\u00f1o a otro. El a\u00f1o m\u00e1s cruento de los \u00faltimos cinco fue sin duda el 2015, en el que la OIM contabiliz\u00f3 algo m\u00e1s de un mill\u00f3n de llegadas al territorio de la UE. Esta cifra ha ido menguando considerablemente en 2016 (390.432) y en 2017 (186.768). Habr\u00e1 que ver si esta tendencia a la baja contin\u00faa este a\u00f1o, en el que ya se han registrado 15.266 entradas. No se debe identificar esta disminuci\u00f3n en las cifras con una reducci\u00f3n del n\u00famero de personas que huyen de sus pa\u00edses de origen, sino con la efectividad de las medidas de contenci\u00f3n europeas. Medidas que tambi\u00e9n influyen en el n\u00famero de peticiones de asilo que se resuelven positivamente, muy pocas en comparaci\u00f3n con el importante n\u00famero que de ellas se reciben: casi un mill\u00f3n y medio en 2015, algo m\u00e1s de un mill\u00f3n en 2016 y casi 700.000 en 2017 seg\u00fan <br \/>Eurostat. Alemania se encuentra a la cabeza muy por delante del resto, aceptando, por ejemplo, el 34,4% de las m\u00e1s de 700.000 recibidas en 2016 (9). Francia, que recibi\u00f3 m\u00e1s de 100.000 en 2017, s\u00f3lo aprob\u00f3 el 13%, e Italia, con 123.370 en 2016, no lleg\u00f3 al 4%. Un caso particular es Suecia, un pa\u00eds que en 2016 aprob\u00f3 m\u00e1s del 60% de las peticiones (10), pero que a partir de 2017 anunci\u00f3 oficialmente la deportaci\u00f3n de entre 60.000 y 80.000 personas.<\/p>\n<p>Sobre la situaci\u00f3n de los refugiados que ya viven en Europa, no dejan de multiplicarse los titulares de prensa que se\u00f1alan el fracaso de las pol\u00edticas de integraci\u00f3n, el aumento de la violencia racista y el creciente sentimiento de rechazo de amplios sectores de la poblaci\u00f3n que han empujado a los gobiernos a tomar r\u00e1pidas medidas de acci\u00f3n ante el peligro de perder su posici\u00f3n frente a partidos de ultraderecha. Hemos se\u00f1alado las deportaciones en Suecia, pero tambi\u00e9n las habr\u00e1 en Finlandia y en Noruega. Tambi\u00e9n se ha comenzado a aprobar leyes que permiten la confiscaci\u00f3n de bienes, como ya sucede en Dinamarca, Suiza y algunos estados <br \/>federados de Alemania.<\/p>\n<p>Pero la gravedad del escenario, espoleado mayormente por los conflictos b\u00e9licos, no ha afectado en lo m\u00e1s m\u00ednimo a los planes de exportaci\u00f3n de armamento. Desde 2003 a 2014, la UE envi\u00f3 armas y material militar a 63 de los 65 pa\u00edses que en aquel momento estaban en conflicto o en una situaci\u00f3n predominante de tensi\u00f3n (11). Este dato evidencia la <br \/>absoluta responsabilidad de Europa en la situaci\u00f3n que, precisamente, trata de eludir. El negocio de la guerra y el miedo, que es un hecho en lo referente a las pol\u00edticas de control fronterizo, contin\u00faa siendo m\u00e1s que rentable con la venta de armas. Prueba de ello es el crecimiento en un 400% de las exportaciones desde 2012 hasta hoy.<\/p>\n<p>Las sanciones y bloqueos con los que Europa castiga a algunos pa\u00edses, como por ejemplo Siria o Libia, no impide en absoluto que las armas Made in EU entren de manera indirecta. De esta labor se encargan las mafias, que en los \u00faltimos a\u00f1os han recaudado miles de millones de euros gracias al tr\u00e1fico de armas y seres humanos (12). Seg\u00fan Cruz Roja Espa\u00f1ola, el precio medio para cruzar el Estrecho ronda los 1.100 euros por persona, cruzar desde Turqu\u00eda hasta Grecia puede llegar a los 2.000 por individuo y pasar la frontera de Melilla escondido en un veh\u00edculo ronda los <br \/>3.000. El negocio del <em>escaper<\/em> es realmente lucrativo. No menos rentable es la nueva modalidad que han desarrollado las mafias que operan en Libia y que apenas empezamos a conocer: la creaci\u00f3n de un aut\u00e9ntico \u201cmercado de esclavos\u201d en ese pa\u00eds, es decir, la compra-venta de personas que en su camino hacia Europa son interceptados y sometidos a condiciones de esclavitud con la intenci\u00f3n de recibir un rescate a cambio de su liberaci\u00f3n (13).<\/p>\n<p>Actualmente, las mafias no s\u00f3lo est\u00e1n presentes en los pa\u00edses de origen o en los pa\u00edses que funcionan como puerta de Europa, sino que tambi\u00e9n lo est\u00e1n en la propia Europa. Es el caso de la mafia calabresa, que ya se hab\u00eda embolsado varios millones de euros de las ayudas oficiales a los refugiados cuando en 2017, una investigaci\u00f3n policial destap\u00f3 que hab\u00eda estado controlando a su antojo un centro de inmigrantes durante diez a\u00f1os (14).<\/p>\n<p>Seg\u00fan la OIM Espa\u00f1a ha documentado un total de 62.643 llegadas irregulares al pa\u00eds desde 2015, m\u00e1s de 2.000 s\u00f3lo en enero de este a\u00f1o. Seg\u00fan la prensa, con acceso a los datos que el Secretario de Estado de Asuntos Europeos ha facilitado a Bruselas recientemente, Espa\u00f1a ha acogido a 2.782 refugiados a d\u00eda 12 de marzo y reubicando adem\u00e1s a <br \/>33.846 personas que se hallaban en Italia y Grecia. Se comprueba as\u00ed que de la \u201ccuota\u201d de 11.137 refugiados que acept\u00f3 acoger hasta septiembre del a\u00f1o pasado, s\u00f3lo ha cumplido con el 24%. El Secretario alude a \u201cfalta de personas que cumplan los requisitos\u201d y a \u201cdificultades en el procedimiento\u201d para justificar este fracaso (15). Requisitos que, seg\u00fan datos de la Polic\u00eda Nacional, se centran en bloquear a aquellas personas que puedan suponer un peligro para <br \/>la seguridad del pa\u00eds. Aunque la realidad es que algunas nacionalidades, como iraqu\u00edes y afganos, simplemente no entran en el acuerdo sobre las \u201ccuotas\u201d de la UE y por tanto, ni siquiera se les plantea la posibilidad. No ocurre lo mismo con los llamados \u201cvisados dorados\u201d, autorizaciones de residencia que con el dinero por delante, no hacen distinci\u00f3n de nacionalidad. Desde que Espa\u00f1a puso en marcha esta modalidad en 2013 se han aprobado m\u00e1s de 40.000 (16). Esos visados se consiguen principalmente a trav\u00e9s de inversiones de entre 500.000 y dos millones <br \/>de euros en inmuebles, dep\u00f3sitos o bonos del Estado. Una pr\u00e1ctica de la que organismos como el Fondo Monetario Internacional (FMI), alertan como puerta de acceso a la corrupci\u00f3n, al fraude e incluso a delitos de evasi\u00f3n o desobediencia a la autoridad en sus pa\u00edses de origen, adem\u00e1s del cohecho. Este tipo de permisos tambi\u00e9n se pueden conceder a trabajadores \u201caltamente cualificados\u201d en un intento por atraer la excelencia profesional a nuestro pa\u00eds (17); una declaraci\u00f3n de la Secretar\u00eda de Estado de Comercio que choca diametralmente con la tendencia a la \u201cfuga\u201d de talento que sufre Espa\u00f1a desde hace m\u00e1s de una d\u00e9cada. De hecho, cada vez son m\u00e1s las personas que deciden salir del pa\u00eds. As\u00ed lo atestigua el Instituto Nacional de Estad\u00edstica (INE), que el a\u00f1o pasado ofreci\u00f3 la cifra de 2,4 millones de espa\u00f1oles residentes fuera del pa\u00eds. Una cantidad que casi se ha duplicado en tan s\u00f3lo siete a\u00f1os. Todo apunta a que esta tendencia seguir\u00e1 aumentando en los a\u00f1os venideros.<\/p>\n<p>Los datos que se recogen en este texto tratan de poner en evidencia la actuaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a y el resto de la Uni\u00f3n Europea en lo concerniente a materia humanitaria ante la realidad de la peor crisis global desde la segunda guerra mundial.<\/p>\n<h6><strong>1. Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre.<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6><strong>2. Agencia de la ONU para los Refugiados (UNHCR) Datos de finales de 2016.<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6><strong>3. Agencia de la ONU para los Refugiados (UNHCR).<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6><strong>4. Aunque de 2015, son los datos m\u00e1s recientes que se tienen sobre el coste de los programas de control fronterizo de la UE, y proceden de un estudio de investigaci\u00f3n desarrollado por el proyecto The Migrants\u2019 Files, impulsado por un consorcio de periodistas de diez nacionalidades. Este proyecto finaliz\u00f3 en junio de 2016.<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6><strong>5. Datos tomados del proyecto The New Arrivals, en el que participan The Guardian, El Pa\u00eds, Le Monde y Spiegel, y que est\u00e1 centrado en hacer un seguimiento period\u00edstico de los refugiados que ya viven en Europa. Concretamente, esta cifra la proporciona otro proyecto colectivo, Security For Sale, que agrupa a m\u00e1s de 20 periodistas europeos.<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6><strong>6. Agencia europea para el control de fronteras exteriores de la UE.<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6><strong>7. Laura Delle Femine (8 de agosto de 2017) El negocio millonario del control de fronteras. El Pa\u00eds \u2013 The New Arrivals\u00a0 \u00a0 8. En concreto, se trata de datos facilitados por el proyecto The Missing Migrants, con el que la OIM coteja sus propios<br \/>datos con los facilitados por las autoridades de cada pa\u00eds afectado y los que toma de los medios period\u00edsticos. Aun as\u00ed, la propia OIM alerta de que seguramente las cifras sean sensiblemente superiores a las ofrecidas.<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6><strong>9. Seg\u00fan la BAMF, la Oficina de inmigrantes y refugiados alemana.<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6><strong>10. Las cifras de Francia, Italia y Suecia proceden de la base de datos AIDA (Asylum Information Database).<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6><strong>11. Informaci\u00f3n facilitada por el Centro Del\u00e0s de Estudios por la Paz, una ONG pacifista interesada en la desmilitarizaci\u00f3n del planeta.<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6><strong>12. Bel\u00e9n Dom\u00ednguez Cebri\u00e1n (17 de mayo de 2016) El \u2018modus operandi\u2019 de los traficantes de migrantes. El Pa\u00eds.<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6><strong>13. Montse Mart\u00ednez (28 de febrero de 2018) Mercado de esclavos en Libia. El Peri\u00f3dico.<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6><strong>14. Juan Diego Quesada (25 de junio de 2017) La mafia hace caja con la migraci\u00f3n. El Pa\u00eds.<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6><strong>15. (21 de marzo de 2018) Un total de 2.782 refugiados han sido reasentados y reubicados en Espa\u00f1a, seg\u00fan el Gobierno. Europa Press.<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6><strong>16. En 2016 Espa\u00f1a concedi\u00f3 un total de 12.497 \u201cvisados dorados\u201d. Y seg\u00fan datos de la AIDA, aprob\u00f3 355 peticiones de asilo (de las 16.544 recibidas) y otorg\u00f3 6.500 permisos de protecci\u00f3n subsidiaria.<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6><strong>17. Marina Est\u00e9vez Torreblanca (24 de marzo de 2018) Los \u201cvisados dorados\u201d se disparan: 41.000 extranjeros obtienen<br \/>papeles por comprar casas de lujo o inversiones millonarias. ElDiario.es<\/strong><\/h6>\n\n\n<p>According to the latest issue of <em>Refugees<\/em> magazine published by the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), at the beginning of 2018 there were 65.6 million people worldwide who had been forced to flee their homes as a result of violence or persecution. In recent years, the numbers have reached historic levels, mainly due to the war in Syria and the numerous conflicts that afflict a significant part of sub-Saharan Africa. To visualize this more clearly, we can say that during 2016, one person was forced to leave their home every second, according to data from the IDMC (1). For more than five years, Syria has been the most affected country in the world (5.5 million refugees and more than 6 million internally displaced persons (2)), surpassed only by Colombia (7.7 million refugees) and followed by Afghanistan (4.7 million), Iraq (4.2 million), and South Sudan (3.3 million).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The global analysis of asylum requests continues a trend that seems irreversible: it is developing countries, rather than the richest ones, that host the largest number of refugees. In the case of Syria, in 2017 more than 3 million refugees fled to Turkey and 1 million moved to refugee camps in Lebanon, a country that accommodates 183 refugees per 1,000 residents. Jordan follows, with more than half a million refugees, followed by Iraq and Egypt (3). According to data from the European Commission, in 2015, just under 300,000 of the more than one million asylum applications received by the EU that year were approved.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>Although it could be said that some European countries seem to be responding slowly to the crisis, there is data that casts doubt on whether the funds and measures needed to solve the problem are being effectively allocated. Since the EU signed an agreement with Turkey in 2016 whereby any irregular immigrant caught at the European border would be immediately returned to Turkish territory, the situation has become even more serious. These types of containment, detention, and deportation policies, along with the construction of new walls and border fences, cost the EU around \u20ac13 billion per year. Specifically, around \u20ac75 million is allocated annually to provide technical assistance to countries such as Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Algeria, and Mauritania. All of these countries are led by governments that can hardly be described as democratic, and where the notorious involvement of mafias in refugee trafficking is already a reality. With the signing of the EU-Turkey agreement alone, Turkey received \u20ac6 billion to deal with the nearly unmanageable number of refugees within its borders: 3.8 million according to data from the International Organization for Migration (IOM) in January this year. Europe also spends a lot of money on projects aimed at developing more efficient technologies and detection systems: an average of \u20ac230 million per year (5).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Aware of the cost of deportation policies and incentives to encourage immigrants to voluntary return programs, which reaches \u20ac11.3 billion per year, it is understandable that budgets for surveillance and containment, by any means, are growing. FRONTEX (6), which since 2016 has operated with a new and more effective border guard corps, provides regular budget data that show a steady increase: \u20ac250 million in 2016, \u20ac281 million in 2017, and \u20ac320 million in 2018. According to some researchers, this overall increase in investment in border security is expected to reach \u20ac50 billion by 2022 (7). But this effort does not prevent thousands of people from attempting to enter Europe at all costs. Moreover, the closure of land borders and the bribes to non-EU countries has only made the situation worse, forcing them onto even more dangerous routes. According to the IOM (8), in 2017 there were 6,142 deaths and disappearances worldwide, half of which were recorded in the Mediterranean. In 2015, the official figure was 3,784, and in 2016 it reached 5,143. As of March 18 this year, there have already been 495 cases (3 out of every 100 people who reach Europe by sea). More than 12,000 women, men, and children have died in the Mediterranean in just over three years.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The number of people who manage to survive the inhumane land or sea crossings fluctuates from year to year. The deadliest year of the last five was undoubtedly 2015, when the IOM recorded just over one million arrivals in the EU. This figure has fallen considerably in 2016 (390,432) and 2017 (186,768). It remains to be seen whether this downward trend will continue this year, with 15,266 arrivals already recorded. This decrease in numbers should not be interpreted as a decline in the number of people fleeing their home countries, but rather as a result of the effectiveness of European containment measures. These measures also affect the number of asylum applications approved, which is very low compared to the significant number of applications received: almost 1.5 million in 2015, just over 1 million in 2016, and almost 700,000 in 2017, according to Eurostat. Germany is far ahead of the rest, accepting, for example, 34.4% of the more than 700,000 applications submitted in 2016 (9). France, which received more than 100,000 in 2017, approved only 13%, and Italy, with 123,370 in 2016, approved less than 4%. A particular case is Sweden, a country that approved more than 60% of asylum applications in 2016 (10), but which officially announced the deportation of between 60,000 and 80,000 people starting in 2017.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Regarding the situation of refugees already living in Europe, there is a growing number of headlines pointing to the shortcomings of integration policies, the increase in racist violence, and the growing feeling of rejection among large sectors of the population, which has pushed governments to take quick action in the face of the danger of losing their position to far-right parties. We have highlighted the deportations in Sweden, but there will also be deportations in Finland and Norway. Laws have also begun to be passed allowing authorities to confiscate property, as is already the case in Denmark, Switzerland, and some federal states in Germany.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, the gravity of the situation, largely driven by armed conflicts, has not affected arms export plans at all. From 2003 to 2014, the EU sent arms and military equipment to 63 of the 65 countries that were at the time in conflict or experiencing high tension (11). This data highlights Europe&#8217;s full responsibility for the situation it is trying to avoid. The business of war and fear, which is a reality when it comes to border control policies, remains highly profitable. Proof of this is the 400% increase in exports since 2012.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The sanctions and blockades with which Europe punishes some countries, such as Syria or Libya, do not in any way prevent EU-made weapons from entering by indirect routes. This task is carried out by mafias, which in recent years have earned billions of euros from trafficking in arms and human beings (12). According to the Spanish Red Cross, the average price for crossing the Strait is around \u20ac1,100 per person, crossing from Turkey to Greece can cost up to \u20ac2,000 per person, and crossing the border at Melilla hidden in a vehicle costs around \u20ac3,000. The smuggling business is truly lucrative. No less profitable is the new modality developed by the mafias operating in Libya, which is only just coming to light: the creation of a veritable \u201cslave market\u201d in that country, that is, the buying and selling of people who are intercepted on their way to Europe and subjected to conditions of slavery in order to extort ransom for their release (13). <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Currently, mafias are not only present in countries of origin or in countries that serve as gateways to Europe, but also in Europe itself. This is the case of the Calabrian mafia, which had already pocketed several million euros in official refugee aid when, in 2017, a police investigation revealed that it had been  running an immigration center as it pleased  for ten years (14).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>According to the IOM, Spain has documented a total of 62,643 irregular arrivals in the country since 2015, including over 2,000 in January of this year. According to the press, with access to data recently provided to Brussels by the Secretary of State for European Affairs, Spain had taken in 2,782 refugees as of March 12 and had also relocated 33,846 people who were in Italy and Greece. This shows that of the \u201cquota\u201d of 11,137 refugees it agreed to take in by September last year, it has met only 24%. The Secretary cites a \u201clack of people who meet the requirements\u201d and \u201cprocedural difficulties\u201d to justify this failure (15). According to data from the National Police, these requirements are designed to block those who may pose a threat to the country&#8217;s security. However, the reality is that some nationalities, such as Iraqis and Afghans, are simply not included in the EU \u201cquota\u201d agreement and are therefore excluded from consideration. The same is not true of the so-called \u201cgolden visas,\u201d residence permits that, with money up front, make no distinction based on nationality. Since Spain launched this program in 2013, more than 40,000 have been approved (16). These visas are mainly obtained through investments of between \u20ac500,000 and \u20ac2 million in real estate, deposits, or government bonds. Organizations such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) warn that this practice opens the door to corruption, fraud, and even crimes of evasion or disobedience to authority in their countries of origin, in addition to bribery. These types of permits can also be granted to \u201chighly skilled\u201d workers in an attempt to attract professional excellence to our country (17); a statement by the Secretary of State for Trade that is in stark contrast with the talent \u201cflight\u201d trend that Spain has been suffering for more than a decade. In fact, more and more people are deciding to leave the country. This is confirmed by the National Statistics Institute (INE), which last year reported that 2.4 million Spaniards were living outside the country. This figure has almost doubled in just seven years. Everything points to this trend continuing to rise in the coming years.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The data collected in this text aims to expose the actions taken by Spain and the rest of the European Union regarding humanitarian issues in response to the worst global crisis since World War II.<\/p>\n\n\n<h6>\u00a0<\/h6>\n<h6 data-start=\"167\" data-end=\"314\"><strong>1. Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre\u00a0<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6 data-start=\"318\" data-end=\"447\"><strong>2. UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) Data from late 2016.<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6 data-start=\"451\" data-end=\"479\"><strong>3. UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR).<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6 data-start=\"483\" data-end=\"982\"><strong>4. Although from 2015, this is the most recent data available on the cost of EU border control programs (programs \u2192 <em data-start=\"596\" data-end=\"608\">programmes<\/em>, si seguimos el ingl\u00e9s brit\u00e1nico) and comes from a research study carried out by <em data-start=\"690\" data-end=\"695\">the<\/em> <em>Migrants<\/em>&#8216; <em>Files<\/em> project promoted by a consortium of journalists from ten different nationalities. This project ended in June 2016.<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6 data-start=\"986\" data-end=\"1581\"><strong>5. Data taken from <em data-start=\"1002\" data-end=\"1007\">the<\/em> <em>New Arrivals<\/em> project, in which <em data-start=\"1079\" data-end=\"1093\">The Guardian<\/em>, <em data-start=\"1156\" data-end=\"1165\">El Pa\u00eds<\/em>, <em data-start=\"1167\" data-end=\"1177\">Le Monde<\/em>, and <em data-start=\"1183\" data-end=\"1196\">Der Spiegel<\/em> are participating, which focuses on journalistic reporting of refugees already living in Europe. Specifically, this figure is provided by another collective project, <em>Security For Sale<\/em>, which brings together more than 20 European journalists.<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6 data-start=\"1585\" data-end=\"1810\"><strong>6. European Agency for the Management of Operational Cooperation at the External Borders of the Member States of the European Union (Frontex).<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6 data-start=\"1814\" data-end=\"2015\"><strong>7. Laura Delle Femine (August 8, 2017) The million-dollar business of border control. <em data-start=\"1897\" data-end=\"1906\">El Pa\u00eds<\/em> \u2013 <em data-start=\"1909\" data-end=\"1927\">the New Arrivals.<\/em><\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6 data-start=\"2019\" data-end=\"2440\"><strong>8. Specifically, this data was provided by <em>the Missing Migrants<\/em> project, in which the IOM compares its own data with that provided by the authorities of each affected country and that taken from the media. Even so, the IOM itself warns that the figures are probably significantly higher than those provided.\u00a0<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6 data-start=\"2444\" data-end=\"2629\"><strong>9. According to the BAMF, the german Federal Office for Migration and Refugees.<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6 data-start=\"195\" data-end=\"289\"><strong>10. Figures for France, Italy, and Sweden are taken from the AIDA (Asylum Information Database).<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6 data-start=\"294\" data-end=\"656\"><strong>11. Information provided by the Del\u00e0s Centre for Peace Studies, a pacifist NGO interested in the demilitarisation of the planet.\u00a0<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6 data-start=\"661\" data-end=\"923\"><strong>12. Bel\u00e9n Dom\u00ednguez Cebri\u00e1n (May 17, 2016) The modus operandi of migrant traffickers. <em data-start=\"743\" data-end=\"752\">El Pa\u00eds.<\/em><\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6 data-start=\"928\" data-end=\"1095\"><strong>13. Montse Mart\u00ednez (February 28, 2018) Slave markets in Libya. <em data-start=\"1078\" data-end=\"1093\">El Peri\u00f3dico.<\/em><\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6 data-start=\"1100\" data-end=\"1299\"><strong>14. Juan Diego Quesada (June 25, 2017) The mafia cashes in on migration. <em data-start=\"1287\" data-end=\"1297\">El Pa\u00eds.\u00a0<\/em><\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6 data-start=\"1304\" data-end=\"1529\"><strong>15. (March 21, 2018) A total of 2,782 refugees have been resettled and relocated in Spain, according to the Spanish government. <em data-start=\"1512\" data-end=\"1527\">Europa Press.\u00a0<\/em><\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6 data-start=\"1534\" data-end=\"1820\"><strong>16. In 2016, Spain granted a total of 12,497 \u201cgolden visas.\u201d And according to data from the AIDA, it approved 355 asylum rapplications (out of 16,544 received) and granted 6,500 subsidiary protection permits.\u00a0<\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6 data-start=\"1825\" data-end=\"2252\"><strong>17. Marina Est\u00e9vez Torreblanca (March 24, 2018) \u201cGolden visas\u201d skyrocket: 41,000 foreigners obtain residency permits by buying luxury homes or making million-dollar investments. <em data-start=\"2236\" data-end=\"2250\">ElDiario.es.<\/em><\/strong><\/h6>\n<h6>\u00a0<\/h6>\n<h6>\u00a0<\/h6>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>En la teor\u00eda de la relatividad general, el horizonte de sucesos \u2014tambi\u00e9n llamado horizonte de eventos\u2014 serefiere a una hipersuperficie frontera del espacio-tiempo, tal que los eventos a un lado de ella no puedenafectar a un observador situado al otro lado. Horizonte de sucesos, 2018 Impresiones inkjet en papel Hahnem\u00fclhe.\u00a0 120 x 80 cm Inkjet [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[6,4],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/639"}],"collection":[{"href":"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=639"}],"version-history":[{"count":12,"href":"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/639\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":724,"href":"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/639\/revisions\/724"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=639"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=639"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/ramon-mateos.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=639"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}