The report focuses on a few specific walls in different regions, highlighting the following:
- Four of the five countries bordering Syria have built walls: Israel, Turkey, Jordan and Iraq.
- India has built 6,540 km of barriers against its neighboring countries, covering 43% of its borders.
- Morocco built an occupation wall with Western Sahara considered "the greatest functional military barrier in the world", 2,720 km long.
In addition to physical walls, the militarization of border areas continues to increase, in which walls are just one means of stopping people crossing territories.. The report highlights two cases:
- Mexico has notably militarized its border with Guatemala with equipment and financing through the US funded Frontera Sur program.
- Australia has turned the sea into a barrier with the deployment of its armed forces and the Maritime Border Command of the Australian Border Force, in addition to an offshore detention system that violates human rights.
The business of building walls
Finally, the report analyzes the industry that profits from this surge in wall-building and the criminalization of people fleeing poverty and violence. The report concludes that the border security industry is diverse, as shown by the number of companies involved in the construction of Israel's walls, with more than 30 companies from the military, security, technology and construction sectors.
“Many walls and fences are built by local construction companies or by state entities, such as the military. However, the walls are invariably accompanied by a range of technological systems, such as monitoring, detection and identification equipment, vehicles, aircraft and arms, which military and security firms provide”, explains Mark Akkerman, co-author of the report and researcher at Stop Wapenhandel. Companies such as Airbus, Thales, Leonardo, Lockheed Martin, General Dynamics, Northrop Grumman and L3 Technologies are the main beneficiaries of border contracts - in particular providing the technology that accompanies the walls in both the US and in EU member states. In the specific cases studied in the report, companies such as Elbit, Indra, Dat-Con, CSRA, Leidos and Raytheon also stand out as key contractors.
“Three decades after the fall of the Berlin Wall, it is extremely sad that the wall has become the symbol of our time. Not only is it a betrayal of people's hopes in 1989, but it also locks us into a fortress with no way out in which we lose our very humanity. All the research tells us that we can expect more migration in the coming decades. Therefore, it is of profound importance to seek other dignified and humane ways to respond to the needs of people who are forced to flee their homes for reasons of poverty, violence and climate change”, warns Nick Buxton, co-editor of the report and researcher at TNI.
Notes for editors
- You can read and download the full report A Walled World, towards a Global Apartheid here.
- You can download the infographics Walled World, towards a Global Apartheid in high resolution here.
- This report is the fourth edition of a series about walls, led by the Centre Delàs d’Estudis per la Pau in collaboration with TNI and Stop Wapenhandel. The first report was published in November 2018, Building Walls, and pointed the 1000 kilometers of walls in Europe, the second Business of Building Walls (November 2019) highlighted the companies involved in wall-construction in Europe and its third edition Guarding the Fortress (November 2019) analyzes the role of Frontex in border militarisation.
1] It is important to note that most of the wall between Mexico and the United States was built not by Trump but rather during the administrations of George Bush and Barack Obama, as presented in the report More than a Wall (2019) by TNI.