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Month: September 2011

guardian.co.uk: English Defence League filling vacuum left by mainstream politics, says report

Posted on September 22, 2011 by Migrant Tales

Comment: An effective way for Finland to come to grips with its far-right problem in parliament would be to see how countries like Britain deal with these types of threats.Two thinktanks, Right Response and Chatham House, are warning that out-of-touch politicians on a grassroots level have left a vacuum for far-right groups like the English Defence League. 

Matthew Goodwin of Right Response claims that mainstream parties had become increasingly professional and managerial. “(They are) concentrating on political marketing techniques and relying on computer-generated canvas returns, tightly-scripted phone banks, focus groups and opinion polls,” he said, “rather than on face-to-face contact, except at election time. Extreme parties often had more innovative websites too.”

He continues: “The rise of extreme parties was not only linked to anxiety over threats to jobs, social housing and the welfare state posed by immigrants. Mainstream parties needed to challenge more forcefully claims national cultures were under attack and that meant going beyond making an economic case for immigration and arguing instead for cultural diversity.”

Such observations by the author of Right Response could very well apply to Finland and explain partially why a right-wing populist party like the Perussuomalaiset (PS) won 19.1% of the vote in the last election. Instead of challenging the anti-immigration and anti-Muslim claims of some of the PS candidates, mainstream parties except for the Greens started to flirt with that party’s xenophobic message.

It appears that in Finland we are having a difficult time admitting how severe of a social ill is racism and if there are far-right anti-democratic politicians in parliament. Migrant Tales has maintained for a long time that the Suomen Sisu wing of the PS led by MP Jussi Halla-aho and his cronies are extremists that should be isolated from Timo Soini’s party.

Social Democratic Party Presidential hopeful Paavo Lipponen has warned earlier about the threat of the far right in the PS. He continued to drive home this message today on MTV3’s Huomenta Suomen Torstaikapinetissa show: “A clear far-right streak exists in the Perussuomalaiset party,” said Lipponen. “We must now ask whether this is Perussuomalaiset (party’s) line and if it accepts this type of politics.” 

Conservative MP for Northampton North, Michael Ellis, was quoted on guardian.co.uk as stating that he had “every confidence” that the coalition government would combat “the rise of the ‘new far-right'” and the potential for “lone wolf'” terrorism.

“One must only look at the terrible atrocity this summer in Norway at the hands of a murderous terrorist – in the name of a crazed war against Islam,” he said, “to see the relevancy and currency of this report.”

_______________

James Meikle

Mainstream political parties must tackle far-right groups through doorstep hearts and minds campaigns that tackle anti-Muslim sentiments at local level, according to two reports on challenging extremists.

Read whole story.

MTV3: Lipponen jyrähtää jälleen: Perussuomalaisissa asuu äärioikeistolaisuus

Read whole story.

PS’ Hirvisaari and his overkill of the media

Posted on September 21, 2011 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

Perussuomalaiset (PS) MP James Hirvisaari went on the rampage today by calling journalists “bloodthirsty hyenas” as well as  “arrogant and lying scum.” He equated  persu, the shortened term for Perussuomalaiset which is now a forbidden word in parliament, to nekru, or the very offensive n-word.

Hirvisaari has learned a lot from his outbursts. I am certain that he now he knows how immigrants and Muslims must feel after reading his countless spiteful blog entries and opinions of these groups.

The big difference, however, is that those that Hirvisaari lashes out against like immigrants and refugees  don’t have the means to defend themselves like one of Finland’s largest parties.  What does Hirvisaari write about immigrants? Read what he says about reporters.

What is even more incredible about what Hirvisaari said was the reaction of Pirkko Ruohonen-Lerner, leader of the PS parliamentary group. She told the media that the MP from Asikkala didn’t really mean what he said because he wasn’t probably taking his arguments seriously, reports Helsingin Sanomat.

The PS claims through Hirvisaari that the media and “elite” Finns are carrying out a systematic hate campaign against Timo Soini’s party.

With MPs like Hirvisaari, Jussi Halla-aho, Teuvo Hakkarainen and others, they can rest assured that the PS’ worst enemy is none other than itself.

ESS: Hirvisaari lakkauttaisi Ylen

Posted on September 21, 2011 by Migrant Tales

Comment: Of all the far-right anti-immigration PS MPs, James Hirvisaari has got to be the scariest. A railway engineer by profession, Hirvisaari not only reveals his ignorance about the role of the media in a democratic society but his true political colors whenever he gives his opinion on immigration never mind Muslims.

In his latest blog entry on Uusi Suomi, he accuses journalists of being “arragont and lying scum.” Hirvisaari has gone on the rampage at newspapers that use the term persu, or shortened term for Perussuomalaiset, by comparing it with the term nekru, or a synonym of the n-word.

The JSN announced today that using the term persu, which comes close to the term perse or anus, can be used by the media sparingly.

In a blog entry shortly after Anders Breivik killed 77 people in Norway, Hirvisaari blamed immigration for the mass killings. “I really am not surprised that something like this could happen in Norway,” he wrote on Uusi Suomi. “In the last years at least ALL (100%) of tens of those accused of violent rapes have been immigrants/foreigners that have come from outside Europe.”

Hirvisaari is also a strong believer of  ethnic hygiene. He believes that it is a bad matter for Finns to marry foreigners.

One of Hirvisaari’s recent pet topics recently is the Finnish media. He and PS MP Jussi Halla-aho have tried to teach the media their job with  dismal results.

Hirvisaari’s latest target is the Finnish Broadcast Company (YLE), which he accuses of brainwashing the public. “For as long as in YLE’s bylaws read that one of the aims of the company is to further multiculturalism, or brainwash Finnish citizens (not foreign citizens?), I would not want any state money (to go to YLE),” he was quoted as saying on Lahti-based daily ESS.

A question for Hirvisaari: Is it the state or viewers who finance YLE? If it is the latter then it cannot be the state.

Hirvisaari, like Jussi Halla-aho and his PS cronies, believes that multiculturalism is a conspiracy or a left-wing tool that permits non-Europeans and Muslims from moving to Finland and Europe. 

If it were up to Hirvisaari, he’d close Finland’s borders and start a state-sponsored hate campaign against visible immigrants and minorities.

Fortunately, Hirvisaari’s party is not in government and that he is up for relection in 2015.

____________

Perussuomalaisten kansanedustaja James Hirvisaari leimaa Yleisradion täysin ylimitoitetuksi ja kohtuuttomasti rahaa kuluttavaksi muinaisjäänteeksi, jolla nykymuodossaan ei ole olemassaolon oikeutusta. Hirvisaari vastasi sähköpostilla Etelä-Suomen Sanomien kysymykseen Yleisradion tulevasta rahoitusmallista. Hän ei suostu puhelinhaastatteluihin.

Read whole story.

Ihmisiä muuttoliikkeessä: Susanna Niinivaara: Muisti Pätkii

Posted on September 20, 2011 by Migrant Tales

Comment: One of the most incredible claims made by the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party is that Finland  should be thankful to them for opening up the debate on immigrants and immigration to Finland. The immigration topic has been debated in Finland for decades but if there is something we can be thankful to the PS is for making racism public.

The opinion-piece below by Susanna Niinivaara shows how the debate began in the early 1990s when the first Somalians arrived from the former Soviet Union.

Even Niinivaara arrives at almost the same conclusion as I: “The Perussuomalaiset (party) has brought to the debate (on immigrants and immigration) an angry tone that does not tolerate  contrary opinions.”

_____________________

Susanna Niinivaara

Ensin perussuomalaiset onnistuivat brändäämään itsensä maahanmuuttokriittisenä puolueena, ja sitten puolue onnistui sumentamaan meidän toimittajien muistia. Perussuomalaiset toistavat sitkeästi, että Suomessa maahanmuuttoon liittyvistä ongelmista on vaiettu ja varsinkin näitä ongelmia on hyssytellyt media. Viestimissä on väitteelle annettu tilaa ja perussuomalaiset ovat saaneet kiitosta siitä, että he ovat nostaneet vaietun aiheen keskusteluun.

Read whole story.

Ilta-Sanomat: Fazerin karkeista nousi rasismikohu Ruotsissa

Posted on September 20, 2011 by Migrant Tales

Comment:  When I saw this story on Ilta-Sanomat about a racist drawing of a Chinese on one of its chocolate-covered wheat puffs brand, I wondered if Fazer had learned anything after it was forced to remove a Golliwog from its famous licorice brand in 2007.

The latest uproar came in Sweden after Patrik Lundgerg criticized in his column the drawing of a stereotypical Chinese man on the bag of  Fazer Kina candies. 

Fazer has taken the criticism seriously and said that it would change the package.

You would think that a large company like Fazer would have enough sensitivity never mind brains to make such a mistake as depicting a foreign group in a stereotypic fashion. 
___________

Fazer vaihtaa karkkipaperikääreet rasismisyytösten takia. Fazerin “Kinapuffar” -karkkien pussinkylkeen piirretty kiinalaismies on herättänyt rasismikohun Ruotsissa.

Read whole story.

Le Monde Diplomatique: Lessons from Norway

Posted on September 20, 2011 by Migrant Tales

Comment: The box story below in the September issue of Le Monde Diplomatique (LMD) is a good read that attempts to see what lessons can be learned from Norway after Anders Breivik went on the rampage on July 22.

One matter that we must accept, according to the story, is the rise of far-right radicalism, anti-immigration and Islamophobic sentiment in Europe. Even so, we cannot say that they will automatically produce more Breiviks.

Writes LMD: “These ‘radical’ views are not the sole preserve of a disparate violent fringe — they are becoming legitimised as part of the political discourse. The ‘one long scream of resentment,’ in the words of the late historian Tony Judt, ‘at immigrants, at unemployment, at crime and insecurity, at ‘Europe’ and in general at ‘them’ who have brought it all about” is being heard by more people than ever before. Yet there is a danger of reading too much into these opinions as the catalyst for an individual atrocity.'”

One matter we should keep clear, however, is that far right or right-wing populist views are deteminental to our society. “These (far-right) parties should be opposed not because they may have tangentially ‘inspired’ individual acts of symbolic violence, but because their programme is dehumanising, sectarian and threatens the basis of a stable, cohesive society,” concludes LMD.

______________

By K Biswas

What do the tragic events in Utoya and Oslo tell us about the status of far-right, anti-immigrant or Islamophobic politics in Norway, Scandinavia and the rest of Europe? Commentators and “security experts” — many of whom were initially convinced of the Islamic nature of the attacks — have spent the past month speculating.

Read whole story.

Ilta-Sanomat: Tässä ovat perussuomalaisilta kielletyt sanat

Posted on September 19, 2011 by Migrant Tales

Comment: Professor Erkki Havansi, who is a card-carrying Perussuomalaiset (PS) party member, has been advising Timo Soini’s party on what is hate speech and what terms should not be used when speaking of immigrants and minorities.

Laws on hate speech were tightened in Finland in June. According to Havansi, some no-no words that should not be used include the n-word (neekeri), camel driver (ählämi), Ruskie (ryssä) or Rutabaga (hurri). For some strange reason, Havansi does not consider the word mamu, the shortened term for  immigrant, as offensive. 

He thinks that it is ok to call immigrants mamus because he hasn’t even bothered to ask any immigrant association a second opinion.

There was an extensive debate on Migrant Tales in January on the usage of the term mamu.

After MPs in the PS learn what is the appropriate term to use when addressing an ethnic group, racism will disappear from Finland right? Wrong.

This lesson in basic communication skills with ethnic groups to the PS shows at what level the whole debate on immigration is in Finland and why some members of Soini’s party don’t have a clue what racism is.

__________

Professori Erkki Havansi on ohjeistanut puoluetovereitaan vihapuhelainsäädännön suhteen. Nettiin laitettua muistiota voidaan pitää selvänä ohjeena varsinkin Jussi Halla-aholle, joka viime viikolla erotettiin kahdeksi viikoksi ryhmän toiminnasta.

Read whole story.

PS’ far right threatens our society and values

Posted on September 19, 2011 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

The sooner we comprehend as a society that the far-right wing of the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party led by MP Jussi Halla-aho and his cronies are a threat to our Nordic way of life the better. There are already clear signs that this group of MPs in the PS has not only become a thorn in Timo Soini’s side but is being shunned by other political parties and the public.

Who would have thought that a groups of anti-immigrant fanatics that twirled the Finnish media and dazzled the public with the racist statements before the April election would see their wings severely clipped today?

Former Prime Minister and Social Democrat presidential hopeful, Paavo Lipponen, blasted Sunday Halla-aho and his followers, which he called “far-right extremists.”  Center Party head Mari Kiviniemi was quoted as saying on Monday’s Helsingin Sanomat that cooperation in the opposition with the PS has been “spoiled” by the far-right wing of that party.

Apart from being under close scrutiny by the Finnish media and public, these group of far-right extremists probably never imagined the stiff opposition they’d face as MPs especially after the mass killings in Norway by Anders Breivik on July 22.

Halla-aho’s style is pretty easy to predict: He enjoys jolting the public by surprise with his provocative statements. Before his suggestion that Greece should install a military junta to quell protesters, he had said that “multiculturalism sucks ass.”

Certainly Halla-aho, who is chairman of the important administration committee of parliament, which sets among other matters immigration policy, “multiculturalism” is only a policy that permits Muslims and non-Europeans from moving to Finland and Europe. He does not tell you that multiculturalism is a social policy used in Canada, Britain and Australia to integrate immigrants.

One of the biggest mistakes that Halla-aho and his followers have made is that they believe in their own racism and lies.

The so-called immigrant-critical group of the PS led by Halla-aho is made up of the following MPs: James Hirvisaari, Juho Eerola, Olli Immonen, Ari Jalonen and Maria Lohela.

Finland: Enter at your own risk or beware of dog!

Posted on September 19, 2011 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

Rabbah Boussuira is an artist and an old friend that was able draw a snapshot of the hostility that inflicted Finnish society in the early 1980s. What is sad is that that same drawing could apply today. About 25 years ago, anti-foreign sentiment was all around but today it has found a home in the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party. 

Instead of inviting immigrants to work to Finland, why not avoid problems and put up a sign like the one below at the border?  The sign could read in all the major languages: “Beware of dog” or “Enter at your own risk.”

Even though Finland's immigrant population has grown by ten times since 1984, when Strange Days was published, the ongoing one-sided debate on immigrants makes this drawing still valid by Rabbah Boussuira.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

YLE in English: Lipponen condemns Finns party statements

Posted on September 18, 2011 by Migrant Tales

Comment: Of all the Finnish presidential hopefuls, Social Democrat Paavo Lipponen has been one of the most outspoken against the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party’s far-right wing led by MP Jussi Halla-aho. In May he said that this far-right group should be isolated from the PS.

The attack against the PS by Lipponen comes after Halla-aho was suspended for two weeks from the party for suggesting on Facebook that Greece should install a military junta to quell protests. Halla-aho is chairman of the administration committee of parliament.

“The Finns party’s parliamentary group and the party leadership don’t seem to realise what kind of issues they are joking about,” said Lipponen. “What kind of significance does the minimum punishment have, if the parliamentary group leader still calls dictator comments “humour” even after the “punishment” has been handed down?”

PS head Timo Soini strongly criticized Lipponen’s comments on his blog. He said that he did not accept such smears about the PS “even from Paavo Lipponen.”

___________

SDP Presidential candidate Paavo Lipponen has warned the Finns party not to joke about basic democratic values. In Lipponen’s opinion it is now time to create clear boundaries for the hard right both in politics and in wider society.

Read whole story.

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