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Month: May 2018

Mohammed’s deportation from Finland to Iraq on May 29

Posted on May 31, 2018 by Migrant Tales

There are many reasons why some consider the Finnish justice and asylum system inhumane towards asylum seekers. Amnesty International has cited factors like restrictions of the right to free legal representation and reduced appeal times in 2016 as factors that have undermined asylum seekers’ situation in Finland. 

Mohammed*, who came with his brother from Iraq to Finland in October 2015,  was a minor of 16. Over two years later, when he became an adult, his brother was deported to Baghdad on Tuesday, May 29.

“My brother and I are close,” said Mohammed’s brother. “We were always together and even made the difficult journey to Finland from Iraq together.”

Mohammed’s brother said that after receiving three rejections for asylum and a new one for a new case, his brother was asked to visit on May 15 the Mikkeli police station.

“The police told him that he had to sign a paper to return to Iraq,” he said. “My brother refused and told him that he would never return to Iraq voluntarily.”

On that day, Mohammed was detained, put in a police cell and sent to the Joutseno immigration removal center.

Since he did not have the services of his former lawyer, he was given one by the state pending his deportation.


Mohammed’s last days spent in Finland were in a small room at the Joutseno immigration removal center.

“Even if my brother sent numerous messages to the lawyer and even if she promised she never visited him in Joutseno,” he said.

According to Mohammed’s brother, the lawyer had assured his brother that he would not be deported.

“My brother had an appointment with the judge about whether he would be deported,” Mohammed’s brother said. “She said she had made a new appointment with the judge but later denied that she had ever made such a meeting.”

“They deported my brother despite the lawyer’s assurances that it would not happen,” he said. “I got a message on Tuesday (May 29) from my brother that he was at the airport and they were going to deport him.”

Mohammed’s brother states that the lawyer didn’t do anything to help his brother and lied to him.

Mohammed told his brother in Baghdad not to worry about him, even if returning to Iraq is a shock and even if he doesn’t dare to venture outside his home for too long.

Migrant Tales hopes to publish soon a letter from Mohammed about his stay in Finland and his return to Iraq.

The United States and Finland must stop incarcerating migrant children

Posted on May 29, 2018 by Migrant Tales

One picture on the left shows how migrant children in the United States are being separated and incarcerated. On the right, is a picture taken in Finland last year of a minor looking out the window at the Joutseno immigration removal center. 

One of Finland’s most anti-immigration governments, which has brought the hostile environment to our shores, can claim with a poker face while it incarcerates minors it does not separate children from their parents.

But then we have unaccompanied minors who are incarcerated in Finland never mind the child protection authorities that ethnically profile migrant families.

The United States versus Finland. What is the difference?  See the video on the right here, and the one on the left here. The picture of the girl on the right was locked up with seven of her brothers and sisters at the Joutseno immigration removal center. The family was released in 2017 from detention, and all its members have a temporary residence permit in Finland.

Why the Finnish media and police do not have credibility with minorities and migrants

Posted on May 27, 2018 by Migrant Tales

You bump into news and scoops.

When I was making a living as a journalist many years ago, I learned that the best way to get scoops was by having good sources. Even if this is clear, the question is how do you get those good sources so that you bump into news and scoops?

I use today in Migrant Tales the same strategy I used to get news and scoops when I lived off journalism. If you do things the right way with patience, news and scoops will come to you.


Rubbing off the old sell-by dates with new ones is easy. All you need is nail-polish remover, a rag, and a stamp with fake sell-by dates. Read the full story here.  Unscrupulous employers will do anything to exploit migrants and asylum seekers.

A classic example is the most recent example of a food distributor utilizing asylum seekers and changing the sell-by dates of its old products. This news “came to us” because we have a reputation for speaking out for vulnerable groups like asylum seekers. That reputation is backed by solid knowledge of the topic.

The fact that we get big scoops and the national media doesn’t so often is because it represents the interests of white Finnish power and privilege. The same goes for the police. Migrants and minorities don’t turn to the police for help in many cases because they do not trust them.

For these reasons, unscrupulous businesspeople and exploiters of migrants in Finland will continue to conduct business as usual because politicians, the media, and society are more concerned with reinforcing stereotypes and victimizing migrants and minorities than representing and protecting their rights.

We must stand up for our rights. Nobody else can do it for us except for us.

 

 

Where is Resham’s powdered milk produced?

Posted on May 25, 2018 by Migrant Tales

Resham milk powder, which is distributed by Milkmagic Oy, proudly displays the Finnish flag stating “produced in Finland.” Just for curiosity sake, Migrant Tales sent an email Thursday to the company asking where the milk powder is produced in Finland. 

I gave the company until 6 pm today to respond to my question but we haven’t heard anything from them.

As a consumer, I would like to know where the powdered milk is produced in Finland.


“Justice was served” with the 9.5-year prison sentence for brutally attacking a Pakistani migrant in February

Posted on May 25, 2018 by Migrant Tales

The wife of the Pakistani migrant, whose husband was brutally attacked by three Finnish white youths in February, is satisfied with the 9.5-year prison sentence handed by a Vantaa court Friday. The three youths were sentenced for attempted murder. 

The incident has caused concern among the Pakistani and Muslim community.

If you ask some members of the nursing staff at the hospital where the Pakistani migrant was treated in February and March for his wounds, they will tell you that they have never seen such a case of brutal violence in their careers.

The attackers used a knife, ax and a pointed object to attack the victim. Removal of the stitches alone took four hours, according to the nurses.

“We are satisfied with the court ruling and it is not common that such a stiff sentence are handed in Finland,” she said. “We are satisfied because justice was served. The fact that it was not a hate crime is a bit confusing.”

Even if the victim and his wife still insist that what happened was a hate crime, the police were quick to deny it. The day after the attack, the police told the wife that it could not be a hate crime because the perpetrators “were intoxicated.”

Later on, the police told the wife that what happened to her husband was not a hate crime because “it wasn’t planned.”

As everyone knows, a hate crime can be committed even if the person is intoxicated or isn’t planned.

Migrant Tales asked the investigating police officer, Detective Chief Inspector Mikko Minkkinen, if he had made such statements to the wife but denied ever saying them.

After the attack, which took place on Friday, it was on Tuesday that the police put out a statement.

Detective Chief Inspector Minkkinen denied on that day to the media that what happened was not a hate crime.

Some believe that the Finnish police may play down racism as a motive in such cases for fear of repercussions from the migrant community. The majority of Pakistanis are Muslims.


Read the full story here.

The wife of the victim said that her husband is afraid to go out at night. “I don’t allow him to go our alone an he feels uneasy about being out alone even when it starts to get dark,” she added.

Continue reading ““Justice was served” with the 9.5-year prison sentence for brutally attacking a Pakistani migrant in February”

Three white Finnish youths that brutally attacked a Pakistani migrant sentenced to 9 years and 6 months in prison

Posted on May 25, 2018 by Migrant Tales

A Vantaa court sentenced three white Finnish youths who brutally attacked a Pakistani migrant in February to a prison term of nine years and six months, according to victim’s family. 

The brutal nature of the attack is so horrible that we cannot publish a list of the wounds that the Pakistani sustained. The victim was stabbed over 20 times and suffered multiple fractures on the skull from blows from an ax. This was only part of the wounds he received.

Migrant Tales will update the story.


Read the full story here.

Minister of Justice Antti Häkkänen states there “is no room in Finland for Sharia law”

Posted on May 25, 2018 by Migrant Tales

Finnish Minister of Justice Antti Häkkänen surprised participants at an Advisory Board for Ethnic Relations  (ETNO) meeting on Tuesday by stating that “there is no room in Finland for Sharia law or other efforts towards a parallel society,” according to YLE News.

“Finland is an open, international country that is rich linguistically and culturally, and where basic rights belong equally to everyone… Finnish justice gives equal protection to everyone, regardless of skin color, religion, gender, culture or other background[s],” he was quoted as saying.

His comment caused a swift reaction from politicians like Social Democrat Helsinki councilperson Abdirahim Husu Hussein, who wrote on Facebook that the minister of justice “was flirting with Islamophobia” and that “nobody was demanding Sharia law in Finland.”


 

Read the full story here.

What “parallel society” is Häkkänen speaking of? Is it the one he is nurturing and encouraging by his hostile statements?

Continue reading “Minister of Justice Antti Häkkänen states there “is no room in Finland for Sharia law””

A food distributor that hires asylum seekers, pays them under the table, to change the sell-by dates of their old products

Posted on May 24, 2018 by Migrant Tales

An Espoo-Helsinki-based ethnic-food distributor,* which allegedly hires asylum seekers and pays them near-starvation salaries under the table, uses such victims to repackage and change the sell-by dates of their food products. Some of these products are allegedly five years old and their sell-by dates have changed twice, according to an asylum seeker, who spoke on condition of anonymity. 

While changing the sell-by dates is illegal and could put consumers at risk, should we be surprised that employers without scruples are taking advantage of asylum seekers and migrants? Some of this type of exploitation is not only by Finns but by migrants as well.

One such case that Migrant Tales reported on in 2017 was a Porvoo-based cleaning company called A-T Puhdistus.

Despite legal action taken against the company, nothing has happened, according to Jihad, a former employee who filed charges to the police against the company. Some of the ways that A-T Puhdistus allegedly exploited its employees was by having them pay for their coffee and lunch breaks.

Foreigners are not the only ones who are taking advantage of needy and desperate migrants.  In 2013, we learned about Finnish companies that used vulnerable groups like berry pickers from Thailand. A Helsingin Sanomat article revealed that such berry pickers made 2.4 euros an hour, well below the minimum 7 euros an hour payment considered below-poverty-line wages.

Migrant Tales has published some recent cases of asylum seekers and undocumented migrants who worked off the books. The first time I learned about such abuse was in the early 1980s from a Mexican cook who was brought from his home country to work for a Helsinki restaurant called Mexicana. He worked long hours, complained about the working conditions, and slept at the restaurant.

The interesting question to ask in light of this ever-growing problem is why aren’t the unions, politicians, and policymakers speaking out against employers who abuse migrants?

Below are three recent cases reported by us.

Case #1: Invoves an Iraqi who worked full-time six days a week eight hours a day for 500 euros a month and a promise from the employer that he would be hired as a staffer, which would help him get a residence permit. He quit after a few months when it became clear that the employer was lying to him.

Case #2: Another Iraqi asylum seeker worked at a bakery run by Iraqis. The person worked 12 hours a day five days a week and got paid 1,000 euros a month. In order to not raise any suspicion by the authorities like the tax office, the employer reported that the asylum seeker worked 30 hours a week when in fact the correct numer of hours was 240. His hourly wage was 4.16 euros or 49.92 euros a day. Of the former employees 1,000-euro monthly salary, 250 euros went for paying rent for an apartment.

Case #3: Another asylum seeker from Iraq worked for the same company as the first case above but worked there for a year and three months. His payment was 500 euros a month for three months with the promise that they would offer him a permanent job and help him get a residence permit. For about a yaer, he worked at the company’s warehouse in Helsinki where his working hours were erratic and payment varied from 200 to 400 euros a month. When he worked, working hours could be as long as 12 hours. His employer offered him food products as compensation.

Of all the cases that Migrant Tales has learned of, the latter one is the most concerning because it involves the repackaging of rice, flour, and other products with fake expiration dates (see pictures below). Some of these products are allegedly five years old, and their sell-by dates changed two times, according to the source.


“Hello, my name is BLANK, I used to work for an Espoo-Helsinki-based foods company called BLANK for a year and three months in weighing or distributing vegetables and foodstuff around Finland. I also used to do work like changing the sell-by dates of food products like wheat, rice, and many others. [The owners of the company] BLANK and BLANK used to threaten me that if I didn’t change the sell-by dates, they would tell the police. At the time I had two rejections for asylum and a deportation decision. [One of the owners] BLANK used to distribute the goods to Asian shops, Asian, Arab and Indian. The sell-by dates of the goods were forged; the company changed expired foodstuffs from 2017 to 2018.”

Changing the sell-by date is easy. In the extreme left picture, it reads that the whole flour (chakki atta) in the bag was packaged on 22 Jan. 17 and should be sold by 21 Oct 17. With some nail remover and a cloth (second picture) wipe the old dates off the package. Use a stamp with new dates and, presto, the product has a fake sell-by date. How much profit does this company make on these products?

The name of the company that changes the sell-by dates distributes such products to ethnic stores in Helsinki and Greater Helsinki, Lahti, Korso, Mikkeli, and Tampere.

“There is one Indian who works near Helsinki and buys powdered milk from India and other countries, repackages it as Finnish powdered milk and with fake sell-by dates,” the former employee said. “The owners buy over a ton of rice from India a year before it passes the sell-by date. The rice is repackaged with new sell-by dates.”


 

The warehouse where old products are repackaged with new sell-by dates. On the right, bags with 2kg bags of whole wheat flour (chakki atta). What products are past sell-by dates? According to the asylum seeker that worked there, all are past sell-by dates.

The source that gave me insight into the alleged dealings of the company, left the country and asked not to publish the story until May 15, when the former worker left Finland.

The owners of the company, allegedly threatened the asylum seeker. They tol him that if he didn’t change the sell-by dates, they would tell the police. At the time, the asylum seeker had two rejections for asylum and a deportation decision hanging over his head.

The asylum seeker said that one of the owners allegedly calls him daily and is cross with him because he left the country without his permission. He said that they have friends all over Europe and that anything can happen to him.

Whose fault?

Many desperate asylum seekers from countries like Iraq and Afghanistan are desperately seeking employment. If they get full-time work, it may mean getting a residence permit and avoiding being deported from Finland.

Even if the owners of the company promise to hire an asylum seeker, it is not sure that the person will get a residence permit due to the needs test, which requires the job to be offered first to EU citizens. If an asylum seeker is lucky to get a job in Finland and passes the needs test, he will have to work full-time (37.5 hours a week) and get paid decent wages to get a residence permit.

We all know that the present government of Prime Minister Juha Sipilä has tightened immigration policy and created a hostile environment for asylum seekers. Before 2015, when about 32,000 came to Finland, the Finnish Immigration Service (Migri) granted 70% of all asylum requests, but that has now changed to 70% rejections.

Amnesty International’s latest 2016/2017 report highlighted in the case of Finland how the present government had undermined the human rights of asylum seekers. Some of the worrying points are the restriction of legal representation, deadlines for appeals that were reduced from 30 to 21 days in the first instance, and to 14 days when appealing to the supreme administrative court.

Family reunification is another area that has faced tightening of immigration policy. Moreover, Finland continues to detain families with children in immigration removal centers as we have reported in the past.


This picture is of a girl locked up with seven of her brothers and sisters at the Joutseno immigration removal center. Read the full story here. The family was released in 2017 from detention and all its members have a temporary residence permit in Finland.

* While we haven’t published the real name of the company, the Regional State Administrative Agencies (AVI), health authorities and the police have the company’s name. We will update this story as it evolves. 

 

 

Toisen kirjeen suomalaisille suomalaiselta äidiltä miehensä säilönotosta ja mahdollisesta pakkopalautuksesta

Posted on May 23, 2018 by Migrant Tales
Migrant Tales julkaisee toisen kirjeen suomalaiselta naiselta, joka synyttää pian irakilaismiehen ja hänen toisen lapsen. Ensimmäinen kirje julkaistiin toukokuun alussa. Suomessa, Maahanmuuttovirasto (Migri) katsoo ettei lapsi tarvitse isänsä ja siksi hänet voi pakkopaualttaa.

Hyvä lukija, 

Lasteni isää on pidetty nyt säilössä 43 päivää. Tänä aikana hän on jäänyt niin paljosta paitsi, lapsemme oppii joka päivä uusia sanoja, hän kasvaa joka päivä ja mieheni jää kaikesta paitsi, emmekä saa tätä aikaa koskaan takaisin. 

43 päivää ei kuulosta paljolta, mutta kun joutuu pärjäämään yksin, kantamaan huolta tuosta pienestä ihmisestä, sekä lapseni isästä, joka näyttää kuihtuvan silmissä, niin ja itsestäni, synnytys lähestyy ja mietin joudunko pärjäämään silloinkin yksin. 
Itse ilman isää kasvaneena, ainut toiveeni koko elämäni ajan on ollut se, että lapseni saisivat tulevaisuudessa kasvaa perheessä, johon kuuluu äiti sekä isä. Heillä on isä, mutta meiltä on viety perhe-elämä.

Äii ja lapsi pöydän ääressä odottavat miehensä ja isänsä.

Kun katson pientä lastamme, joka puhelimen soidessa huutaa “isiii”, olen kiitollinen siitä, että hän on niin pieni, ettei ymmärrä miksi ‘isi’ ei ole kanssamme nyt. Joka kerta kun lapsemme huutaa isäänsä, tuntuu kuin ilmat olisi lyöty pihalle, miten on mahdollista, että lapseltani viedään näin isä. Isä, joka on aina ollut läsnä. Isä, joka rakastaa meitä enemmän kuin mitään.

Continue reading “Toisen kirjeen suomalaisille suomalaiselta äidiltä miehensä säilönotosta ja mahdollisesta pakkopalautuksesta”

Exploitation of asylum seekers in Finland for profit and illegal activities

Posted on May 22, 2018 by Migrant Tales

Migrant Tales will publish and expose this week a foods distributor that pays asylum seekers under the table to change the sell-by dates of their products. We have a written statement and many pictures sent to us by one former employee that show how easy it is to change sell-by dates of products.

Below, is a letter sent to the authorities about a Helsinki-based foods company that allegedly hires asylum seekers and pays them under the table. As the letter states, the former employee was asked to allegedly change the sell-by dates of products like flour, rice and others.

In a new post, Migrant Tales will publish the name of the suspected company.

The Regional State Administrative Agency (AVI) and the Helsinki health authorities have the name of the company. The health authorities have paid a visit to the company’s warehouse.


 

Hello, my name is BLANK, I used to work for an Espoo-Helsinki-based foods company for a year and three months in weighing or distributing vegetables and foodstuff around Finland. I also used to do work like changing the sell-by dates of food products like wheat, rice, and many others. [The owners of the company] BLANK and BLANK used to threaten me that if I didn’t change the sell-by dates, they would tell the police. At the time I had two rejections for asylum and a deportation decision. [One of the owners] BLANK used to distribute the goods to Asian shops, Asian, Arab and Indian. The sell-by dates of the goods were forged; the company changed expired foodstuffs from 2017 to 2018.

The big question about this illegal activity is who to blame?

  • Is the culprit the company? Yes, definitely.
  • Is the culprit the hostile environment against migrants in Finland? Yes.
  • Is the culprit the asylum seeker who is exploited? No.

Another question is if one company does this, how many more do it?

 

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