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Month: September 2018

Turku appeal court of Finland upholds earlier decision to ban neo-Nazi PVL group

Posted on September 29, 2018 by Migrant Tales

Migrant Tales was happy to hear that the appeal court in Turku has upheld an earlier decision by the Pirkanmaa district court in Tampere to ban in Finland the neo-Nazi Nordic Resistance Movement (PVL) and Pohjoinen Perinne (Nordic Tradition Group), a PVL –linked group, according to YLE News.

The PVL will have to end operations in Finland once court’s decision becomes enforceable, or when there is no longer any possiblity of appeal by the neo-Nazi group.

Last November, the court in Pirkanmaa banned the PVL but the group appealed the decision.

Apart from openly supporting anti-Semitism, racism and hostility towards sexual minorities, both courts ruled that the PVL encouraged violence. The ultimate aim of the former neo-Nazi organization is to set up in Finland and elsewhere in the Nordic region a nationalist socialist state.

The PVL represents one of many extremist groups in Finland that have gained more public exposure.

The growth of the far-right group could not be possible without the support of political parties like Perussuomalaiset (PS),* Blue Reform and even mainstream parties like the National Coalition Party (Kokoomus), which do not openly support fascism but seem distant relatives to such extremist ideologies.

PS members Ulla Pyysalo have had links to the PVL as well as others, like Sampo Terho and Jussi Niinistö, in far-right groups.

* The Perussuomalaiset (PS) party imploded on June 13 into two factions, the PS and New Alternative, which is now called Blue Reform. Despite the name changes, we believe that it is the same party in different clothing. Both factions are hostile to cultural diversity. One is more open about it while the other is more diplomatic.

A direct translation of Perussuomalaiset in English would be something like “basic” or “fundamental Finn.” Official translations of the Finnish name of the party, such as Finns Party or True Finns, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and racism. We, therefore, at Migrant Tales prefer to use in our postings the Finnish name of the party once and after that the acronym PS.

 

 

YLE of Finland changes picture of niqab-wearing woman after objections. The new picture still instills fear of asylum seekers.

Posted on September 28, 2018 by Migrant Tales

YLE published on Wednesday a story about what different parties’ positions are on migration and cultural diversity. The picture that the Finnish state-owned broadcaster chose was, in our opinion, a poor example of opinionated journalism that fuels fear and racism. 

Migrant Tales asked: “If the story is to look at each parties’ stand on migration, what is a woman with a niqab doing in the picture? The article calls it burka but in fact, the woman is wearing a niqab. By the way, how many women wear the niqab never mind the burka in Finland?”

After objections from NGOs like Fem-R and others like us, YLE decided to trash the original picture and replace it with two visible migrants, which instill fear and racism of asylum seekers.

Racist journalism is always harmful to migrants.


Before…

The original article published on Wednesday.

…After

 

The latest version of the story that continues to instill fear of asylum seekers.

Sloppy Finnish journalism that plays into fearmongering and xenophobia

Posted on September 26, 2018 by Migrant Tales

Below, is one example of many of how media like the Finnish Broadcasting Company (YLE) fuel racism and fear of asylum seekers in Finland. Asylum seekers and Muslims form a small part of Finland’s total immigration picture. Why do they give so much attention to them?

If the story is to look at each parties’ stand on migration, what is a woman with a niqab doing in the picture? The article calls it a burka but in fact, the woman is wearing a niqab.

By the way, how many women wear the niqab never mind the burka in Finland?

What would you call this type of reporting apart from shoddy, even opinionated journalism by YLE?

This type of reporting should not come as a surprise from the state-owned broadcaster since it has seen a lot of changes and meddling by politicians like Prime Minister Juha Sipilä and anti-immigration parties like the Perussuomalaiset.*


Read the full story (in Finnish) here.

* The Perussuomalaiset (PS) party imploded on June 13 into two factions, the PS and New Alternative, which is now called Blue Reform. Despite the name changes, we believe that it is the same party in different clothing. Both factions are hostile to cultural diversity. One is more open about it while the other is more diplomatic.

A direct translation of Perussuomalaiset in English would be something like “basic” or “fundamental Finn.” Official translations of the Finnish name of the party, such as Finns Party or True Finns, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and racism. We, therefore, at Migrant Tales prefer to use in our postings the Finnish name of the party once and after that the acronym PS.

Construction company in Turku area: work 15 hours/day, seven days a week for peanuts

Posted on September 26, 2018 by Migrant Tales

A friend from South America called me and said how a construction company he worked for exploited its workers. Migrant Tales hopes to denounce the company located in the Turku area. 

“I know of a South American couple who the the owner [of the company] brought to Finland,” he said. “They worked long hours with no days off and wanted to go back to their country after working for a month and a half even if they planned to stay till November.”

The owner paid he woman 16 euros and the man 101 euros for a month and a half of work after discounting their plane ticket and insurance.


Finding a job as a migrant in Finland can lead to exploitation and abuse. The source of the article is not in the picture.

According to my friend, he worked for the same construction company 15 hours a day seven days a week, sometimes until five in the morning.

Continue reading “Construction company in Turku area: work 15 hours/day, seven days a week for peanuts”

Blue Reform’s Sampo Terho of Finland and his politically ambidextrous misbeliefs

Posted on September 26, 2018 by Migrant Tales

Blue Reform* minister for European affairs, culture and sports, Sampo Terho is politically ambidextrous: He can say one thing and state a totally different thing. It is like coming out of the closet and going back in. The opportunism in such ambidextrous behavior is believing that others don’t notice. And we do.  

In the statement below, Terho gets tough on Muslims but takes a more benign view of Foreign Minister Timo Soini’s right to attend anti-abortion gatherings abroad as a member of the government.

In the first quote below on the left, he states the following about Muslims: “A country that accepts refugees and immigrants cannot tolerate that its culture would die. Those who move here must inevitably change and adapt to our basic values.”

But then he makes an about-turn on the foreign minister’s case, who is also a member of the same party: “Soini has personal beliefs, an opinion he has a right to have. Personal opinion and freedom of religion are Western values based on human rights.”

What hypocrisy!

Thank you, Rasismivapaa Suomi, for the heads-up.

* The Perussuomalaiset (PS) party imploded on June 13 into two factions, the PS and New Alternative, which is now called Blue Reform. Despite the name changes, we believe that it is the same party in different clothing. Both factions are hostile to cultural diversity. One is more open about it while the other is more diplomatic.

A direct translation of Perussuomalaiset in English would be something like “basic” or “fundamental Finn.” Official translations of the Finnish name of the party, such as Finns Party or True Finns, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and racism. We, therefore, at Migrant Tales prefer to use in our postings the Finnish name of the party once and after that the acronym PS.

 

Anti-refugee sentiment in Finland and politicians who capitalize on fear and racism

Posted on September 24, 2018 by Migrant Tales

A new survey by PEW Research Center shows that there is wide support in several EU countries for taking in refugees. The report shows that Spain is the most welcoming while Poland and Hungary are the least responsive. 

Another EU country in the survey, Italy, also scored far behind Spain, the Netherlands, Germany, Sweden, France, United Kingdom, and Greece.

As Finland holds its parliamentary elections in April 2019 and EU elections a month later, parties like the Perussuomalaiset (PS), Blue Reform,* and politicians of the National Coalition Party (Kokoomus) are eager to capitalize on anti-immigration sentiment.

And that is what is happening now after a massive police operation took place over the weekend and which led to the arrest of two suspects, an Estonian and Russian citizen, suspected of laundering money.

The arrest of the two foreigners, especially of the Russian citizen, has caused a Russophobic knee-jerk reaction from politicians of the PS, Blue Reform, Social Democrats and the National Coalition Party (Kokoomus) to restrict the purchase of land from outside the EU and EEA.

MP Suna Kymäläinen of the Social Democratic Party, who got re-elected in 2015 thanks to her anti-Russian stance on real-estate purchases, reiterated her calls for tighter controls on non-EEA citizens. PS MP Tom Packalén, who has built a reputation on his anti-immigration views, said that parliament should speed up a law that would force non-EEA and EU citizens to get a special permission to buy land.

Defense Minister Jussi Niinistö said that the new law would grant the government the right to intervene in transactions that it sees jeopardizing national security.

Another result of Finland’s xenophobia is limiting the rights of dual citizens even if discrimination is prohibited in the Finnish constitution.


Read the original PEW study here.

As with Sweden, support for refugees in Finland must be in the same ballpark.

Continue reading “Anti-refugee sentiment in Finland and politicians who capitalize on fear and racism”

Epäluottamusmies: Kysymys Timo Soinille: onko elämä pyhä?

Posted on September 23, 2018 by Migrant Tales

Timo Soini on menettänyt kaikki: hänen populistinen, maahanmuutto- ja naisvihan puolue perussuomalaiset ja siniset. Hän on tehnyt paljon tuhoa suomen hyvä maineen. Samaan ryhmään ovat kokoomus ja keskusta.

Soini saa luottamuksen äänin 100-60 vaikka hänen kantaa aborttiin on suomen lain vastaan.

Katso alkuperänen piirros tästä.

Twitter: Ministeri Jari Lindström puhuu #integration2018 “ikärasismista”

Posted on September 19, 2018 by Migrant Tales

How would we classify Finland’s immigration and asylum policy? Thumbs up, or down?

Posted on September 17, 2018 by Migrant Tales

Just like President Donald Trump has destroyed the US’ standing in the world, what wreckage has Finland’s immigration and asylum policy brought on our society and our country’s name? 

Thanks to years of anti-immigration rhetoric and hardline policies by the former and present government of Prime Minister Juha Sipilä, Finland has sunk into a dark hole where values like human rights and social equality are forfeited for cheap nationalism and by fortifying structural racism.

Finland’s immigration and asylum policy has a clear message to Muslims and non-EU citizens: Stay out!


Maria Lohela, former speaker of parliament and PS MP, is a good example of how racism has become a part of our institutions. She got elected with her Islamophobic rhetoric. She is today part of the Blue Reform block. Source: YLE.

Just like the media in the United States is fighting tooth and nail to expose the corruption, racism and kakistocracy of Trump’s administration, the media in Finland has an important job as well to make sure that parties like the Perussuomalaiaset* and their allies in parliament and elsewhere, don’t take Finland for a ride as happened before the 2011 parliamentary elections.

Continue reading “How would we classify Finland’s immigration and asylum policy? Thumbs up, or down?”

A message from Ali, who was deported to Kabul, Afghanistan, from Finland

Posted on September 13, 2018 by Migrant Tales

A thirty-year-old  Afghan asylum seeker who was deported from Finland three months ago got in touch with me Thursday morning. His messages on Messenger were simple but behind them were evident uncertainty and anxiety. We spoke in Finnish by phone later in the afternoon. Ali had learned a lot of Finnish in the two and a half years he waited unsuccessfully for a residence permit. 

Ali said that even if he considers himself an Afghan, he had never been to Afghanistan until he was deported to that country.

“I don’t have anyone here,” he continued. “I was born and raised in Iran. I don’t have any work, money or family [in Afghanistan].”


I told him that I heard he was deported to Afghanistan.

Ali said that he hopes to move back to Iran but this is difficult since he doesn’t have the financial means.

“I don’t wander outside the home in Kabul after 8 pm because it is dangerous,” he said. “There have been a lot of bombings and killings in Kabul.”

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