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Month: March 2020

QUOTE OF THE DAY Bertolt Brecht 1898-1956: How long do you fight for social justice?

Posted on March 29, 2020 by Migrant Tales

During these trying times of coronavirus, we need to make sure there is no return to the order of things before the pandemic hits us. A quote by Bertolt Brecht 1898-1956 offers us a social road map.

Will we finally make the world a better place for all of us on this planet?

We can but it up to us now, isn’t it?

“Men” could be substituted in the quote with “people.”

A song that quotes Bertolt Brecht.

Institute of Race Relations: Asylum in the time of COVID-19

Posted on March 29, 2020 by Migrant Tales

by John Grayson

The appalling, overcrowded, unhygienic housing offered to some asylum seekers and their young children is putting them at especial risk of Covid-19. A refusal of insanitary accommodation leads to threats of homelessness. John Grayson of South Yorkshire Migration & Asylum Action Group investigates the reality in Leeds, Halifax and Wakefield.

Helen ‘I don’t want to stay in that haunted house’

Helen is from South Asia with a 13-month-old daughter Debbie, she rang me late in the afternoon on Wednesday 18 March because she had been taken from Urban House to a mother and toddler ‘unit’ in Leeds. She was distraught, saying the Mears housing manager had said she could not refuse to stay there and had left her saying she would return the next morning. Helen said, ‘I don’t want to stay in that haunted house’.

I went to Leeds the next morning to wait for the manager and tell her that Helen had the right to refuse the accommodation. Arriving at a Victorian villa in the suburbs of Leeds I realised that four years ago, in March 2015 I was at this same Victorian villa just after G4S had leased the former student accommodation from a developer.
I met five of the mothers in the building in the first floor ‘lounge’, all of them spoke some English, some were fluent. Hazel was holding a kettle full of boiling water. ‘We have had no hot water in here for two months. I am just going to fill a bath for my baby. We have reported and reported it, nobody in Mears does anything. The housing manager says she has reported it.’

Helen pointed to the dirty carpet, ‘I am frightened for my baby on that carpet. She is already ill with a vomiting sickness’. Kelly said, ’We have to put down bed sheets over the carpet so our children can crawl and play here. We vacuum regularly but this carpet needs a proper deep clean – or changing for a new one.’

I remembered the building and asked if I could look around. I told them I was trying to improve the conditions and they were happy to show me round. The room allocated to Helen was tiny and there was another small bedroom but many of the rooms were quite large. Bathrooms and toilets were grubby, and very old, internal window frames rotten. One shower was broken and very dirty. There were a couple of vacant rooms so probably about 18 mothers, babies and toddlers are resident there.

Downstairs, what I remembered as the playroom (four years ago) was now simply packed with buggies with a space for a sofa. Drying washing was piled on a radiator near the main door. ‘We keep the kitchens as clean as we can do’, said Kelly. Hazel pointed to a closed bag full of dirty nappies in the corner of the first-floor lounge, ‘There are no special bins for the nappies.’ Beth joined in the discussion on hygiene. ‘Every child in this place is on antibiotics for some infection or other. My own child recently had mumps. Thank goodness no other children have got it from him.’

Sewage, rats and a dead fox

Our conversation was interrupted by two workmen coming into the hallway. One of them asked, ‘Do you know where we can get into the cellars?’ I asked if they were there to repair the boiler. ‘No, we’ve been told they are flooded.’

A dead fox rotting in the outhouse

A few minutes later Steve and Joe (not their real names) returned. Steve said, ‘The cellar is not flooded with water, it’s sewage down there.’ Joe said, ‘You can come round the back with us if you want and take photos of the cellar. There must be dozens of rats here. I saw their holes all round the building. I’ll take some photos for you. There’s a dead rotting fox in the outhouse near the front door. I’ve taken a picture of that too. Those babies and toddlers should not be living in this place, it should be closed down.’

I remembered that Helen had told me she had seen a rat the night before. Steve and Joe were independent sub-contractors for Mears, and they rang and reported the sewage. I asked them to report the hot water problems at the same time. Over an hour later, two Mears workers arrived asking if anyone knew how to get into the boiler room.

Eventually the Mears housing manager Fiona (not her real name) arrived determined to make sure Helen accepted the room. I asked her about the hot water and the rats. ‘I have reported the hot water. The rats are outside the building not inside and I reported them.’ I asked her if she would be happy for her own two-year-old to be living in the building. ‘Alright,’ she said, ‘I will report the rats again.’

For the next few hours Helen and I negotiated with Fiona’s managers at Mears to try and get Helen alternative accommodation. A compromise was reached where Mears managers agreed to move Helen with her baby to one of the many hotels they are using for those waiting for a move to accommodation.

I sent my report on the ‘unit’ immediately to the constituency workers of the local MP Alex Sobel. They sent me the response they received from Mears, denying all my claims and those of the independent contractors. Here are relevant sections dated 20 March:

We have a newly recruited resident welfare manager on patch, X who has visited the property every other day over the last 2 weeks and spent time 121 getting to know the residents and children. I held a small steering group last week to collect resident thoughts and feedback and again this Monday [16 March], there were no concerns raised about lack of provision, we are continuing to monitor this alongside the children centre and react accordingly.

The cellar flooded due to bad weather and we believe food waste being placed down sinks, nappies and wipes being thrown into the toilet also. Yorkshire Water removed the blockages two weeks ago (emphases mine)

So … Mears says that all the mothers I spoke to and the independent contractors were … lying?

The Leeds mother and toddler ‘unit’ and the children in there have had to endure the poor hygiene and lack of hot water at a time when a national health emergency was unfolding. A similarly worrying situation had developed at Urban House IAC (Initial Accommodation Centre) in Wakefield.

‘How do we wash our hands with no soap in the bathrooms?’

Our South Yorkshire Migration & Asylum Action Group (SYMAAG) had organised discussions with twelve of the residents of Urban House in early February. Further contacts and discussions were held and testimony recorded with eighteen new people on 4 March. These discussions, often through our interpreter, were dominated again by worries over food for children, bed-bug infestation, health care and constant references to poor hygiene in the bathrooms and showers in the older parts of the 310-bed hostel.

Bed bugs for 56 days

One couple who came out to see us said they were moving on the next day. David, from the Middle East, said, ‘We have had bed bugs in our room. We have been bitten for all the 56 days we have been in Urban House.’ Most of those who gave us testimony had been in Urban House for months. The majority of the people we spoke to were women. One told us of an operation in her country where the surgeon told her to avoid infections and gave her medication. She told us, ‘I am terrified of going to the dirty toilets and I cannot get my medication renewed in Urban House. I am sure my vaginal infection is getting worse.’ Another woman was crying, ‘I have had to leave my two small children in my country, I cry all the time. I am desperate. I need medication and counselling support. The nurse at Urban House just said “try not to think about your children”.’

With the women, whom we met in the town centre, we looked online to find an NHS walk-in centre. We found one a few streets away. Kay said, ‘Let’s go there now, they are open until 10 tonight. we will sit and wait there and ask to be treated.’ Four of the women went off to the NHS centre, I learned later that some went the next day and all were treated.
Hygiene in Urban House was raised again and again. Some of the people, who had given us testimony before, had sent dated video and photo material showing that there was no soap dispenser in the women’s bathroom in the oldest part of the hostel where they all lived. The soap foam dispensers were also empty in the men’s bathroom. Kay, who had taken some of the videos, said, ‘We are really worried about the coronavirus. They put notices up to tell us to wash our hands – and there is no soap!’

Lucy’s parents ‘We are worried about coronavirus spreading in this crowded place’

Whilst I was writing this piece (on Sunday 22 March) I received a text message from a couple, Frank and Yvonne with a two-year-old daughter, Lucy, who had been moved to Urban House from a London hostel six days before. Frank wrote of his worries about coronavirus and the dirty carpet in their room ‘because my daughter puts her hand on the ground and then puts in her mouth’. Frank sent me a picture of the bed sheet they had to put on the floor of the room to allow their daughter to play. Of the bathroom and toilets, he wrote, ‘these places are so dirty, and we cannot use them’.

Frank said they had a washbasin in their room and some soap. Frank emphasised his fears ‘due to the high risk of coronavirus spreading in this crowded place. This situation is very scary.’ There was, he said, one other family with a small daughter in Urban House.

Gemma’s parents ‘We were already in an asylum house and they sent us here’

On Monday 23 March I was sent another text, this time from Bill inside Urban House. ’My daughter is seven years old could you help me? We were in a refugee house in Newcastle for two weeks, then five days ago they brought us here. I don’t know why they did that.’

So a family with a seven-year-old child is taken from an asylum house, where they could presumably self-isolate, to a crowded Urban House with 300 people.

A question for the Home Office

Why was two-year-old Lucy transported 185 miles from London by the Home Office to a high-risk ‘crowded place’, Urban House in Wakefield, at a time when the government was advising against travel and for families to stay at home and to avoid ‘crowded places’? People seeking asylum presently in the UK surely have the same rights as all of us to try and stay safe in their homes, even in hostels, when faced with the threats from Covid-19. The Home Office apparently does not think so.

‘He said I had no choice … you can stay outside’

May’s medication

May is 62 years old and has severe arthritis, asthma and a depressive illness. She came to the UK from the Middle East in October 2019 to reunite with her son, who is settled in Yorkshire. May claimed asylum and in December the Red Cross advised her to apply to go to Urban House IAC in Wakefield, where she would wait until the Home Office could find asylum housing accommodation suitable for her needs as a disabled person. May spent three months in Urban House (the Home Office says people should spend no longer than three to four weeks there). She was regularly told by Migrant Help and Mears that they were trying to find her suitable accommodation, if possible near to her son.

I went to see May on Saturday 21 March in her Mears house in Halifax, 52 miles away from her son. May told me through an interpreter, ‘I was brought here on 3 March from Urban House around 11 in the morning. It was a very rainy day. I was shown my room, a tiny room up two flights of very narrow stairs, by the Mears manager. I said I cannot stay here up all those stairs. He said I had no choice, “If that’s your choice you can stay outside. You have to sign and stay here.”’

I was crying and asking him ‘please take me back to Urban House’. He said, ‘go yourself but it will cost you £40.Then he left and locked the door. Someone saw me in the rain, and they called a taxi to take me to the police station. After hours waiting, around 6 pm, the police told me that if I was homeless, I had to go back to my Mears house. The police said they had rung Urban House and they said I had to take the room. The police brought me back here in their police car.’

‘Since then I have rung Migrant Help many times. Two weeks ago, they said I would have to sign and accept the place, or I would lose my NASS support and money. I signed. They said they would make an assessment. They rang me then and said they were looking to find a place near my son. That was two weeks ago and nothing from them since.’

May very slowly showed me to her tiny attic room, up really difficult stairs. The bathroom was on the floor below – the shower was broken. ‘Just over a week ago I fell down the stairs, I still have bruises all over.’

May was denied her rights under the asylum contract

The Home Office contracts since 2012, even though outsourced, have had to conform to all statutory equalities and safeguarding legislation. They also include some protection for tenants to prevent them being allocated accommodation which is ‘unfit for purpose’ and unfit for their medical or disability needs. (see attached section on Contract Requirements)

May had a perfect right to refuse the property. Mears should have immediately tried to find another more suitable property or at the very least, taken her to one of the many hotels where Mears have places, to wait for a suitable property.

Uncaring treatment of people trying to get a safe home

Researching the Mears asylum contracts in Yorkshire over the past few weeks, people have told me of the uncaring treatment they receive when they leave Urban House, and how they then face unacceptable accommodation, and are threatened by Mears staff that they will ‘be on the streets’ if they don’t accept the property.

Paul’s testimony

Paul is from the Middle East and while at Urban House he was diagnosed with a serious medical condition in a nearby Wakefield hospital, and sent urgently for tests and medication to a specialist unit in Leeds. His consultant at the Leeds unit said in a letter sent to Mears on 21 February and later to the Home Office, that Paul was at ‘serious risk of opportunistic infection’. What are his chances of avoiding that?

On Thursday 27 February Paul was picked up at Urban House and taken to an address in Leeds. At the front door he was greeted with piles of household waste overflowing from bins. The front door was damaged and would not close and lock. His room door had a damaged lock. The kitchen was very dirty and unusable. Paul sent me mobile phone pictures and I said I would go the next day. Paul was with a friend at the house when I arrived, he said, ‘I could not stay here last night; it would have been too dangerous for me. My friend says I can stay over the weekend … When I came the woman from Mears said I had to stay here, I could not refuse. She said that they would repair the doors and then I would have to stay.’

Paul showed me the kitchen. ‘I need to cook for myself, there is no real cooker and that (pointing to a table-top cooker full of grease and dirt) would make me ill. The carpet is full of stains and old food. …I waited all day yesterday from 10 am right through to 7 pm when the repair men came. I had rung Migrant Help every couple of hours. They said I had to wait for the repair men and if wanted to move I had to send a doctor’s letter for the Home Office to consider a move to another house which would take some time.’

We went upstairs. ‘I could never use the shower here. They had brought a new mattress and pushed it into my small room with the bed and old mattress … The Mears woman came when the repairs were done and told me to stay. I rang my friend and he came for me.’

For the next thirteen days, Paul was homeless, sleeping at any friends’ who would help him. He constantly rang Migrant Help. I emailed and rang all the Mears management I had contacts with. Paul’s doctors emailed Mears and the Home Office.

The doctors were very clear about the hazards of the house offered to Paul. This is what they said: ‘It is important that he is able to cook his own meals to keep his strength up in a clean environment. Possible exposure to any bacteria will be disastrous for this man as his own immunity is unable to fight off infection. His current property is surrounded by uncollected household waste that could also make him vulnerable to exposure to bacteria.’

Paul was panicked by being homeless. On the evening of 6 March, he rang me. ‘If I get a cold I will die. I am homeless.’ On 12 March Mears finally contacted Paul to say they would move him to a house in Leeds on Monday 16 March, later changed to Tuesday 17 March. Paul rang me from the new property. ‘They say I have to stay here in a shared house with another man, I cannot refuse.’

A heated conversation followed between Paul, me and the managers of Cascade Housing (subcontractors for Mears in Leeds). It was only when I threatened to find a solicitor for Paul to contact the Home Office that they agreed to move the other man to another property. Paul rang me the next day. ‘It’s ok here in the two-bedroomed house. Mears staff came here and said they would look for a single flat for me. I have cleaned the place and I feel safe now.’

Perhaps it is worth quoting the Mears ‘Service Users Handbook’:

Support plan

If you require any specialist care, you may be provided with a support plan. Your support plan will be reviewed regularly, and other people may attend reviews if appropriate, such as a social worker.

If you feel at any time that you would like to review your support plan and the review is not due, you can speak to your Housing Manager and they will organise this for you.

We will work with you to agree a support plan that meets your needs.

If there is anything in your support plan that you disagree with, you can ask for your comments to be included in the plan.

The very first time that any Mears housing manager came to see Paul face to face was Wednesday 19 March – nineteen days after they placed him in a house which would have been a real threat to his life. Death in the time of Covid-19?

At lunchtime today (25 March) SYMAAG received this message:

‘My friend who is a asylum seeker is in hostel in Wakefield urban house.

I’m concerned for their welfare. Three people are sharing a room and the cooking facilities seems like a dining hall (crowded easily) from his description.

Doesn’t seem like they are any precautions.’

At the same time, I was sent the below image from a mobile phone inside Urban House of lunch today. There seems to be no attempt by staff in Urban House to have social distancing in the queue or in seating arrangements.

Read original story here

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

How is coronavirus impacting the Asian community of Finland?

Posted on March 29, 2020 by Migrant Tales

It’s highly probable that the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has had a racist knock-on effect against Asians and other visible migrants and minorities. While this may be the case, the question is, why is it underreported or hardly ever mentioned by the media?

A story in Helsingin Sanomat, dated February 7, interviews a Chinese national: “People use the virus as an excuse for their racist behavior,” said Qi Hongjia, who has lived in Finland for over ten years.

Read the full story here.

Yle News published on the same day as the Helsingin Sanomat article how the coronavirus targets Asians.

An Asian who spoke on the condition of anonymity said that she receives more looks than usual.

“Using a face mask in a completely normal way is now seen as really bad and suspicious,” the Asian said.

We at Migrant Tales have tried to get in touch with Asians and other migrants and minorities to write about their experiences during these difficult times.

If you have a story to share, please get in touch with us because exposing racism is one effective way of beating the social ill.

Email: [email protected]

Phone: 040 8400773

A $2.2-trillion rescue package to perpetuate social inequality, fat cats, and wars

Posted on March 26, 2020 by Migrant Tales

Even if we humans are resilient, the coronavirus has exposed the same problems that brought us to this situation in the first place.

Instead of investing trillions of dollars in defense or attack spending and servility to the economy and stock markets, why haven’t we paid enough attention to health care, environmental disasters that brought us global warming, human tragedies that our imposed wars have shoved down people’s throats.

Read the full story here.

In the United States, there is a huge demand for ventilators and other medical equipment to challenge the coronavirus pandemic.

We continue to invest trillions of dollars in war spending and servility to the economy and stock markets. Why haven’t we paid instead enough attention to health care, environmental disasters that brought us global warming, human tragedies that our imposed wars shoved down people’s throats?

In the United States, there is a massive demand for ventilators and other medical equipment to challenge the coronavirus pandemic.

Martin Luther King Jr. said a lot of wise things.

The 2.2 trillion-dollar package to stop the US economy from freefall is only a temporary bandaid. The answers we see today on how to steer through the crisis, which has seen endless investments in social inequality and wars, will not solve the problem but make it worse.

It will be worse since we are not even thinking about changing a very sick paradigm for one that invests and improves people’s lives.

Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick, 69, said on Fox News that it was ok to sacrifice older people to save the economy.

“You know, Tucker, no one reached out to me and said, ‘As a senior citizen, are you willing to take a chance on your survival in exchange for keeping the America that all America loves for your children and grandchildren?’” he was quoted as saying in the Guardian. “And if that’s the exchange, I’m all in.”

Dehumanizing groups indicate that we are on a slippery slope.

Chiara Costa Virtanen: Gender-based violence in Finland through the eyes of the immigrant women community

Posted on March 25, 2020 by Migrant Tales

By Chiara Costa Virtanen

Due to the Coronavirus spread throughout Europe, people are required to stay home in safe. Same in Finland, where also the hashtag #stayhome is in trend. Unfortunately, for many women, home doesn’t mean safety. On the contrary.

According to a 2012 study by the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA), 47% of Finnish women have experienced gender-based violence at some point in their lives, starting at the age of 15. It puts Finland as second in the list of the 28 European Union countries that participated in the survey, right after Denmark.

This is quite a smack on the face, considering that The Nordic countries are often praised for their achievements on gender equality.

But what do we mean with gender-based violence?

Gender-based violence is violence directed against a person because of their gender. The majority of victims of gender-based violence are women and girls. Gender-based violence and violence against women are terms that are often used interchangeably, but the ‘gender-based’ definition is the one that we should use more as it highlights more the aspect of inequality among men and women.

The Istanbul Convention is a Council of Europe Convention that focuses on preventing and combating violence against women and domestic violence, and published its first evaluation report on Finland on 2 September 2019.

The UN Entity for Gender Equality have stated that generally women of ethnic and cultural minorities are more in danger to become victims of violence. There is not a research that states why it is so, but in my opinion one of the factor is the sexualization of some ethnic groups ( like women of color, or south Asian women ) with an exasperation of their sexual characteristics and even porn categories only about them.

The Rape Crisis Center “Tukinainen” reports to receive 1000-1200 calls and attempted calls each month. The risk of physical assault is highest between the ages 15 and 34 years. ( datas from Tilastokeskus ) .


Nearly half of African background women reported experiencing discrimination during the past five years, that study found — most often at the hands of strangers. They were often subjected to name-calling or other forms of verbal abuse. (source Yle)

However, estimating the prevalence of sexual violence in Finland is difficult, because a big number of are not reported to the police.

Instead of telling to women how to dress up for not being raped and to blame the victims for not having reported the perpetrator to the authorities, let`s try to analyze some of the possible causes of lack of reaction from the immigrant women victims of gender-based violence:

  1. ·Failed integration: Following a quote of Mia Poutanen, chief superintendent on the National Police Board: “Integration programs focus on educating foreigners with regard to attitudes and values, but in many cases, it unfortunately does not start quickly enough, because asylum processing takes too long.”(source Yle). This explication speaks for itself, and I totally agree. Often, even with integration program completed, the sensation of not being part of the community is strong: social integration is only feasible once immigrants are accepted as members of the society. Unfortunately, for many minorities this represent a big struggle.
  • ·Lack of peer support and network: A big part of the foreign women living in Finland comes for following their partner/spouse. Women with a foreign mother tongue are more likely to be married than Finnish-, Swedish- or Sami-speaking women.: 43% of women with a foreign mother tongue and 32 % of women with a national mother tongue were married. (source ulkomaalaistaustaisethelsingissa.fi).This means that they don’t necessarily have a network of supportive people in case of need. They might face loneliness and exclusion, and the risk of social isolation is high. In case of danger or need, they might not have a person that can support them in the hard times.
  • ·Poor language skills: According to a study of 2019, 82% of the population of foreigners living in Helsinki is born abroad. Immigration is still a relatively new phenomenon in Finland: The majority of Helsinki residents born abroad have migrated to Finland less than 10 years ago. This means that the majority of the international community, doesn’t speak Finnish as mother tongue. Reaching for help, searching information online, even just explaining what happened can become a struggle.
  • ·Lack of knowledge of own rights: Many foreign women don’t know that they don’t have to stay in an abusive relationship for staying in Finland. The perpetrator might blackmail the victim by claiming that she might lose her kids or be deported if she calls the authorities.
  • ·Women poverty: Despite the welfare benefits available in Finland, the struggle of poverty is still real, especially for those women that are not in the working-age anymore. Indeed, nearly 70 percent of over-65-year-olds are living exclusively on basic benefits are women. In practice this means that they only receive a guarantee pension of 784 euros monthly, paid to persons whose pre-tax pension income is otherwise less than 777.84 euros per month. (source Yle)
  • ·Fixed-term work, unemployment and zero-hours contracts: Higher education does not protect residents with a foreign mother tongue from unemployment as efficiently as Finnish- and Swedish-speaking residents. The unemployment rate among residents with a foreign mother tongue remains fairly constant regardless of their education. Residents with refugee background have had more difficulties in finding a job than other people.

But how can to get help?

If you are a victim of gender-based violence, don’t be afraid to ask for help. You are not alone, it is not shameful to reach for help and it is more common than you imagine.

Here there is a list of some of possibilities to reach for help.
If you have become or see someone else becoming the victim of violence, immediately call the emergency number 112. Intervention is always required in cases of violence.If you have sustained physical injuries, go to the nearest emergency room or call 112 for help.

Here is a list of some organizations that can be a good support:

  • · Monika Naiset ry is probably the most famous for promoting the equality and inclusion of immigrant women in Finland and prevents violence against women.
  • · Mieli the Finnish Association for Mental Health, provides crisis assistance and support in order to prevent mental health problems and suicides.
  • · RIKU, the Victim Support Finland`s organization, aims to improve the position of victims of crime, their loved ones and witnesses of criminal cases by influencing and producing support services.

Tukinainen, the crisis centre for sexually abused women, is a national victim support centre that provides support and guidance for people who have been sexually assaulted/ or abused, as well as providing guidance for their families.

See the original posting here.

This post was published with permission.

Un golpe de estado hace 44 años que cambió nuestras vidas para siempre

Posted on March 24, 2020 by Migrant Tales

Hoy, el 24 de marzo, hace 44 años que la Argentina vivió su pesadilla más larga después de un golpe de estado que cambió el país para siempre, pero que nos dió también una promesa: ¡nunca más!

Uno de los héroes de la guerra sucia (1976-83) fueron, indudablemente, los padres y familiares que sufrieron la desgracia de la pérdida y la desaparición de sus hijes.

Las fotos en esta nota fueron tomadas en agosto de 1983 cuando el pueblo argentino repudió la autoamnistía que se autoproclamó el gobierno de facto.

Estoy sumamente orgulloso de ser una pequeña parte de ese movimiento social que jamás abandonaré y olvidaré especialmente cada 24 de marzo.

Cuando veo esta foto, me pregunto ¿quién es esta pareja? ¿Quiénes son los que están a su alrededor? ¿Qué historias nos contarían? Foto: Enrique Tessieri
Luchas sociales son luchas en contra de la impunidad e injusticia. Foto Enrique Tessieri
Es nuestro deber mantener vivos a los que querían silenciar para siempre. Foto: Enrique Tessieri
¿Dónde está mi hije? No se preocupe demasiado porque están en nuestras memorias y corazones. Foto: Enrique Tessieri

Facebook Danilo Canguçu: Racism on the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination

Posted on March 22, 2020 by Migrant Tales

Migrant Tales insight: I got in touch with Danilo Canguçu, whom I thanked for bringing to public attention what had happened after being harassed in a racist manner. He did the right thing, and others should follow his example. Since public authorities too often only offer lip service instead of action in fighting racist abuse, we need to raise our voices when this occurs.

Danilo said he will file charges to the police and get in touch with Helsingin Uutiset if the woman who harassed him and his friends is employed by that community paper.

Helsingin Uutiset, like other ones in the same league, is known for their biased reporting that is sometimes racist. Since they have no subscribers, they are dependent on ads to finance their newspaper.

Turkulainen, a community paper owned by Etelä-Suomen Media, which owns Helsingin Uutiset, published a sensationalist story and headline in 2017: “A shocking figure from the beginning of the year: Rape crime grew by over 400% in Turku compared previously.”

But wait a minute. The “over-400%” claim is based on a figure of 4 suspected cases in 2016 compared with 21 in the first quarter of 2017.

When I called the editor of Turkulainen, to ask him if this is fair and ethical journalism.

“Don’t you understand that we need to attract advertisers!” he said justifying the headline

Community newspapers are some of the worst examples of unethical and biased journalism in Finland.

______________________________________________________________________________

Here is the person who was filmed allegedly in racist harassment. Source: Facebook.

EN ESPAÑOL

“TODOS USTEDES DEBERÍAN VOLVER A SUS PAÍSES, USTEDES NUNCA SERÁN DUEÑOS DE ESTE PAÍS!”

El Día Internacional para Eliminación de la Discriminación Racial fue ayer, 21 de Marzo. Este mismo día, mis amigos y yo – todos extranjeros – vivimos el ataque más racista que ya vi sufrí en Finlandia.
Era cerca de las cinco y media de la tarde y el sol brillaba. Nosotros tres estabamos yendo a “visitar” a una amiga quien recién llegaba de Brasil. Queríamos verla y recibir unos regalos que nos trajo. Para mí, dos ediciones de mi revista favorita, revista piauí, mayoritariamente sobre política y un aire fresco en tiempos de Bolsonaro. Para mi amiga, roomate y también Brasileña, un libro: “Ideas para adiar el fin del mundo”, de Ailton Krenak. El tercer amigo, Francés-Canadiense, nos condujo con su carro y también participó del encuentro.
Yo dije que la “visitamos” porque no entramos en su apartamento ubicado cerca a la estación de metro en Kontula: Estábamos parados en el andén (primer piso), mientras le hablábamos. Ella estaba en el balcón (en el tercer piso) en quarentena. Sus padres están en el grupo de riesgo del Coronavirus. Los tres estaban encerrados en el balcón de vidrio.
Ella empacó nuestra literatura en una bolsa plástica, la amarró con una cuerda y – como las trenzas de Rapunzel – el conocimento llegó hasta nosotros. Nos reímos. Compartimos nuestros sentimientos sobre la quarentena, sobre el aterrisaje del virus en Brasil – aquí no nos reímos para nada – etc. Estábamos hablando en Portugués, nuestra lengua materna. Somos orgullosos de hablarla y nos sentimos seguros de usarla en Helsinki, en Finlandia, en Europa. O por lo menos nos sentíamos.
Por la derecha, una mujer en sus 40 apareció. Ella tenía un carrito-caja lleno del periódico Helsingin Uutiset. Cuando pasó por nosotros, habló en Finés de una manera muy agresiva y superior. Yo no hablo Finés pero mis amigos sí, así como el padre de mi amiga – por lo menos un poquito. Entonces entendí que decía que olía mal (‘Hyi haisee’) mientras pasaba por nosotros. Uno de mis amigos respondió, ironicamente, en Finés: “Guau, eres muy inteligente!”. La señorita de la entrega, en su camino de entrada al edificio de mi amiga, nos miró y escupió en el piso, de una manera bastante obvia. Mientras tanto, afuera, mis amigos traducían qué había dicho ella y estábamos en choque.
La señorita salió diciendo – o casi gritando – más palabras de odio hacia nosotros. Mis dos amigos respondían también en Finés. Yo empecé a responderle en Inglés – de pronto no debería haberlo hecho. Sentí (y todavía lo siento) que a veces estaba siendo agresivo – no como ella. Ella entró en el edificio al lado. Intentando entender qué pasaba, nuestros ojos hablaban más mientras nuestros pensamentos corrían dentro de nuestras cabezas. Mi roomate tuvo una idea: “Yo voy a coger uno de los periódicos de allá”. Yo tuve otra: “Alistaré mi cámara para cuando regrese ella”. Con el periódico escondido bajo la chaqueta de mi amiga y mi teléfono listo para grabar, la señorita salió del segundo edificio.
Sí, más palabras agresivas. “Yo te estoy grabando!”, grité. Ella vino hacia nosotros diciendo “Qué derechos tienes de filmar una empleada?”. Yo tenía miedo. Nosotros teníamos miedo. Yo pensé que ella cogería mi celular y lo tiraría en la nieve. Mi roomate pensó que ella nos iba a golpear. No sé qué pensaba nuestro tercer amigo pero estaba aterrorizado, riéndose desconfortablemente. Ella siguió gritándonos: “Ustedes nunca serán Fineses”. Ella señaló su dedo hacia mi amiga y dijo: “Eres una prostituta y una drogadicta” mientras pasaba el indice por la garganta, como quien corta un cuello. “Todos ustedes deberían volver a su país, ustedes nunca serán dueños de esta tierra!” – la frase ecoaba por la calle vacía. Ella se alejó de nosotros, todavía gritando. Yo empecé a gritarle: “Chao! Vete!”.
Nosotros, los seis, separados por tres pisos y el coronavirus, vivimos el evento más racista de nuestra vida en Finlandia. Pensábamos que estábamos seguros pero cuando eres inmigrante, tienes que acordarte todos los días: tú siempre estás en el grupo de riesgo.

Twitter FRA director Michael O’Flaherty: Coronavirus is also a human rights question

Posted on March 21, 2020 by Migrant Tales

Now, as far-right parties aim to capitalize on the coronavirus with the help of fake news, we must stay vigilant to challenge their sinister and selfish aims. 

We saw this happen in Finland on Yle’s A-talk when Perussuomalaiset* MP Riikka Purra claimed that a hospital was washing and using disposable equipment.

“I have received information from a hospital that they wash disposable equipment,” she tweeted, declining to say who her source is. state her source.

Purra’s claim that she cannot reveal her source is an old tactic even used by US President Donald Trump playbook: “There’s that guy who told me…” “I’ve a very nice friend who told me…” “Many beautiful experts told me…”…etc. [1]

In the face of fake news and claims by opportunist and irresponsible påoliticians, EU Fundamental Rights Agency (FRA) director Michael O’Flaherty has an important message below.

https://twitter.com/i/status/1241273394160640002

[1] Thank you Albert Furgenstin for the tip.

NoHateFinland: Rashid and Sobia commemorate the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination

Posted on March 21, 2020 by Migrant Tales

On this date of March 21, 1960, the police in Sharpeville, South Africa, opened fire on a group of peaceful protestors demonstrating against that country’s apartheid laws. In commemoration of the 69 people that were killed on that day, the United Nations called on in 1966 the international community to intensify its efforts to banish all forms of racial discrimination.

Source: United Nations.

Despite celebrating this important day, there is still a lot of work to be done. 

About two years and a half ago on February 23 in the Helsinki suburb of Vantaa, a Pakistani man was brutally attacked by three young white Finnish youths.

Writes the Helsinki Times: “Assailants inflicted 20-30 stab wounds on the victim using knives and other edged weapons. His lips were also cut and was stabbed near the eye. Fortunately, the victim was transferred to the hospital urgently and underwent major surgery. Although still in ICU [intensive care unit] and in critical condition with severe injuries, his situation is not life-threatening anymore, and he has regained consciousness.”

Anti-Hate Crime Orgnisation on the forefront of anti-racism activity in Finland. The association was founded in Helsinki on September 8, 2018, and officially registered on October 3, 2018. One of the guiding forces of the association is Rashid and his family. Rashid, who was the victim of a brutal crime in 2018, wished after recovery to do work against hate crime and racism. Ther association’s first board (from left to right): Enrique Tessieri (chairperson), Tegha Abeng (substitute board member), Thomas Babila (board member), Ali Rashid (board member), Ahti Tolvanen (secretary), Rashid (honorary and board member), Sobia (vice-chairperson), and Mounir E. Eliassen (treasurer).

Much to the amazement of the family and other NGOs, the police did not consider what happened to Rashid a hate crime.

“The police called us the following day after what happened to my husband,” said the wife of the victim. “The first question I asked the police if it was a hate crime. They said it wasn’t because the suspects were intoxicated.”

The three youths received 9.5-year prison sentences each after they raised the charges in April from attempted manslaughter to attempted murder.

What does this day, The International Day for the Elimination of Racism, mean to Rashid and Sobia?

“We left our own country, our people, and family to live in peace in a foreign land, but this horrible matter happened to Rashid and us,” she explained.

Sobia said that apart from having a profound economic, social, and psychological impact on their lives today, the family has not recovered from what happened. “It made us lose trust in Finland as a safe country,” she added.

Sobia states that she and her husband continue to get suspicious looks from strangers when they are in public.

“You can tell when you are not wanted because some people give you angry looks,” she said. “And this is because you may have dark hair and don’t look like them.”

What happened to Rashid and the rest of his family after that February evening shows that only one day to celebrate the elimination of racism is not enough.

It is also a reminder that racism can strike at you.

See the original post on NoHateFinland.org here.

PS MP Purra is as phony as the fake news she maliciously spreads

Posted on March 20, 2020 by Migrant Tales

Populists like Perussuomalaiset MP Riikka Purra are desperate for attention in the face of the coronavirus pandemic because fewer are interested in their Islamophobia broken record.

MP Purra, who is also the PS’ first vice president, pulled a fast one on Yle’s A-talk by stating that she has doubts about Finland’s health infrastructure. “I have received information from a hospital that they wash disposable equipment,” she tweeted, declining to say who her source is. state her source.

If she were speaking the truth, she’d get in touch with health authorities to investigate the claim.

This will, supposedly, not happen because it is spreading fake news.

Source: Twitter.

The I-can’t-disclose-the-source comment by Purra is one of the oldest tricks in the book. Since her statement instills fear among the population, such fake news should be strongly condemned.

The PS is worried about their standings in opinion polls since the coronavirus pandemic has overtaken their mostly exaggerated and fake news about the threat of migrants.

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Recent Posts

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