“Yesterday, I joined the anti-racism protest in Helsinki at the invitation of Afars (African Anti-Racism Society Finland) – I met wonderful new people through social media and reconnected with old friends. I was honored to give a speech at the event. Big thanks to all the organizers and everyone who showed up for this important cause.
Happy Anti-Racism Day ✊🏿❤️“

Migrant Tales does not usually endorse candidates but with Paco Diop there is an exception. His speech speaks for itself and should be heard by everyone in this country.
“By Any Means necessary Also in Finland
Dear friends and listeners,
Today is the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination. But I ask you – what does that mean here in Finland, where racism hides behind polite silence and political manipulation?
The Orpo government says nothing. Does nothing. Pretends to be neural while the fire burns all around. They speak of equality, but they pass laws that strip dignity and rights from immigrants, Black people, brown people, and te most vulnerable.
The partes in Orpo’s government are deceiving us – making some believe that thing are getting better, while the system keeps its knee on our necks.
They used anti-racism as a tool to gain trust. Promised change. But where is that change? They weaponized diversity when it served their agenda – and discarded it the moment they gained power.
Good people,
Let us speak the truth today. Not a polished truth that makes white people comfortable. Not a passive trut that hides injustice beneath red roses. But the real truth: Finland has a racism problem. A deep problem. It lives in healthcare, in schools, in the media, in entertainment, in the ob market, in the streets, in politics and yes, even in thos quiet glances on the tram, and the clutching of handbags in supermarket queues.
According to last year’s EU report, every second person of African descent experiences racism daily. Not occasionally. Daily. That is not just a statistic. It is our reality. It is trauma that repeats itself.
My black and brown sisters an brothers – you do not owe this country your silence. You do not have to beg to be seen. You do not have to mold yourselves to fit whiteness in order to be safe. Your -our-pain is real. You our anger is justified. And our voices are vital in this fight.
Anti-racism belongs to us. It must be in the hands of those who are oppressed. Because thos who built the system cannot dismantle it unless they are willing to let go of their own comfort along with it.
And to white Finns, those of you here today or listening to this later if you’re serious abut anti-racism, now is the time to get uncomfortable. You must stop treating racism as a distant problem and see it for what it is: a wildfire and you have the power to help extinguish it.
Use your privilege like a weapon – not silence us – but to fight with us.
Don’t wait for a Black or brown person to call out racism – do it yourself. Whether it’s in Parliament or at the dinner table. In a job interview or a university hallway.
This is not about guilt. It’s about responsibility. Your silence contribute. Your neutrality is violence. If you do nothing, you are on the rise of the oppressor. This is no middle ground here.
ir you want to dismantle racism in Finland, we need truth. We need strength. And we need action. Not someday. Not when its politically convenient. But now.
We must build a Finland where Black children are not asked: ‘Where are you really from?’ A finland where Somali women are not stared at like strangers in their own country. A Finland where no one fears security guards or police because of the color of their skin. A Finland where being Finnish doesn’t only mean being white.
But that future will not be handed to us. We must fight for it. We must organize. We must speak. We must teach. And yes – when necessary, we must disrupt.
The words I carry with me today are forged in the fire of our ancestors:
We want justice – by any means necessary.
We want dignity by any means necessary.
We want freedom by an means necessary.
We will not haks for it politely. We will demand it unapologetically.
We are not strangers in this country. We are this country. and from this day forward we will no longer accept invisibility.
Dear friends,
Let them hear us.
Let them see us.
Let tem understand – we will not back down.
I’m back.
We are back.
Thank you.


















