Is it a coincidence that Perussuomalaiset (PS)* Interior Minister Mari Rantanen’s letter Tuesday to the EU Commission on scraping asylum rights temporarily is an accidental coincidence? News of Rantanen’s letter, which has received harsh criticism from Professor of International Law Matti Koskenniemi, was published after a story by The Guardian claiming global inaction on human rights could fuel “mass atrocities” and over 1,000 unmarked graves were discovered on EU migration routes.

Interioir Minister Mari Rantanen is the dark face of Finland’s immigration policy who wants to put on ice human rights for asylum seekers. Some consider her an incompetent minister driven by Islamophobia and xenophobia. Source: Yle
While Professor Koksenniemi slammed Rantanen’s letter to the EU Commission as “unbelievable and incomprehensible,” not one minister, never mind Prime Minister Petteri Orpo, has questioned or commented on Rantanen’s letter to overhaul the asylum system.
Even President Sauli Niinistö, whose job is to oversee Finland’s foreign policy, has not uttered a word.
Rantanen’s letter to the EU Commission is another black stain on how the present government is undermining systematically human and civil rights in Finland.
“The whole purpose of this [refugee] system is to protect people in need,” Koskenniemi was quoted as saying in Demokraatti. “And the minister wants to attack this system without saying anything about what the purpose of this system is.”
Rantanen does not mention the word “refugee” once in the letter to the EU Commission.
“Most of the world’s countries bear a much heavier burden than these rich European countries [like Finland],” Koskinniemi continued. “It is hypocritical to say that this [asylum seekers] constitutes a security threat to us.”
Considering the tens of thousands of migrants that have died trying to reach the EU, Rantanen and the PS claim that under a thousand asylum seekers on the Finnish-Russian border constitute a threat to internal security. The political motive for labeling asylum seekers and closing the border is intended for internal consumption.
It is concerning that steps to weaken human rights by Rantanen and Orpo’s government are leading us on the road to a Nordic Hungary.
