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Author: Migrant Tales

Finland’s future recipe for success is based on social equality, mutual acceptance, respect and equal opportunities

Posted on May 26, 2012 by Migrant Tales

Why would any political party seriously care about immigrants and their children if these newcomers form part of a fragmented group that has little political and economic power? Should they be concerned about high unemployment and ever-growing social inequality among such groups in Finland? 

Our success story as a society was never based on social inequality but on social equality, or tasa-arvo.  If you disagree, look at our violent history between 1918 and 1945. The crucial fuel that fed the wheels of internal and external strife back then was suspicion of other groups and nations.

Despite our rocky start as an independent nation, we have built today a model society that is the envy of other nations. Another welcome characteristic of our society is its strong sense of community and belonging. Not everyone, however, enjoys being part of such a great family. Some of these are  visible minorities like the Roma, Saami, non-white Finns, homosexuals and other groups.

As we race deeper into the depths of the new century, we need more than ever those tools that turned us into a successful nation and helped mend our differences as a society. We especially need values such as inclusion to rub off on those that form part of our ever-growing culturally diverse nation.

Are we putting Finland in harm’s way again by reviving those same class divisions, inequality and loathing that once impoverished us? Are those very values that fueled strife now entering our society through the back door as anti-immigrant sentiment and intolerance?

You don’t have to be a rocket scientist to understand that humans are social animals and that our successful Nordic welfare society is based on social equality.  Social vices like greed, apathy and even racism therefore constitute today the greatest threat to our society.

Some politicians in Finland and Europe naively believe that they can revive these above-mentioned social ills and control them with a short leash. Nothing could be further from the truth. The mass killings in Norway that we witnessed last year are tragic proof of the contrary. What attacked Norway wasn’t a mass killer called Anders Breivik but his racist values and fear.

Political parties are playing with fire if they fuel class divisions and hatred of other groups like immigrants and visible minorities.

It is an encouraging sign, however, that more politicians, political parties and common Finns are finding the courage to openly question racism and all forms of discrimination.

A lot more work is still needed on this front. We should hear more than ever those values, together with new ones, that turned us into what we are today:  social equality for all based on mutual acceptance, respect and equal opportunities.

 

University of Helsinki seeks research participants who are of Finnish descent and migrated to Finland as adults

Posted on May 25, 2012 by Migrant Tales

Do you have Finnish roots and currently live in Finland, but were born and raised abroad? Participants are needed for a research study on people of Finnish descent who migrate to Finland in adulthood. In particular, those who have moved from Canada, the United States, Sweden and Russia are sought.

If this sounds like you, you are warmly invited to participate in this study by attending an interview, joining a group discussion and/or writing about your experiences. Please visit the study’s website (http://blogs.helsinki.fi/kjurva) for more information and to sign up. You can also contact the researcher, Katrina Jurva, directly for more details ([email protected]).

Recruitment for this study is ongoing so please feel free to share this information if you know someone else who may be interested!

 

Amnesty International Annual Report 2012 criticizes Finland for accelerated asylum procedures

Posted on May 24, 2012 by Migrant Tales

Amnesty International (AI) has criticized Finland in its Annual Report 2012 for accelerated asylum procedures, which include forced returns to Baghdad, according to YLE.  The report noted as well that Finland was unable to provide figures on how many irregular migrants and asylum-seekers it detained during the year.

AI reports: “However, there were concerns that many of those being detained were held in police detention facilities, contrary to international standards. In these cases, many were detained in mixed-sex facilities, together with individuals suspected of crime. Children seeking asylum, including unaccompanied children were also detained.”

The report said Finland provides inadequate protection for asylum-seekers and their right of appeal.

Migrant Tales understands that the Finnish authorities forcibly return asylum-seekers back to their original country if their request has been rejected 2-3 times.

“I know of some asylum-seekers who have been deported [from Finland] to Iraq, Afghanistan, Russia, Chechnya, Angola, Guinea-Bissau and Cameroon,” said a former asylum-seeker, who spoke on condition of anonymity. “If the first country that took your fingerprints is Sweden, they can deport you to that country [as stipulated in the Dublin Agreement].”

The former asylum-seeker said that the Finnish police have three ways of deporting you.

“One is by letter informing you that they will pick you up at a certain day and time, the second is by surprise incarceration after being requested to appear at a police station,” he said. “The third is by detaining you at the refugee center without any warning.”

 

 

MTV3 poll shows support for PS to have plummeted to 5%

Posted on May 23, 2012 by Migrant Tales

If the municipal election of October were held today, only 5% would vote for the right-wing populist Perussuomalaiset (PS) party, according to a poll published Wednesday by MTV3. The latest poll is further proof that support for the PS continues to plummet compared with the impressive gains it made in last year’s election.

In the April 2011 election, the PS won 19.1% (39 seats) of the vote compared with 4.05% (5 seats) in 2007.

The biggest winner in the MTV3 poll is the National Coalition Party (23%) followed by the Social Democrats (21%) and Center Party (20%), which has made an impressive comeback after its disastrous election result in 2011. The Greens and Left Alliance would get 9% apiece.

The MTV3 poll published today shows the National Coalition Party, Social Democrats and Center Party making the biggest gains if the October 28 municipal elections were held today.  

Migrant Rights’ Network of the UK: The Elephant in the Workplace – Why it’s time we talked about migration and labour exploitation

Posted on May 22, 2012 by Migrant Tales

 

 

 

 

Dr Sam Scott*

Certainly, it is rare for evidence of worker mistreatment to come to the fore but this does not mean, in our opinion, that it is ipso facto rare. Partly, the challenge is one of identifying workplace exploitation and persuading victims to come forward with evidence. Partly, it is about how as a society we define workplace exploitation, how it is legislated against, and how this legislation is policed. 

Trade Union membership is as low today as it was in the 1940s. Amidst the various worker protests against austerity measures, it has tended to be white-collar professionals, principally in the public services, who have been able to exert collective will, via union or professional group membership, in an attempt to protect eroding rights. Those in vulnerable employment in the UK – an estimated 2 million workers according to the TUC – do not to join unions in the main and so struggle to protect themselves from exploitative employers.

The cleaners, farm workers, production line operatives, au pairs, domestic servants, car washers, waiters and waitresses, the list could go on, are largely cast adrift, atomised and struggling to carve out a living at the bottom of the UK labour market. Their labour is not on the label, is not even evident when we look behind the label, and, in fact, has largely been written out of the social history of the late twentieth and early twenty-first century. The invisible hand of the market is now the low-wage worker and, interestingly, since the mid-1990s, this hand has become increasing migrant in origin.

New research funded by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation identifies this link between workplace exploitation and immigration via a case study of the UK food industry. Using evidence from 62 migrant workers (mainly Polish, Chinese, Latvian and Lithuanian) spread across five areas of the UK (London, Liverpool, South-West England, Lincolnshire and east-Central Scotland) the report highlights why migrants are at particular risk of exploitation. Specifically, it is their constrained economic circumstances, limited English, widespread use of tied housing, and reliance on gangmasters that renders migrants vulnerable to severe forms of exploitation: what we term ‘forced labour’.

If I had known English, I would have gone to find a new job, I would have looked for anything, but it was the beginning here and I really did not have any other options. (Sally, woman, 32, Polish)

What do we mean by forced labour? Well the JRF report identifies 14 ‘practices’ that we consider to be part of the forced labour crime (forced labour has been a criminal offence since 2009). Some of the most noteworthy practices are as follows:

  • Upfront fees/debt bondage­ – many migrants paid fees to gangmasters to travel to the UK and to secure work. This often indebted migrants and/or led them into exploitative work and housing.
  • Productivity targets and surveillance –  targets and monitoring gave workers little opportunity for social interaction at work. Pressure was intense: “It was completely crazy, rushing, shouting constantly … they can stand behind your back with a stopwatch and see how many chickens you are packing per minute … Here you are a robot, a machine.” (Izabela, woman, 44, Polish)
  • Non-/under-payment of wages – this was remarkably common, and migrants seemed unable to get back pay they were owed. A popular tactic was to deduct a few hours’ pay each week: “The boss was very, very stingy. When I worked ten hours, he would note it down as six or seven hours. Always a few hours less … Every week when the payday came, we had to argue with the boss … ”. (Li Xia, man, 42, Chinese)
  • Underwork/indebtedness – LMIs recruited even when work was scarce, because they charged workers fees for finding work, however limited, and/or for travel, accommodation and other bills. The more workers they had, the more charges they could levy; it could be in LMIs’ interests to provide workers with just enough hours to pay these charges. This left migrants with no spare money to escape their exploiters, furthering dependency.
  • Tied Accommodation – poor accommodation was often linked to exploitation. Interviewees talked of overcrowded (e.g. five people in one caravan), sub-standard, overpriced housing. “I was shocked … the caravan is for 5 people … One of the girls sleeps in the living room …” (Victoria, woman, 21, Bulgarian).

The research clearly shows that the bottom of the labour market can be a truly inhospitable place. Fear and a sense of powerlessness are pervasive and there is no collective union engagement to alleviate this and push for improvements, quite the contrary. The question then is whether we could do more to prevent forced labour and more to empower low-wage migrant workers in an attempt to halt any decline in workplace standards?

A starting point may be to think about why news headlines concerned with improving workers’ rights are so rare and why the issue of tackling workplace exploitation is so infrequently raised in policy speeches? Regrettably, it usually takes a shocking event – i.e. death at work – for people to take note. However, the reality for most victims is that forced labour is about everyday and often quite incremental forms of exploitation that only collectively and cumulatively combine to constitute a criminal act. The elephant in the workplace is not, in other words, as simple as might be implied when we glimpse its occasional monolithic shadow.

*Dr Sam Scott is an associate lecturer at the Department of Geography, University of Exeter. He has been researching international migration for the past decade and has published work on both skilled and low-wage labour migration, mainly from within the European Union. His latest research – with Professor Gary Craig (Wilbeforce Institute) and Dr Alistair Geddes (University of Dundee) – looks at experiences of forced labour in the UK food industry.

Read original story here.

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

Kyllä neuvonnalle, ei kriminalisoinnille ympärileikkausasiassa

Posted on May 21, 2012 by Migrant Tales

Husein Muhammed

Vihreät päätti viikonloppuna puoluekokouksessaan, että poikien ei-lääketieteellisistä syistä tehtävistä ympärileikkauksista pitää päästä eroon neuvonnan keinoin. Vihreän miesliikkeen aloite, että ympärileikkauksen kieltoa pitäisi alkaa ajamaan välittömästi, kuitenkin hylättiin. Poikien ympärileikkaus ei ole missään maassa kiellettyä.

Myös seksuaalisuuden ja ihmissuhteiden asiantuntijana toimiva Sexpo-säätiö on aloittamassa Ehjä-nimisen hankkeen, jonka tarkoituksena on ehkäistä kulttuurisista tai uskonnollisista syistä tehtäviä poikien ympärileikkauksia. Säätiö järjestää syksyllä Helsingissä
myös kansainvälisen konferenssi aiheesta.

Aikataulusyistä en päässyt Vihreiden puoluekokoukseen. Mutta olen mielelläni käytettävissä puolueen lopullisen kannan muodostumisessa. Olen myös kutsuttu luennoimaan aiheesta Sexpon seminaariin.

Suomessa juutalaiset ja tataarit ovat jo 1800-luvulta lähtien tehneet poikien ympärileikkauksia ilman viranomaisten puuttumista asiaan. Viime vuosina jotkut ympärileikkaukset ovat johtaneet pahoinpitelysyytteisiin, joskin monissa tapauksissa syyttäjä on myös päätynyt syyttämättäjättämispäätökseen.

Viimeksi vuonna 2008 Suomen korkein oikeus katsoi, että uskonnollisista tai kulttuurisista syistä tehty poikien ympärileikkaus on sallittua, mikäli se tehdään asiallisesti. Poikien ympärileikkaus ei tiettävästi ole kielletty missään maassa. Toisaalta Suomessa viimeksi joulukuussa kahdessa tapauksessa vanhemmat olivat käräjillä ympärileikkauksen vuoksi.

Sosiaali- ja terveysministeriössä oli vuonna 2008 valmisteilla laki, jolla uskonnollisista ja kulttuurisista syistä suoritettava poikien ympärileikkaus olisi nimenomaisesti laillistettu. Ympärileikkauksen suorittajan olisi tullut olla ammattilääkäri, ja vähävaraiset perheet olisivat voineet teettää sen julkisessa terveydenhuollossa maksutta.

Ilmeisesti poliittisista syistä ministeriö jäädytti hankkeen. Ympärileikkauksen laillistamista ja teettämistä myös julkisin varoin on puoltanut muun muassa Ihmisoikeusliitto. Sen sijaan esimerkiksi Lääkäriliitto on vastustanut sitä.

Uusi peruspalveluministeri on luvannut selvittää uuden lain tarpeen (HS 21.12.). Todennäköisesti uusikaan selvitys ei poliittisista erimielisyyksistä johtuen saa aikaan tarvittavaa lakia.

Lainsäädännön puuttuminen on ongelmallista. Vanhemmat ja lääkärit joutuvat elämään epätietoisuudessa siitä, saako operaatiota tehdä vai tuleeko syyte pahoinpitelystä.

Suomalaiset lääkärit ovat omantunnonsyistä tai pahoinpitelysyytteiden pelossa lähes kokonaan kieltäytyneet uskonnollisista ympärileikkauksista. Juutalaiset ja tataarit ovat teettäneet ympärileikkaukset omilla lääkäreillään. Ongelmalliseksi on muodostunut maahanmuuttajien ympärileikkaus, sillä niihin ei yleensä ole löytynyt ammattitaitoista lääkäriä. Osa vanhemmista on joutunut käyttämään poikansa kotimaassaan ympärileikkauksessa, toiset ovat turvautuneet puoskareihin.

Poikien ympärileikkaus on vain vähäinen toimenpide, joka oikein suoritettuna ei aiheuta mitään varsinaista vammaa tai seksuaalista kyvyttömyyttä. Maahanmuuttajavastaisten piirissä ympärileikkausta on demonisoitu ihan muista syistä kuin lapsen terveyden vuoksi: Samat niin kutsutut maahanmuuttokriitikot, jotka muualla vaativat maahanmuuttajien palauttamista kotimaihinsa, vaikka nämä olisivat vaarassa joutua teloitetuiksi tai kidutetuiksi poliittisten tai uskonnollisten mielipiteidensä vuoksi, väittävät vastustavansa ympärileikkausta sen vuoksi, että ovat huolissaan muslimipoikien terveydestä.

Juuri terveydellisistä syistä ympärileikkaus tulee sallia valvotuissa olosuhteissa. Kielto altistaisi lapsen ammattitaidottoman henkilön suorittamalle ympärileikkaukselle, mistä lapselle voi aiheutua vakaviakin vammoja.

Jos ympärileikkaus kriminalisoitaisiin, osa vanhemmista kuitenkin ympärileikkauttaisi lapsensa. Ympärileikkauksen epäonnistuessa he eivät pahoinpitelysyytteiden pelossa uskaltaisi viedä lastaan lääkäriin. Tämä olisi lapsen kannalta kaikkein vaarallisinta.

Ympärileikkausta on vastustettu myös sen vuoksi, ettei lääketieteellisesti turhaa toimenpidettä tulisi kustantaa verorahoilla. Ympärileikkaus on kuitenkin mahdollista laillistaa ilman, että se suoritettaisiin julkisin varoin. Varakkaat vanhemmat maksaisivat poikansa ympärileikkauksen joka tapauksessa.

Vähävaraisille toimenpiteen on sen sijaan syytä olla ilmaista. Muuten lapsi saatetaan ympärileikkauttaa ammattitaidottomalla henkilöllä, mikä saattaa paitsi vaarantaa lapsen terveyden, myös tulla epäonnistuneen ympärileikkauksen vuoksi suoritettavina lääketieteellisinä toimenpiteinä julkiselle terveydenhuollolle kalliimmaksi kuin jos ympärileikkauksen olisi alun perin tehnyt ammattitaitoinen lääkäri.

Ympärileikkausta koskevaa neuvontaa olisi syytä tarjota vanhemmille neuvoloissa jo ennen lapsen syntymistä. Tällöin on tähdennettävä, että tyttöjen sukupuolielinten silpominen on erittäin vaarallista ja myös ankarasti kiellettyä. Myös poikien ympärileikkaukseen liittyvät sinänsä harvinaiset riskit on kerrottava. On myös esitettävä mahdollisuus siirtää ympärileikkaus aikuisuuteen ja asianosaisen itsensä päätettäväksi. Viime kädessä vanhemmille on annettava myös mahdollisuus ympärileikkauttaa poika turvallisissa oloissa.

Alkuperäisen blogikirjoituksen voi lukea tästä.

Tämä blogikirjoitus julkaistiin Migrant Talesissä luvalla.


 

 

PS MP Olli Immonen plans to boycott YLE “for a short while”

Posted on May 21, 2012 by Migrant Tales

By Enrique Tessieri

Far-right anti-immigration Perussuomalaiset (PS) MP, Olli Immonen, said Monday he will boycott YLE “for a short while” since the state-owned radio and television company reports unfairly about the PS.  According to him, there is a systematic propaganda campaign against the PS by YLE

I doubt that many will lose sleep over Immonen’s decision, taking into account that his pet political topics include anti-Immigration, anti-Islam and an odd nostalgia for Finnish fascism of the 1930s.

Immonen has done the right thing, however. In English we say: “If you can’t take the heat stay out of the kitchen.”

It is clear that the PS MP from Oulu cannot take the heat.

Why are so many PS party members so hypersensitive about the media? Is it an indication that the party has lost touch with Finland, never mind its convoluted political program?

Immonen is a sad example of the illness that has inflicted Finland these days. Mention the magic word “Muslim” to a person like him and he changes into a political Mr. Hyde.

Ulla Pyysalo is another sad example.  She is PS MP Juho Eerola’s aide, who got her fingers burned when her name appeared on a neo neo-Nazi membership list.

Pyysalo was recently active on Facebook:

Ulla Pyysalo: …it’s been known for some time that a Muslim man can beat his wife. Maybe they didn’t believe this before… Ulla Pyysalo: and force them to have sex, or rape…

Pyysalo, like Immonen and her boss Eerola, belong to the same far-right faction of the PS. Others that form part of this same group are PS MP Jussi Halla-aho and James Hirvisaari.

Migrant Tales Literary: Right or wrong side up

Posted on May 21, 2012 by Migrant Tales

William Blake wrote:

Expect poison from the standing water.

No standing water here

except for the forest standing…

right side up

or wrong side up.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Xenoholism is a behavioral disorder caused by foreigners

Posted on May 20, 2012 by Migrant Tales

Have you noticed how some people get violent and turn into Mr. Hydes from Dr. Jekylls whenever they start speaking about other ethnic or religious groups? Could we call those that suffer from such split personality disorders xenoholics?

Xeno derives from Latin meaning “foreigner” or “outsider.” Thus a xenoholic is any person who suffers from “a disorder caused by foreigners.”

Contrary to alcoholic, the xenoholic consumes dry rhetoric. There are different types of xenoholic like there are different types of alcoholic drinks such as gin, whiskey and vodka. Xenoholic “drinks” include: racism, prejudice, bigotry, ethnocentrism or a mix of the mentioned into one potent atomic-bomb cocktail.

Isn’t it incredible that some of these xenoholics are the nicest persons when they interact with their group. Everything changes, however, when they take a sip or shot of xenohol.

But let’s stop whining and look at what we can do to help xenoholics kick the habit.

Since its founding in 1935 in Akron, Ohio, Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) has played an important role in helping people rebuild their lives after alcohol addiction.  What about if we establish Xenoholics Anonymous (XA) to help those who suffer from xenoholism? I can see it now at the first-ever XA meeting in history… “Hi, I’m Jussi or James and I am a xenoholic…”

Since xenoholics, like alcoholics, rarely admit they have a “drinking” problem,  I suggest the following AA test* for potential XA members. Simply replace “drinking” to “consuming racist rhetoric” in the AA test below:

  1. Do you lose time from work due to drinking?
  2. Is drinking making your home like unhappy?
  3. Do you drink because you are shy with other people?
  4. Is drinking affecting your reputation?
  5. Have you ever felt remorse after drinking?
  6. Have you gotten into financial difficulties as a result of drinking?
  7. Do you turn to lower companions and an inferior environment as a result of drinking?
  8. Does your drinking make you careless of your family’s social welfare?
  9. Has your ambition decreased since drinking?
  10. Do you crave a drink at a definite time daily?
  11. Do you want a drink the next morning?
  12. Does drinking cause you to have difficulty in sleeping?
  13. Has your efficiency decreased since drinking?
  14. Is drinking jeopardizing your job or business?
  15. Do you drink to escape from worries or troubles?
  16. Do you drink alone?
  17. Have you ever had a complete loss of memory as a result of drinking?
  18. Has your physician ever treated you for drinking?
  19. Do you drink to build up your self-confidence?
  20. Have you ever been to a hospital or institution on account of drinking?

If you answered YES to any one of the questions, there is a definite warning that you may be an alcoholic.

If you have answered YES to any two, the chances are that you are an alcoholic.

For alcohol and drug dependency issues, you can also get in touch with the National Council on Seniors Drug & Alcohol Rehab.

If you answered YES to three or more, you are definitely an alcoholic.

*Steward Brand: The Next Whole Earth Catalog. Sept. 1981. p. 328.

 

 

 

Julkisen sanan neuvoston päätös oli voitto sanavapaudelle

Posted on May 19, 2012 by Migrant Tales

Enrique Tessieri

Julkisen sanan neuvoston (JSN) vapauttava päätös Kirkko ja kaupungin lehdelle oli mielestäni voitto sana- sekä lehdistövapaudelle Suomessa. Miten on mahdollista, että yksi maamme suurimmista poliittista puolueesta kehtaa alkaa vaikuttamaan sekä rajoittamaan lehdistövapautta maassamme? Mielestäni tämä on juuri se tärkein kysymys koko JSN:n päätöksessä.

Neuvoston mukaan pilapiirroksista on tullut erittäin vähän kanteluita sen olemassaoloaikana vuoden 1968 jälkeen. JSN on myös ottanut käsiteltäväksi vain poikkeustapaukissa pilapiirroksia. Neuvosto kirjoittaa lehdistötiedossa: ”Tämä kertoo siitä, että yleisö ymmärtää pilapiirroksen erityisluonteen ja hyväksyy niissä käytetyn kärjekkään ilmaisutavan.”

Jos JSN:n olisi antanut Ville Rannan pilapiirroksista vastakohtainen päätös, olisivat seuraamukset hyvin arveluttavia ja kaunankantoisia lehdistövapaudelle.

Mitä ero on Rannan pilapiirroksessa ja tuomiot, jotka saivat persussuomaalisten kansanedustaja James Hirvisaaren ja kotkalainen kaupunginvaltuutettu Freddy van Wonterghemin kiihottamisesta kansanryhmää vastaan? Vaikka nämä poliitikot haluavat suojella oma moukkamaista käytöstään politiikkoina sanavapauden avulla, tässä on toki kysymyksessä jotain muuta ja vakavampaa.

Tietyt maahanmuuttajaryhmät ovat samaa kun viina joillekin maahanmuuttovastustajille, koska he käyttäytyvät loukkaavasti toisia ryhmiä kohtaa. Tämä ”känni” nähdään harvoin kun he ovat omassa ryhmässä.

Kun olin nuori toimittaja Buenos Aires Heraldissa, päätoimittaja antoi minulle tärkeää ohjetta. Hän sanoi, että sanat ovat kun tehokas ja tappava ase. Ei voi hävittää muurahaista tykillä, eli on oltava oikeudenmukainen ja huomaavainen kun kirjoittaa toisista. Ihmisarvoa on kunnioitettava eikä sitä pidä tuoda esiin halventavalla tavalla kuten JSN (JO 26) suosittelee.

Onko niin, ettei mm. Jussi Halla-ahon, Hirvisaarin ja van Wonterghemin kirjoitukset loukkaavat toisten ihmisarvoa? Mitä arvo heidän argumentit antavat, jos ne hyökkäävät, leimaavat ja solvaavat toisia ryhmiä?

Tuskin ei mitään kun vihanlietsonta, pahamieltä ja lopulta kansankunnanhäpeä.

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