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Category: Enrique Tessieri

Harith Mana’thar Badr Alsilmawi: Asylum seeker sent from Finland killed in “safe” Iraq

Posted on August 17, 2018 by Migrant Tales

For how long will the Finnish Immigration Service (Migri) with the backing of Prime Minister Juha Sipilä’s government continue to maintain that Iraq is a “safe” country to deport asylum seekers? The latest victim of this flawed policy is 33-year-old Harith Mana’thar Badr Alsilmawi, who sought asylum in 2015 and died on Wednesday in Basra. 

Migrant Tales reported in October 2016 of two Iraqi asylum seekers who returned to their home country and were killed.

Harith Mana’thar Badr Alsilmawi in Finland during better days. Source: Facebook.

According to a source who has been in touch with Harith Mana’thar Badr Alsilmawi’s relatives in Iraq, the young asylum seeker was apprehended by the police, tortured and then killed.  

“There are conflicting stories about Alsilmawi’s deportation to Iraq from Finland,” said the source. “The family in Iraq said that he returned voluntarily while other sources at the Jämsä asylum reception center state that he was detained by the police and forcibly deported.”

Harith Mana’thar Badr Alsilmawi’s death certificate. Source: Facebook.

This story will be updated. 

Brexit-inflicted UK is so racist that even white Europeans are targets of racism and rage

Posted on August 16, 2018 by Migrant Tales

It would be wrong to conclude that Brexit is the cause of the racism we are witnessing today in the United Kingdom. Surprised? Not really. What would you expect from a country that has a dark history in global domination, exploitation, and genocide? 

The common thinking of some people about the United Kingdom is that it was its divine right to colonize, enslave, exploit, pillage and commit genocide on a mass global scale. Britain is as much out of touch with its racism and bigotry as it is in acknowledging, apologizing and compensating its victims. 

The racism we are seeing today in the United Kingdom, Europe, the United States, Australia and elsewhere is the same ogre that conquered and pillaged the world through the greed of colonization and slavery. 

Below is a story in metro.co.uk that highlights the illness facing Brexit-inflicted United Kingdom, where even white Europeans are targets of racism and rage. 

Read the full story here.

Thank you Patrick Yu for the heads-up.

Soldiers of Odin expand to Finland’s Åland Islands

Posted on August 10, 2018 by Migrant Tales

I ran across a story in Seura about the far-right vigilante group, Soldiers of Odin, starting a chapter in Finland’s Åland Islands. Migrant Tales has wondered in a number of stories the Finnish media’s fascination with far-right and racist groups like the Soldiers of Odin. 

But it’s not only the media that gives space and exposure to such Nazi- sympathizing groups, some police representatives don’t see any problems with them either.

“In my opinion, it’s positive that we have more ears and eyes in [Åland] society, which inform the police,” Maria Hoikkala, Åland chief of police, was quoted as saying in Ålandstidningenille.

Read the full story (in Swedish) here. 

In light of the police’s continued mixed response to far-right vigilante groups and the media’s apparent fascination with them, one may correctly ask why was the story about this group published in a Åland newspaper? The story doesn’t tell us, but we may be talking about a “taxi organization,” or that all of its members can fit in the back seat of a car. 

Why is this a story in the first place and why does the chief of police not have any issues with this far-right group that marches and has sympathies with neo-Nazi groups?

Is it because they are white? 

The fact that a group identifies with neo-Nazis raises a lot of questions about Hoikkala’s knowledge about the horrors of World War 2. 

Finnish police suspected of sedating asylum seekers on deportation flights. It may break the law, according to a medical specialist.

Posted on August 6, 2018 by Migrant Tales

There has been a suspicion that the police use sedatives when deporting asylum seekers on flights. According to  Markku Toivonen, a medical specialist, considers the use of sedatives unethical and even illegal, according to Iltalehti. 

“The point here is if medication is given against [the person’s] will or whether there is consent,” Toivonen was quoted as saying. “In any case, from a physician’s point of view, if the person is not only bound but given medication [sedatives] on an airplane [by the police] it may be a violation of the law in such deportation cases.”


Read the full story (in Finnish) here, and in English here.

Migrant Tales published in January 2017 a story about the deportation of an Iraqi at Oulu airport. As the asylum seeker spoke and recorded his deportation on social media, a substance, possibly a sedative, sprayed inside the van. “And it smells bad,” the asylum seeker said.

If such cases are true, it reveals that there is too little scrutiny of the police in deportation cases.

This must change like Finland’s inhumane immigration and asylum policy towards non-EU citizens.

QUOTE OF THE DAY: How anti-diversity and Islamophobic is Finland?

Posted on August 5, 2018 by Migrant Tales

“One of the big denials that one still hears a lot in Finland is its denial of the rise of the Perussuomalaiset (PS)*, an Islamophobic party that won 39 seats in the parliamentary elections of 2011 from just 5 MPs in previously. There was an ongoing debate after 2011 within the PS on what caused its historic election victory. Then party leader Timo Soini claimed it was anti-EU sentiment while its present leader, Jussi Halla-aho, claimed it was the PS’ Islamophobic stance. 

While it’s clear that the PS’ anti-Islam campaign rhetoric played a crucial role in 2011, one wonders how some 20% of the voters were receptive to Islamophobia and bigotry. The PS’ election victories in 2011 and 2015 are valid examples that Finland has serious issues with xenophobia and especially with Islamophobia. Unless we want future generations of Finns to learn how not to hate other cultures and ethnic backgrounds, we need a radically new definition of Finnish identity.

In that new definition, all religions, ethnic backgrounds, and cultures fit in that new identity.”

 

 A study on Europe’s most racist countries commissioned by the European Commission published in Fem Positive.

 

* 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.

Finland’s lost decade and how asylum seekers exposed our hypocrisy and cowardice

Posted on August 2, 2018 by Migrant Tales

The recent example of civil disobedience by Aino Pennanen, when on a Finnair flight Tuesday she attempted to stop a deportation of an asylum seeker. In a country like Finland, where civil disobedience is almost unheard of today, Penanen’s example speaks volumes about how some Finns have lost the trust of their government never mind the Finnish Immigration Service (Migri).

Just like the Perussuomalaiset and Blue Reform parties together with the National Coalition Party and Center Party have brought us a lost decade by flirting and promoting racism and polarization of society, future historians and students of Finnish society will study this decade as one of its low and shameful points.

Even so, Prime Minister Juha Sipilä’s government turns out a steady stream of rehearsed denials while showing its contempt for the most vulnerable sectors of our society.

Contrary to a military battle, which is won by physical force, an ideological battle can never be won. Even if fascism looked buried deep in the grave a few decades ago, it is lifting today its ogre-like face with a vengeance. The same is true of communism. Communism and socialism did not die when the former Soviet Union fell from grace in 1991. It just went into hibernation.

Finland’s immigration and asylum policy

The history of Finland’s immigration policy and its views of diversity raise a lot of questions. It was only in 1983 when Finland got its first immigration act. Before that, and like in many countries that did not respect human rights, Finland denied foreigner, among many other things, habeas corpus. Finland even returned Soviet citizens back to the USSR even if they asked for asylum.

If we have not had an earnest debate about the questionable way Finland’s immigration policy treated non-Finns in the last century, how can we have an honest discussion today about our immigration and asylum policy, which have come under heavy criticism from human rights groups like Amnesty International?


Aleksander Shatravka and Irina visited my home in Mikkeli in October 2011. He was forcibly returned to the Soviet Union despite requesting asylum from Finland in 1974.


Finland is still suffering from Urho Kekkonen amnesia. Even so, heroines like Pennanen with her civil disobedience show to us that this country’s eyes are slowly but surely waking up from its long cold war slumber.

That was a disgraceful period when it came to refugees and migrants but we seem to always return to it like now.

* 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.

Ibrahim’s last chat with me before his departure to Iraq

Posted on July 26, 2018 by Migrant Tales

Ibrahim’s* case, the Iraqi asylum seeker who returned “voluntarily” to Iraq this week, is a case in point of how the Finnish Immigration Service (Migri) and politicians fail people. Here are some facts about Ibrahim, who moved to Finland in October 2015: he applied for 25-30 jobs a week; constantly did voluntary work; converted to Christianity; and found employment delivering newspapers during his last months at Posti. 

From these facts, we can easily conclude that Ibrahim was an ideal asylum seeker who could adapt pretty rapidly to life in this country.

Juho Kusti Paasikivi, the main architect of Finland’s post-war foreign policy as prime minister (1944-46) and president [1946-56), used the following quote by nineteenth-century British politician Thomas Babington Macaulay: The beginning of all wisdom is acknowledgment of facts.


 

Instructions on what an asylum seeker can take back to Iraq. After almost three years, Ibrahim’s possessions must fit in two 23-kg pieces of luggage.

Paasikivi used this quote to understand Finland’s difficult geopolitical situation with the former Soviet Union.

Babington Macaulay’s quote sits well for the difficult situation that two-thirds of asylum seekers faced and continue to face in this country.

Continue reading “Ibrahim’s last chat with me before his departure to Iraq”

An active citizen needs to learn at school about two crucial matters: empathy and social activism

Posted on July 25, 2018 by Migrant Tales

If we look at history and today’s Europe and globally, it becomes clear that most people who went to school that too many never learned about empathy and social activism. A positive example of the latter is Elin Ersson, who refused to take a seat on a flight before they removed an Afghanistan deported asylum seeker off the plane. 

Veronika Honkasalo, a Left Alliance Helsinki city councilperson, was recently quoted as saying in Kansan Uutiset that in light of the low turnout of demonstrators during the Trump-Putin summit, it would be important for schools to teach their pupils how to exercise their civic rights by becoming active citizens.

In countries like Russia and others where human rights abuses are the norm, their citizens are not left with many choices if they want to express their opinions.

In Argentina, where I was born, living under a dictatorship supported by the United States, gave you three choices in the face of social unrest: stay silent, emigrate or join a guerrilla movement and start killing people.

While all three choices are bad, the latter about killing people for a cause raises a lot of ethical and moral questions. Can you kill another human being and live with such a deed for the rest of your life?

My heroes aren’t Rambo or the Terminator and other creations of the Hollywood culture industry. For me, social activist that changed history were people like Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, Sophie Scholl of the White Rose Movement, Mahatma Gandhi, Nelson Mandela, James Baldwin, Rodolfo Walsh, Alvar Nuñez Cabeza de Vaca and many, many others.

All of these latter examples show us that a person can challenge a system that is oppressive and appears invincible.



 

Migrant Tales will begin to highlight more stories about social activism. One way of doing this is by sharing stories of struggles and social activism.

We hope to hear and publish your story.

 

Does Ibrahim’s claim about Hepatitis B expose white fragility?

Posted on July 24, 2018 by Migrant Tales

Migrant Tales published a story about Ibrahim’s* “voluntary” return to Iraq after coming to Finland in October 2015.  While there were many that felt for Ibrahim’s case, some were more preoccupied with what he alleged, or that he contracted Hepatitis B when going to a Finnish dentist. 

In journalism, you run up against a lot of claims. Since we do not know if they are true of not, we sometimes give the source the benefit of the doubt by using the word alleged, which means that he claims but isn’t yet proven.

Sometimes, these types of stories reveal the most surprising things like white fragility.


Guidelines on what you can take back with you to Iraq. After almost three years, Ibrahim’s possessions must fit in two 23-kg pieces of luggage.

It is important to remember that Ibrahim alleges that he got infected in Finland even if we don’t have any proof that this actually happened. Considering the high standard of Finland’s health care system, such cases are unheard of. Even so, this is how Ibrahim sees it.

Continue reading “Does Ibrahim’s claim about Hepatitis B expose white fragility?”

Dutch foreign minister offers excuses for racism and “failures of multiculturalism”

Posted on July 23, 2018 by Migrant Tales

The interview below with Dutch foreign minister, Stef Blok, is another prime example of why racism, bigotry, and discrimination continue to list high on the European shame board. The interview, where Blok tells us how “multiculturalism has failed,” reveals another excuse why racism is deeply ingrained in Europe. 

He also forgets to tell us about the history of racism in Holland and Europe and its complicity in the slave trade.

Said Blok in Politico: “Give me an example of a multiethnic or multicultural society, where the original population are still living as well … and where there are peaceful community relations. I’m not aware of any.”

It is odd, but not surprising, that Blok speaks of “multicultural society,” or a society that is culturally and ethnically diverse, as a failure because he’s not aware of any ones where there are good ethnic relations.

Certainly, there aren’t due to the legacy of racism in countries like Holland.

Moreover, many successful economies like the United States build their growth on exploiting migrants as cheap labor.

No, Foreign Minister Blok, you got it wrong. Well-functioning societies – and none will never become 100% harmonious – hinges on social equality and equal opportunities. If you are unwilling to challenge social inequality and racism, there is your answer of what you refer to as the failure of “multiethnic or multicultural society.”

It is not “race”  or “ethnicity” but of equal opportunities and inclusion that are key to creating a well-functioning society.

When Blok claims that multiculturalism is a failure, it is only an excuse that reveals a lack of political will to take action against racism and social inequality.


Read the full story here.

Another statement made by the Dutch foreign minister in the interview is that Eastern European countries like Hungary and Poland “will never agree” to EU refugee quotas. He said it was because “colored people” have “no life” in those countries and would be “beaten up.”

Continue reading “Dutch foreign minister offers excuses for racism and “failures of multiculturalism””

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