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Category: Enrique Tessieri

Undermining and attacking dual citizenship rights is a hostile provocation against social equality and cultural diversity in Finland

Posted on February 10, 2017 by Migrant Tales

The ongoing debate about the perceived threat of dual nationals in Finland and the proximity of municipal elections should raise some serious questions. One of these is why are we having such a discussion now and who is fueling it?

The answer is more than obvious and highlights a segment of society that refuses to see multicultural Finns, migrants and minorities as equal members of society. These are none other than the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* and other parties that are suspicious of cultural diversity in varying degrees, like the Center Party and National Coalition Party.

The proximity of the municipal elections on April 9 is crucial for the PS, which has seen its popularity in the polls plummet, to show to its government partners that it is still has political life in it.

Thursday’s A-studio talked about the threat that dual citizens pose. PS MP Simon Elo revealed with his comments that plans to discriminate against dual nationals and water down their rights is a general political strategy of his anti-immigration populist party to undermine cultural diversity in Finland. See full talk show here.

The debate on dual citizenship in Finland reveals how institutional racism works in this country and how some political parties will stop at nothing to undermine the civil rights of minorities.

YLE News published on January 31 a story where it claimed that the defense forces place restrictions on dual nationals of Finland and Russia.

“Finnish Defense Forces have not been waiting for legislative changes but have adopted their own rules and procedures for dealing with Russian-Finnish dual nationals,” YLE News reported.

Continue reading “Undermining and attacking dual citizenship rights is a hostile provocation against social equality and cultural diversity in Finland”

A week in an asylum seeker’s life in Finland: legal limbo and deportation

Posted on February 8, 2017 by Migrant Tales

From good news like with the release of Hayder Al-Hatemi on February 1 this week is characterized by extending the detention of an asylum seeker and two deportations.

Let’s start off with DH, who was detained in Pori on January 22. His fiancée wrote a letter asking without any luck Prime Minister Juha Sipilä to free her fiancé from detention. She wrote:

My fiancé was torn from life without any warning when he was detained. The door shut coldly in front of me and there were no chances even to say goodbye at the first place he was detained.

DH was transferred on January 26 from Helsinki’s Metsälä immigration removal center to Lappeenranta. Over the weekend, DH and her parents made a long six-hour trip from Pori to Lappeenranta by car to visit her fiancé on Sunday between 9am and noon.

DH and her fiancée posing for a selfie from detention center in Lappeenranta on Sunday.

DH’s fiancée was hopeful that he’d be released after a judge heard her on Tuesday.

“They are not going to release him because the police fear he’ll go into hiding,” she said by phone, who didn’t know what was the next legal challenge her fiancé faces.

Deportation #1

Kerstin Ögård, who wrote an inspiring post on Migrant Tales last week, took the case of twenty-year-old Aziz Khalaf, who was deported Tuesday noon to Iraq.

The young Iraqi asylum seeker writes:

“I came to Finland because I had read that it is a country that has freedom and humanity…Just please focus on this word ‘humanity,’ what does this word mean to you? Please let me stay here for the sake of humanity if nothing else.”

Continue reading “A week in an asylum seeker’s life in Finland: legal limbo and deportation”

Finns have finally woken up to a lie and bully called the Perussuomalaiset party

Posted on February 5, 2017 by Migrant Tales

After bullying, labeling and scapegoating migrants and minorities for a number of years, the Perussuomalaiset party (PS)* appears to be returning to the minor one-digit political leagues, if a recent poll by Helsingin Sanomat is true. Those groups that the PS has attacked and spread lies about will have the last laugh. 

While there is still a long way to go before the parliamentary elections of 2019, the municipal elections are just around the corner on April 9.

A poll commissioned by Helsingin Sanomat shows the Perussuomalaiset in the minor one-digit political leagues with 8.6% Source: Helsingin Sanomat.

Some analysts believe that if the PS does poorly in the municipal elections, which would mean below 10% of the votes, it may prompt the party to exit government. Depending which party replaces the PS or if new elections are called, it could even mean an about-turn in immigration policy.

Continue reading “Finns have finally woken up to a lie and bully called the Perussuomalaiset party”

Ahmad Liath: “I left Iraq because I long for freedom”

Posted on February 5, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Ahmad Liath was twelve years old when he left Iraq in 2005. Two years before that year, the United States invaded Iraq in 2003 and in 2004 his father was killed.

After the invasion by the United States and its allies, thing didn’t get better but worse in Iraq. A testimony of the latter is the violence and death that we commonly read in the news from Iraq today.

Like thousands of other Iraqi asylum seekers, Liath, who lives in the city of Tampere, located 178 km north of Helsinki, came to Finland in the fall of 2015. Like many of his fellow countrymen, he too got a rejection for asylum from the Finnish Immigration Service (Migri) in January. His mother, however, who came with him to Finland, got a positive decision from Migri ten days before his rejection.

Eleven years is a long time for anyone to be on the road. Liath first moved from Iraq to Syria in 2005 and stayed there until 2010, when fighting in that country’s civil war got worse. He moved to Turkey and then in 2015 to Europe.

“Even if I have lived most of my life in Syria and Turkey, I still don’t know what having a home means,” he continued. “I’ve been called a lot of names during my travels like asylum seeker, tramp, bum, hobo, and wanderer. I’ve taken a lot of insults, suffered racist attacks and seen my human rights trampled,”

Liath said that one of the matters he learned after being on the road for such a long time is that you learn to mistrust everyone, especially your countrymen.

“In Austria I got a negative decision for asylum because the interpreter, who was an Iraqi, told the immigration authorities that I wasn’t a real asylum seeker,” he said.

Liath says that despite his fears and mistrust of people, he’s able to stay focused on his long journey. “I left Iraq because I long for freedom,” he said.

Liath stated that if he can settle down in Finland he’d like to study a profession like computer science and work for a company.

“It’s been difficult to go to school for me since we’ve been near-constantly on the move and I’ve been obliged to work in order to help my mother and sister,” he added.

Before coming to Finland, the young Iraqi asylum seeker moved to Germany, where he stayed at an asylum refugee center in Karlsruhe, after being in Austria and Hungary. He too took the so-called “road of death” that hundreds of thousands of asylum seekers took in 2015 through Greece, Macedonia, Serbia, Croatia, and Hungary.

“The worst place that I visited was Hungary and in Serbia they treated us like animals,” he said. “I was locked up [in Hungary] for a month for crossing the border.”

Around 1,300 people lived in an asylum center in Karlsruhe, Germany. “Imagine what the WC looks like or when you have wait in long lines for food or get you phone charged,” he said. Picture by Ahmad Liath.
The food served at the asylum center in Karlsruhe in Germany. Picture by Ahmad Liath.

“We were 12 people in a tiny cell that was only 15 square meters,” he said. “We had to take 4-5-hour shifts sleeping because all of us couldn’t lie down on the floor at the same time. We were locked up for 22 hours and allowed to go outside for only two hours a day.”

Continue reading “Ahmad Liath: “I left Iraq because I long for freedom””

Hayder Al-Hatemi is freed from detention and becomes a momentary bright spot in the gloom that asylum seekers face in Finland

Posted on February 2, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Some stories that Migrant Tales has published about asylum seekers in Finland have had tragic endings.  On Wednesday, however, there was a bright spot that cut through some of the gloom: Hayder Al-Hatemi, alias “SH,”* was released from detention from Helsinki’s Metsälä immigration removal center.

Today was his first full day as a free man.

“It really feels great to be free,” he said by phone. “I met Miro [del Gaudio] and we went to Migri [Finnish Immigration Service] to renew my work permit.”

Al-Hatemi said that being locked up at an immigration removal center like Metsälä is something he had never experienced in his life before.

“You are locked up with other people who may have criminal records and be drug dealers,” he continued. “What is my crime? Is it because my application for asylum was rejected? I’m not a criminal.”

Al-Hatemi said that his employer at a bakery in Laitila has promised to help him enroll in school so he could learn a new profession and become a baker. “This is such a nice feeling and so many people have helped me and made my freedom a reality,” he said.

Celebrating Hayder Al-Hatemi release Wednesday in Helsinki. From left to right: Eero Pellikka, Al-Hatemi, and Miro del Gaudio.

Al-Hatemi’s legal representatives, Lex Gaudius, have been instrumental in helping the Iraqi asylum seeker.

Lex Gaudius authorized lawyer Eero Pellikka was happy as well about his release.

Continue reading “Hayder Al-Hatemi is freed from detention and becomes a momentary bright spot in the gloom that asylum seekers face in Finland”

Iraqi asylum seeker SH was released today after being detained since January 6

Posted on February 1, 2017 by Migrant Tales

SH, the Iraqi asylum seeker who was detained by the police on Janaury 6, was released today from Helsinki’s Metsälä immigration removal center. SH was detained on the same day together with KM, who was released from detention on January 12.

“I’m really happy and now I must renew my work permit,” he told Migrant Tales this afternoon.

Read the full story here.

SH said he will return to Laitila where he was working at a bakery.

Iraqi asylum seeker being put on plane and deported today

Posted on February 1, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Migrant Tales has learned of a new deportation today at around 7 pm Tuesday from Helsinki-Vantaa Airport, according to a video below posted on social media sites. 

“This terrifies me because it proves to me that human rights don’t apply to us,” an asylum seeker said. “You really don’t know where you’ll be in Finland the next day or even next hour.”

Iraqi Ambassador to Finland, Matheel Dhayif Al-Sabti, told Migrant Tales earlier this month that “Iraq will not accept forced deportations.”

Restrictions by the defense forces on dual nationals is discriminatory and should be forcefully rejected

Posted on January 31, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Should it surprise us that a member of an anti-immigration party like the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* is suspicious of dual citizens? Add to the latter that the person who is suspicious is Defense Minister Jussi Niinistö, who is known for his far-right sympathies.

According to information obtained by YLE,  and if the story is true, the Finnish defense forces has begun to place restrictions on conscripts who are dual citizens of Finland and Russia. YLE said that no such guidelines existed before.

Finland has considered limiting the role of dual nationals in key public posts for years but has not asked if this is unconstitutional.

YLE reported that despite some circles wanting to limit the role of people with dual citizenship in the army, there is no legislation that permits such restrictions from taking place now. The finance ministry is, however, working on such legislative reforms.

Said Niinistö in YLE:

“I personally take the view that when we talk about professional military positions, there are weighty reasons excluding dual nationality. There will now be a review to clarify this. The required proposals will be prepared for legislation on the Defence Forces on how national security can be improved in filling professional military positions, and when an individual applies for training leading to a professional officer’s commission.”

Read the full story here.

One of the biggest unanswered questions of the YLE story concerning dual nationals is if it is discriminatory.

Continue reading “Restrictions by the defense forces on dual nationals is discriminatory and should be forcefully rejected”

Trump’s USAmerica and populist parties in Europe have given us a choice: democracy or demagoguery

Posted on January 31, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Over the weekend I had the opportunity to chat in Brussels with Wouter Van Bellingen, the first black deputy mayor of Belgium and prominent a civil rights activist against cases like Black Pete. Some of the topics we touched upon were the future of Europe in light of the rise of far-right populist parties and the start of President Donald Trump’s mandate in the White House.

One thing we agreed on was that people in Europe and the United States are faced with two choices. “At the end of the day we are faced with a choice,” he said, “either you are on the side of democracy or you’re not.”

By “populist demagoguery,” we not only mean Trump but far-right European politicians like Harald Vilimsky of the Austrian FPÖ, Matteo Salvini of the Italian Lega Nord, Gert Wilders of the PVV of Holland, Marine Le Pen of Front Nationale, and Germany’s Frauke Petry of AfD as well as others.

Such politicians above have little to no respect for cultural diversity because their political ideology is based on perpetuating white supremacy and privilege.

I must admit that I’ve been left speechless by Trump’s first week in the White House and how it threatens our core democratic pluralist values and world peace.  The recent executive order to ditch the entire US refugee program and ban Muslims from traveling to the US from seven countries is one terrifying example.

Continue reading “Trump’s USAmerica and populist parties in Europe have given us a choice: democracy or demagoguery”

Detained Iraqi asylum seeker SH: “I hope to go back to work”

Posted on January 30, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Today Iraqi asylum seeker SH, who was detained with KM on January 6, has been detained at Helsinki’s Metsälä immigration removal center for 24 days. SH said that he was interviewed today by the Finnish Immigration Service (Migri) concerning his new asylum application. 

“We didn’t talk about my release from here because that wasn’t the aim of the interview with Migri,” he said by phone. “My lawyer will apply for a new work permit because the existing one expires on February 10.”

The balcony of the immigration removal center where SH takes a smoking break. YLE published a story about his case on Friday.

SH believes that he’ll be released after the lawyer proves to the authorities that there is no reason for keeping him detained.

Continue reading “Detained Iraqi asylum seeker SH: “I hope to go back to work””

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