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Category: Enrique Tessieri

Soon-to-be deported SH opens new asylum case and is confident he won’t be forcibly sent to Iraq

Posted on January 15, 2017 by Migrant Tales

SH is one of the three asylum seekers that were detained on January 6 by the police and sent from Turku to the Metsälä detention center in Helsinki a week ago to await deportation. Since then, KM was released Thursday but SH and another Iraqi asylum seeker, AM, are still at the detention center. 

SH, who was detained a week ago in Turku with KM and was set to be deported to Iraq on Monday, spoke Saturday evening to Migrant Tales by phone.

KM and SH were detained in Turku by the police. They were residents of the asylum reception center in Laitila, located in southwest Finland.    Source: FRB-I.

“I have opened a new case,” he said. “Now I can leave the camp and this will stop my deportation.”

When asked why he wasn’t released like KM, SH said that it was probably because it is the weekend. He is hopeful that he will be released soon if not Monday.

Migrant Tales will follow SH’s and AM’s case. We hope that they will be released from detention as soon as possible.

We hope that they will be released from detention as soon as possible.

Who’s responsible for the spike in hate crimes in Finland?

Posted on January 14, 2017 by Migrant Tales

National Police Commissioner Seppo Kolehmainen states that there is an upsurge in hate crimes in Finland, according to YLE News. He states that those hate crimes that are reported to the police service are only the tip of the iceberg. Is Kolehmainen being disingenuous? Why doesn’t mention he state clearly that politicians and political parties are polarizing society and emboldening racists?   

The national police commissioner states that one of the problems is that victims are reluctant to file a complaint to the police service. And why would they? It takes months, if not a near-eternity, for the police to get in touch with you.

Migrant Tales reported in May a case when a white Finnish woman insulted in a racist manner and threw a bucket of water on a Kenyan woman who lives in Helsinki. Still today the police and the non-discrimination ombudsman have not been in touch with the victim.

The latest sentences for hate speech – all present or former Perussuomalaiset (PS)* politicians – of MP Teuvo Hakkarainen, Tampere city councilor Terhi Kiemunki, Olli Sademies, Sebastian Tynkkynen and many others are an example of where part of the problem originates.

Continue reading “Who’s responsible for the spike in hate crimes in Finland?”

In twenty years the Finnish Sports Gala still portrays an all-white image that remains stuck in an ethnic time warp

Posted on January 13, 2017 by Migrant Tales

How many visible minorities do you see in the picture below at the recent award committee of the Finnish Sports Gala? In the picture below lies the clear answer of the failure of integration sports policies in Finland for the last 20 years: All of the people in the picture are white! 

The ministry of education and culture instigated a program for greater cultural diversity in 1997 but twenty years later there is not one single minority or non-white Finn in the event below.

What makes the picture below amazing is that the organizing committee of the Finnish Sports Gala lacks sensitivity in even trying to have at least one visible minority in the picture below.
If there is a picture that shows obstinacy and denial of cultural and ethnic diversity in sports in Finland, it is without a doubt the one below.

Can you find one visible minority in the picture?
 

Iraqi asylum seeker KM who was set to be deported on Monday was released today

Posted on January 12, 2017 by Migrant Tales

KM, one of three Iraqi asylum seekers that Finland planned to deport Monday with SH and AM, was released today after the district supreme court decided to review his case. 

“I feel horrible,” he told Migrant Tales shortly after he was released. “A man came to the room [where I was detained in Metsälä] and asked if I was KM. He said I can go free.”

KM, seen in the picture, was released today from detention.

KM said he felt “horrible” because two of his Iraqi friends were still being held at the Metsälä detention camp.

Migrant Tales will continue to follow and update the plight of the three Iraqi asylum seekers.

As deportations start to pick up in Finland since the beginning of the year so has fear among Iraqi and other asylum seekers

Posted on January 10, 2017 by Migrant Tales

The news of the detention on Friday and deportation order on Sunday of two Iraqi asylum seekers, KM and SH, came to a shock to many asylum seekers in Finland. We suspect at Migrant Tales that deporting more people to Iraq this year is a ploy used by the Finnish Immigration Service and Prime Minister Juha Sipilä’s government to instill fear among asylum seekers. 

Migrant Tales has heard unconfirmed reports that four other Iraqi asylum seekers were detained by the police and will be deported.

Boiata commented in Migrant Tales the following about the two Iraqi asylum seekers’ cases:

“Most of the persons deported from Finland are sent to countries with which Finland has not deportation agreement or arrangement. What is strange in [the] Iraqis’ case is that why, now, suddenly, it is possible to deport failed asylum seekers to Iraq when it was not possible, before.”

I spoke to KM today and, despite everything that has happened since Friday, he was in good spirits.

KM speaking about his case in a video at the Metsälä detention center in Helsinki where he was sent Sunday. KM states in the video that he’s not a criminal and doesn’t why he’s being locked up by the police service. He said that he came to Finland to find peace.

The police cell in Turku where KM and SH were held from Friday to Sunday. Source: FRB-1.

After some investigation, it appears that Finland doesn’t – like the comment by Boiata states – need to have a repatriation agreement with any country to deport people.

Even so, we consider it exceptionally unfair and inhumane to deport people back to a country that has seen hundreds of thousands of deaths, near-constant bombings and instability after the US-led invasion in 2003.

There are some questions about who can and cannot be deported from Finland and what can be done if you are still in the country:

  • Don’t let the authorities intimidate you as is probably happening now as deportations start to pick up from the beginning of the year;
  • since you need a travel document to go to Iraq, some claim that not having a passport or hiding it from the authorities can possibly slow the deportation process;
  • the police have KM’s and SH’s passports and this is why they are going to be deported against their will;
  • one reader that got in touch with Migrant Tales Monday said that the only way to stop forced deportations from Finland is to get the Iraqi government and/or Iraqi ambassador in Finland to state clearly that Iraq will not accept any persons who are deported against their will;
  • in 2012 the Iraqi parliament voted against accepting deported Iraqis from Europe;
  • since the Finnish police service keeps a tight secret on the whole deportation process from Finland to Iraq, unconfirmed reports of asylum seekers in Sweden that were deported to Iraq refused to get off the airplane and were then flown back to Sweden;
  • go to the European Court of Human Rights and get a similar ruling as in August that returning an Iraqi family to Iraq and who sought asylum in Sweden would result in “inhumane or degrading treatment.”

If you have any advice you would like to share with us to help stop these forced deportations, please get in touch with [email protected]

 

Two Iraqi asylum seekers get deportation order from judge and will be flown to Iraq “in two weeks”

Posted on January 8, 2017 by Migrant Tales

A judge in the city of Turku decided today that Iraqi asylum seeker KM will be deported “in two weeks” from Finland. KM told Migrant Tales by phones that he didn’t know about the fate of his friend, SH, who was detained by police on Friday. KM’s lawyer has made an appeal to the supreme administrative court concerning his case. 

SH was due to visit the judge shortly after KM. It is highly probable that he got a deportation order from the judge as well.

“The hearing [with the judge] lasted only 5-7 minutes,” he said. “She [the judge] said that I would be transferred to a prison in Vantaa [the correct place is Metsälä in Helsinki] before being sent back to Iraq in two weeks.”

KM threatened on Friday that he’d take his life if he were sent back to Iraq.

“I’ve lost everything,” he said shortly after today’s visit with the judge.

KM’s lawyer said that the only way to stop the deportation order is if the supreme administrative court accepts the asylum seeker’s appeal.

“The police don’t tell us where [what part of Iraq] they are going to deport KM,” the lawyer said. “It’s still unclear.”

Read the full story here.

Migrant Tales will continue to report on the case.

Judge to decide Sunday whether two Iraqi asylum seekers will be forcibly deported

Posted on January 8, 2017 by Migrant Tales

KM, the Iraqi asylum seeker that has been detained by the police in Turku, will see a judge today that will decide whether to deport him and his friend, SH, forcibly back to Iraq. 

“I’m ok, I feel fine,” he said with a sure voice over the phone. “I’m going to see the judge soon. I’ll call you back [after I meet with him].”

KM said on Friday that if they force him to return back to Iraq he will take his life.

“I cannot return to Iraq because the problems I have with the militia,” he said.

Some Iraqis that have come to Finland as asylum seekers are surprised and shocked by the country’s hardline policy towards refugees.

Eurostat statistics from the third quarter on positive asylum decisions show that Finland is in the same tough refugee policy league as Slovakia, Poland, Hungary, Greece, Ireland, UK and Iceland. In the quarter under review, only 21% of asylum applications in Finland got approval versus Sweden that gave 71% of applicants refugee status.

Migrant Tales will continue to report on KM’s and another Iraqi asylum seeker’s case.

Read the full story here.

Why do the Finnish police deport Iraqi asylum seekers if there is no repatriation agreement with Baghdad?

Posted on January 6, 2017 by Migrant Tales

In early December, National Police Board Chief Superintendent Mia Poutanen was quoted as saying in YLE News it is “a false notion” that Finland needs a repatriation agreement with a country like Iraq to deport somebody. Migrant Tales got in touch with an Iraqi asylum seeker who is being detained and risks deportation. 

KM and his friend SH were detained Friday at their asylum reception center in Laitila, located 60km north of Turku. It was in Raisio where they were apprehended by the police and taken to Turku, where they are awaiting a judge’s decision on Sunday or Monday if they will be deported or can remain in the country.

KM* and SH* have two negative decisions from the Finnish Immigration Service concerning their application for asylum.

KM is a young Iraqi being taken in a squad car to a police station in Turku from Laitila.

“We were held by the police today because they claimed that we wanted to leave the country,” KM told Migrant Tales by phone. “This is not true. We have no plans to leave Finland. I’m ready to cooperate with the authorities.”

Continue reading “Why do the Finnish police deport Iraqi asylum seekers if there is no repatriation agreement with Baghdad?”

Undocumented migrants in Finland: Päivi Nerg lives in denial, politicians live in denial as do the media and most of the country, too

Posted on January 6, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Finnish immigration policy in general and asylum policy, in particular, is a good example of the decades-long suspicion that Finland’s political establishment has of outsiders. If some words could be used to describe the present state of things, it could be “not my problem” and “denial.” 

That statement, not my issue, reveals a lot about ourselves as a society and our capacity to live with difference.

The ongoing debate in the media about undocumented migrants is a case in point. Few if any newspapers blame the ever-growing number of undocumented migrants on the politicians who voted in favor of doing away with in April of residence permits on humanitarian grounds.

By doing away with this option, parliament forced the number of undocumented migrants to rise from a few hundred to the thousands. In other words and in plain English, the politicians and government have created the ever-growing undocumented migrant problem in Finland.

We all know that populism means simple solutions to complex problems. The government, which comprises of the Center Party, National Coalition Party (NCP), and Perussuomalaiset (PS)*, believes in simple solutions to complex problems in areas like migration.

The vote to do away with residence permits on humanitarian grounds is a case in point. Lobbied by the PS, the Center Party and NCP voted – together with the Social Democrats and Christian Democrats in the opposition – to do away with such a clause.

Naively, irresponsibly, ignorantly and with a dose of self-deception, the government believed that by doing away with residence permits on humanitarian grounds would solve the problem. It did not solve any problem but worsened it. In the government style, the blame for their incompetence is blamed on the victim, or in this case the asylum seeker.

Thanks to too much complacency in the media that too many continue to have major blind-spot issues with immigration, migrants and asylum seekers, officials like Päivi Nerg can appear and say with a poker face that she “is concerned about the security risk that illegal [sic] immigrants pose,” according to a story by Helsinki Times.

Read the full story here.

Continue reading “Undocumented migrants in Finland: Päivi Nerg lives in denial, politicians live in denial as do the media and most of the country, too”

Laajakoski asylum reception center gives refugees the “opportunity” to learn Finnish for 250 euros a month

Posted on January 4, 2017 by Migrant Tales

The management of the Red Cross-run Laajakoski asylum reception center located near the Finnish southeast city of Kotka is reported to have given the green light for the 250-odd refugees at the center to take Finnish-language courses for 250 euros a month. 

Yes, you read correctly, 250 euros! Even if this includes room and board for six hours of Finnish-language courses daily from Monday to Friday, it would imply living off 66 euros on weekends since an asylum seekers’ monthly allowance at Laajakoski is 316 euros/month.

If there are eight days in four weekends each month, an asylum seeker would have to get by on 8.25 euros/day.

Migrant Tales understands that not too many asylum seekers at the reception center were interested in the proposal. Why would you want to study on an island in Hamina or some remote place between Hamina and Kotka if the majority are going to get their asylum applications turned down by the Finnish Immigration Service (Migri)?

Moreover, courses for asylum seekers are being arranged in other cities at no cost to the person. Why is Laajakoski an exception?

Is this a bad joke or rubbing salt into these asylum seekers’ wounds by the manager, Saija Makkonen, and deputy manager, Tiina Mesola?

Continue reading “Laajakoski asylum reception center gives refugees the “opportunity” to learn Finnish for 250 euros a month”

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