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Warka iska waran Turku

Posted on August 20, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Magaalada Turku ee dalka Finland ayaa maanta lagu soo gaba-gabeeyay shir looga hadlayay fursadaha ay dadka Somaaliyeed uhaystaan iney ganacsi ka sameystaan dalkan,   waxaana kasoo qeyb galay xubno katirsan dowladda Finland,  jaaliyaddaha Soomaalida dalkan Finland  iyo qurbajoog kale oo ka yimid dalalka kale ee Yurub.

Barnaamijkan oo loogu magac daray Iska Waran ayaa soconayay mudo labo maalin ah, waxaana lagu soo bandhigayaa arrimo ay ka mid yihiin qaabka ay Soomaalidu ula qabsatay  nolosha Finland gaar ahaan dhanka shaqadda iyo waxbarashada.


Read the full story here.

Sidoo kale Intii uu socday  shirkan waxaa lagu soo bandhigay tirada bulshadda Soomaaliyeed ee ku nool Finland oo isugu jira kuwa dalkan qaxooti ahaan kusoo galay iyo kuwa ku dhashay.

Continue reading “Warka iska waran Turku”

Migrants and minorities fear that Turku will fuel more hostility and racism in Finland

Posted on August 19, 2017 by Migrant Tales

After the deadly terrorist attack in Barcelona Thursday, some expected the worse in Finland when the following day a young man stabbed indiscriminately ten people who killed two, according to YLE News. The police confirmed on Saturday that what happened was a terrorist attack. 

According to YLE, the suspect is an eighteen-year-old Moroccan citizen.


 

Read the full story here.

At a press conference held Friday at 7 pm in Turku, Interior Minister Paula Risikko talked about “a foreign-looking” person as the prime suspect even if she could not yet confirm his identity.

Whenever Finland uses the term “foreign-looking” or “person of foreign origin” it is code for non-white European.

Continue reading “Migrants and minorities fear that Turku will fuel more hostility and racism in Finland”

Nuku rauhassa -hanke hyökkää kansalaisia vastaan

Posted on August 17, 2017 by Reija Härkönen

”Koska kriisi päättyy – vai päättyykö koskaan? Se on sinusta kiinni.”

Tämä lause on Maahanmuuttoviraston apulaispäällikkö Raimo Pyysalon kirjoituksesta Nuku rauhassa –kampanjan sivulla. Hanke on osa Suomen 100-vuotisjuhlakampanjaa, tekijöinä ovat vapaaehtoiset maanpuolustus- ja veteraanijärjestöt ja eri viranomaiset, mm. sisäministeriö, puolustusministeriö, puolustusvoimat, rajavartiolaitos, tulli, poliisi ja pelastustoimi.

nukurauhassa

Kampanjan teemana on NUKU RAUHASSA – jotta Suomessa kaikki voivat nukkua rauhassa. Hankkeen päätapahtuma on Helsingin Kansalaistorilla ja Töölönlahdella huomenna ja ylihuomenna 18.–19.8.

Pyysalo puhuu kirjoituksessaan maahanmuuttokriisistä. Yleistä järjestystä ja turvallisuuttahan heikensi pakolaisten saapuessa rasistijoukkioiden järjestämä häirintä polttopulloiskuineen. Näistä Pyysalo pitää tarpeellisena mainita, että vähäisiä olivat. Yhteiskuntarauhan vaarantajiksi Pyysalo on löytänyt aivan toisen tahon. Hän todistelee aluksi, kuinka toimivia järjestelmämme ja valitusten käsittelyprosessi ovat:

”Suomessa on toimiva oikeusjärjestelmä. Maahanmuuttovirasto tekee itsenäisesti päätökset vastuullaan olevista asioista. Näistä ratkaisuista voi valittaa hallinto-oikeuteen. Seuraavana valitusasteena on Korkein hallinto-oikeus. Laillisuuden täyttyminen varmistuu käsittelyprosessissa. Tilanne lähtömaissa voi muuttua nopeastikin ja osa päätöksistä palautuukin uudelleen käsittelyyn olosuhdemuutosten vuoksi. Virheellisiä päätöksiä on vähän, suhteessa samaa luokkaa kuin ennen kriisiä.”

Mutta kuinkas ollakaan: valittaminen onkin väärää toimintaa, valittajat ovat uhka yhteiskuntarauhalle, pakolaiset pitäisi saada nopeasti ulos maasta tekemästä äärimmäisiä ratkaisuja:

”Turvapaikkakriisi on jäänyt kytemään. Käytännössä kaikista kielteisistä turvapaikkapäätöksistä on valitettu. Hallinto-oikeudet ovat tehostaneet toimintaansa samoin kuin Korkein hallinto-oikeuskin. Silti valitusten käsittely kestää vuoden 2018 keväälle asti. Tuhannet ratkaisua odottavat asianomaiset jatkavat elämäänsä vastaanoton piirissä epävarmoina tulevaisuudestaan. Henkinen kuormitus on raskas ja altistaa äärimmäisille ratkaisuille.”

Continue reading “Nuku rauhassa -hanke hyökkää kansalaisia vastaan”

Why do some schools in Finland ask if a pupil is “a person of migrant origin?”

Posted on August 17, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Sari Pöyhönen, who wrote in an op-ed piece in Helsingin Sanomat this week, asked why some schools in Finland ask parents if they are migrants, a person with a migrant origin, refugee, returnee, immigrant, temporarily in the country or asylum seeker. It is a good question considering that placing people into such groups is in general illegal in Finland.

“Asking such questions like what is a parent’s background is conflictive and confusing,” she explained. “What group does a child belong to if he or she was born in Finland and the parents were born abroad? What about if the pupil were adopted from overseas and the parents are Finns?”

Pöyhönen, who is a professor at the University of Jyväskylä with expertise in areas like language education policies, migration policy, identity & belonging, refugee & asylum seeker narratives, among others, said that such questions about a parent’s background are not only done at schools in Central Finland.

“I got contacted by a person from Inkoo [in southern Finland], and this suggests that the practice is widespread and has been going on for some time,” she added.


Read the full story here.

Pöyhönen’s asks in the op-ed: “As a guardian, I wonder why a school needs such information about a pupil’s background. What type of pedagogical and administrative policies are made from such information?”

The questionnaire is confusing for many reasons. What is the different between a refugee and asylum seeker?

Continue reading “Why do some schools in Finland ask if a pupil is “a person of migrant origin?””

After detention for 27 days in Finland, Iraqi asylum seeker gets rejection for work permit after half-a-year wait

Posted on August 16, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Remember an Iraqi asylum seeker called Hayder Al-Hatemi who was detained for 27 days from January 6-February 2 pending a deportation order? He applied for a work permit on February 6 shortly after his release and had learned at the beginning of August that it had been turned down. 

Al-Hatemi said that the bakery where he is employed had opened another branch and needs workers.

“The reason why I got [my work permit] turned down is that they state that Finns can do my job and because there is unemployment in Southern Finland,” he said. “The owner of the bakery put ads in the paper but no Finn applied. At work, we’re 17 employees from countries like Iran, Iraq, Estonia, Russia  and only two Finns.”

Despite the treatment that Al-Hatemi has received from the Finnish Immigration Service (Migri), he said that he’d still come to Finland and apply for asylum.

“I would come to this country again because the Finns I have met are nice,” he continued. “The people are friendly, but it’s another story if we talk about Migri and the government.”


Read the full story here.

Al-Hatemi already has four rejections for asylum and one for a work permit.

“I probably have the world record in Finland for the most rejections,” he said with a pinch of humor.

Continue reading “After detention for 27 days in Finland, Iraqi asylum seeker gets rejection for work permit after half-a-year wait”

Iraqi asylum seeker in Finland foils deportation attempt

Posted on August 15, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Haidar Isam of the #righttolife demonstration said that the deportation of an Iraqi asylum seeker was stopped today shortly before a Turkish Airline flight was set to leave Helsinki-Vantaa Airport. 

The asylum seeker, who came to Finland in autumn 2015 to search for refuge and a new life, created such a scene that the pilot and three ordered them off the plane.

Migrant Tales has published many stories about how asylum seekers and deportations. One of these is a video by w2eu.info that tells asylum seekers what to do inside an airplane if they are being deported

Isam was happy about the failed deportation attempt.

“Is this the humanity that Finland speaks of?” he said. “This is one case but the struggle to stop deportations continues.”

Two videos below taken of Haidar just before the plane was about to leave Finland.

One policeman states that “he’s just following orders” while the asylum seeker asks if this is justice?

“We came to Finland to seek shelter, and now you are sending us to our death,” he said, adding that he hoped the United Nations and other government could see what is happening.

See the second video of the foiled deportation here.

Continue reading “Iraqi asylum seeker in Finland foils deportation attempt”

Reija Härkönen: Äänestitkö takuunuivaa viime vaaleissa?

Posted on August 14, 2017 by Migrant Tales
Vuoden 2012 kuntavaaleissa Simon Elo, Perussuomalaisten nuorten puheenjohtaja, kävi ”takuunuivaa” vaalikampanjaa Espoossa. Ja tuli valituksi, rasistien äänillä, kuten myös seuraavissa eduskuntavaaleissa v. 2015.

Simon Elo takuunuiva

Kun Elo nyt vilpitöntä ja selkärankaista esittäen julistaa mediassa, että nyhtöpersuissa ei rasismia sallita eikä kiihottamisesta kansanryhmää vastaan tuomittu voi toimia, lienee parasta muistuttaa häntä itseäänkin, millainen hänen poliittinen taustansa on. Näiden tekstien avulla hän on äänensä hankkinut.

Simon Elon vaalikampanjoinnissa ja vaalien välisessä kirjoittelussa Halla-aho on ollut varsin näkyvässä asemassa. Halla-ahon teesit, termit, valheet ja liioittelut täysin omaksunut Elo ei edes ole tuntunut omaavan mitään omaa poliittista agendaa. Jotain sinistä, jotain lainattua…

Simon Elo takuunuiva 2

Tämä teksti Elolla on edelleen tallessa kotisivuillaan. Ei ole siis mitään syytä epäillä, etteikö ”halla-aholainen” politiikka jatkuisi:

”Suomalaisuus

Terve ja myönteinen suomalaiskansallinen itsetunto antaa espoolaisille vankan perustan kanssakäymiseen monimuotoisen maailman kanssa. Tulijat täytyy sopeuttaa kokonaisvaltaisesti, jotta he kokevat olevansa ensisijaisesti identiteetiltään suomalaisia ja espoolaisia. Julkisin verovaroin ei tule rahoittaa vähemmistöidentiteettejä. Maassa maan tavalla.

Espoo on kirjannut ylhäältä alaspäin johdetun monikulttuurisuuden viralliseen ohjelmaansa. Tällaiset maininnat täytyy poistaa vahingollisina, sillä tulija vaihtaa kotimaansa uuteen maahan siksi, että hän uskoo kohdemaan olevan parempi paikka asua ja elää.

Espoossa täytyy selvittää mitkä ovat maahanmuuton aiheuttamat todelliset kokonaiskustannukset. Tulevaisuudessa maahanmuutosta ja maahanmuuttajista syntyvien kulujen kohdalle tulee merkitä talouslaskelmissa esimerkiksi m-koodi, joka helpottaa kulujen seuraamista. Espoossa ei pidä sallia minkäänlaisia etnisiin kiintiöihin tai “positiiviseen syrjintään” perustuvia käytäntöjä.

Valtuutettuna lupaan tehdä kaikkeni, että Espoosta ei tehdä Suomen Göteborgia tai Malmötä, joita vaivaa turvattomuus ja kansanryhmien eriytyminen. Ruotsin monikulttuurinen tie ei ole meidän tiemme.”

Simob Elo tosi nuiva

Uuden Suomen Puheenvuoro on ollut hyvin suopea rasistipersujen kirjoittelulle ja varmasti paljonkin edesauttanut heidän poliittista uraansa. Tämä Simon Elon teksti elokuulta 2012 oli kuitenkin jostain syystä poistettu:

Continue reading “Reija Härkönen: Äänestitkö takuunuivaa viime vaaleissa?”

US President Donald Trump’s Finnish “tolkun” moment and his mixed response to far-right violence

Posted on August 13, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Three people died in the wake of a demonstration by white supremacists, neo-Nazis and Ku Klux Klan members clashed Saturday with anti-racism activists when the white nationalists planned a rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. The rally saw a car being deliberately driven into a crowd of people that killed one person and left at least 19 others injured.  

The other two fatalities were policemen who died in a helicopter crash.

After what happened at the demonstration, we saw US President Donald Trump have his tolkun moment. Instead of challenging the white supremacists in Virginia, Trump went on to “condemn violence from all sides.”

Sounds familiar?

President Sauli Niinistö, who is no friend of cultural diversity, mentioned the term tolkun ihminen in February 2016 and how two extremes dominate the present debate on asylum seekers, migrants, and our ever-growing cultural diversity. Such a simplistic affirmation has not helped to challenge racism but has fueled it and even encouraged politicians like Interior Minister Paula Risikko to visit a far-right Finland First demonstration this year and give them the thumbs up.

While it’s easy to identify who the far-right extremists are, the “tolkun ihminen” analogy, who are the others? Are they those who fight against racism and bigotry? President Niinistö hasn’t given us a clue.

Like the song about a supposed silent majority living in Muskogee, Oklahoma, disgraced and impeached US President Richard Nixon claimed that such a majority backed his embattled presidency.

If we are to challenge racism, bigotry, far-right populism and extremism, we need leadership from politicians and the public instead of mixed messages that pander to such groups.

What about if President Niinistö or Interior Minister Risikko took Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe’s speech to heart after what happened in his state over the weekend?

Continue reading “US President Donald Trump’s Finnish “tolkun” moment and his mixed response to far-right violence”

The Finnish Immigration Service’s way of saying “this country isn’t your home”

Posted on August 12, 2017 by Migrant Tales

I got a call Friday from a Migrant Tales longtime reader who came to Finland as a child and is in his mid-30s today. “Could you tell me what this message (by the Finnish Immigration Service or Migri) means?!” he asked. “If they send me back to my country I won’t know what to do. I’ll kill myself [before being deported].”

The slip that the longtime reader received from Migri reads:

The bearer of this document can reside lawfully in Finland until a legal decision is made to renew (his residence permit) or deport the person from the country.*

How is it possible that a person who grew up most of his life and lived his adult life in Finland received such a statement by Migri? And then our policy-makers wonder why people are marginalized and excluded from society.

Finland in general and Migri, in particular, should stop their hostile stand on cultural diversity and take a few courses on how customer service.

The first important policy decision that officials should make is to help people feel at home in this country instead of like eternal outsiders. It shouldn’t be code for “this country isn’t your home.”

In the so-called “good old days” of the 1980s, migrants were not only given temporary residence permits but had at one time to apply for a work permit for each employer.  Source: piknu.com.

* Todistuksen haltija voi oleskella laillisesti Suomessa asiankäsittelyn ajan kunnes asia on lainvoimaisesti ratkaistu tai on tehty täytäntöönpanokelpoinen päätös hakijan maasta poistamiseksi.

 

 

Facebook Nuor Dawood: Leaving to a country that doesn’t deport children, pregnant women and asylum seekers

Posted on August 10, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Migrant Tales insight: Nuor Dawood states perfectly in the Facebook posting below what too many asylum seekers feel in Finland. History will not forget Finland or the European Union for its total lack of empathy. 

In many respects, it’s the same attitude and indifference that permitted the Holocaust to happen in the 1940s. Just put them in box cars or on plans today. The Finnish Immigration Service and the government of Prime Juha Sipilä can do the dirty work in our name. 

#humanityfailedinfinland

 



Read the original posting here.
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