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Finland and the PS: The face of racism becomes uglier as it ages

Posted on January 18, 2015 by Migrant Tales

The Perussuomalaiset (PS)* in general and specifically MPs like Juho Eerola, Olli Immonen and Teuvo Hakkarainen are, together with MEP Jussi Halla-aho, examples of the worst kind of extremism and racism we can find in Finland today in the halls of our parliament. They are permitted to spread their racist and bigoted views because they have white Finnish privilege. 

Disagree? Ask yourself what would happen if a Muslim spoke of white Finns in the same way as these politicians do about Muslims.

The Charlie Hebdo attack exposed a lot of things about us. Apart from our shock and grieving, it also unmasked our hypocrisy.

In Finland it exposed once again the opportunism of some PS politicians but also their extremist ideas and declaration of war against those migrants and Finns they loathe, like Muslims.

Racism in its most extreme forms has a goal: the annihilation of whole groups through genocide. We saw this when Europeans colonized the Americas, Africa and other regions like Australia. With the help of pseudo scientific “theories” like eugenics, Europeans were able to justify genocide or the displacement, exploitation and death of millions of non-Europeans.

What are we to make out of the following statements below by PS politicians before and after the Charlie Hebdo attack?

  • Eerola, who admitted being attracted to Benito Mussolini’s fascism and economic policies, states in a letter to the editor below that Finland can still be saved from Islam;
  • Immonen wants immigration from Muslim countries to end to Finland and Europe. Those Muslims that live here should be given incentives to return back to the countries they came from, according to him;
  • MEP Halla-aho states on his blog that the world view of the majority of Muslims is no different from those that carried out the Charlie Hebdo attack;
  • Hakkarainen claimed in 2013 that Europe is being invaded by millions of Muslims in a Trojan horse.

Näyttökuva 2015-1-18 kello 10.03.00

This tweet by Saska Saarikoski of Helsingin Sanomat says it all about Halla-aho and his cronies. “Halla-aho is worried about terrorism. Let’s not forget that the worst terrorist act [Anders Breivik on July 22, 2011] committed in the Nordic region was by a person who admired Halla-aho.”

 

How are we supposed to read these types of statements by members of Finland’s third-largest party in parliament? Should we shrug them off as populism or something more diabolical?

What do these politicians aim to gain from their extremist statements? More votes? Maybe. Media attention? Maybe. Keep Finland Christian and white? Absolutely.

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Read full story here.

 

What can you say about a politician and a party whose aim is to socially exclude whole groups of people with the help of those high walls of racism?

Probably one matter that we can conclude is that Finland is still in deep denial. It hasn’t yet awoken to the perils of intolerance and doesn’t have a clue why spreading such hatred is hazardous to our society.

Since too many in this country don’t see intolerance as a serious enough social ill, it requires a lot more leadership from Finns and migrants of all backgrounds. It would be naive to believe that the ugly face of racism will leave quietly and peacefully.

Time has the ability to expose our stupidity and ignorance. How do you think future scholars and common people of our culturally diverse society will interpret the statements of politicians that aim to keep Finland white at all cost? Will the faces of their grandchildren and great grandchildren turn red with shame?

This is exactly what happened to the worst racists in the US Civil Rights Movement (1955-68).

Most USAmericans want to forget what was done and said during slavery and the Jim Crow era.

The same fate awaits these politicians.

 

* The Finnish name for the Finns Party is the Perussuomalaiset (PS). The names adopted by the PS, like True Finns or Finns Party, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and xenophobia. We therefore prefer to use the Finnish name of the party on our postings. 

Fatbardhe Hetemaj: Who will speak up for us if you don’t?

Posted on January 17, 2015 by Migrant Tales

Fatbardhe Hetemaj is a promising National Coalition Party Helsinki city councilwoman who moved to Finland at the age of seven. Since people like Hetemaj are becoming more common in Finland as we become a more culturally and ethnically diverse society, it is important that they speak out against discrimination and promote tolerance and respect for other groups.   

Hetemaj came to Finland with her family as a quota refugee from Kosovo. She was named in 2009 as the Refugee Woman of the Year.

In a letter to the editor on Helsingin Sanomat, Hetemaj unfortunately uses the same arguments and language that anti-immigration politicians use and which she criticizes in her piece.

The headline, which claims that immigration is “a problem,” is the first matter that catch’s your eye. While Helsingin Sanomat decides on the headline, it does represent pretty well what Hetemaj wrote.

For those who have been following the debate on immigration and migrants in this country know that it revolves too much around the assumption that immigration and immigrants are “problems” instead of an asset. Even if unemployment is two- to three-times higher among immigrants than the national average, the vast majority of migrants that live in this country work, pay taxes and lead normal lives.

Fueling such an urban tale, that migrants should be treated as a problem, does tremendous harm to the whole migrant and New Finn community. How can you resolve a problem if those judging you see you in almost the same light as an illness?

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Read full letter to the editor here.

 

Probably the most incredible statement made by the National Coalition Party councilwoman is that migrants that move to Finland should sign a contract to ensure they’ll respect our laws. She also claims that we should only accept those types of migrants that respect our laws and have a good chance of adapting to our country.

Apart from suggesting that migrants are prone not respect our laws and therefore must sign a contract, in which countries is such a contract mandatory? The contract for migrants that Hetemaj supports reveals more her prejudices and simplistic views about migrants.

Migrant Tales has great respect for all those who excel in our society. Hetemaj is a good example that second-generation Finns or third-culture members of our society can succeed as well.

One of the important matters to remember as our society becomes more culturally and ethnically diverse is that we do not forget our own roots and identity. Moreover, our country is a Nordic welfare state that speaks of two-way not one-way adaption, or assimilation.

We hope that Hetemaj won’t forget to speak up for those who don’t have and are in need of a voice in this society.

 

 

Institute of Race Relations: Where monoculturalism leads

Posted on January 16, 2015 by Migrant Tales

Migrant Tales insight: This perception or problem, monoculturalism, is affecting Finland as well. It explains why an anti-immigration party like the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* can raise the number of MPs in four years from 5 in 2007 to 39 in 2011. It explains why there is so little interest to tackle institutional racism and why so many are colorblind. 

The opinion pice below gives us more insights in understanding the lack of cultural diversity. 

________________

Liz Fekete

As France grieves for those whose lives have been so brutally taken, and more emergency and counter-radicalisation measures are discussed, the future for a peaceful Europe rests on how our leaders diagnose the problems that we collectively face.

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Read full story here.

 

It may seem counter-intuitive, but far from suffering from an excess of multiculturalism, European thought and culture are suffering from too much monoculturalism. And as Simone de Beauvoir, Sartre, Camus, Fanon and all the great intellectuals who once strode like giants over French culture knew, a Europe that does not understand ‘the Other’ does not understand itself.

Following the events of 9/11, all European countries re-aligned their ‘race’ policies towards an assimilationist, monocultural approach to integration. The ‘colour-blind’ approach to integration (in the UK, Eric Pickles calls it ‘mainstreaming’), was no approach at all, and, in France, where ethnic monitoring is illegal and assimilation is the norm, the problems of discrimination and police racism were simply ignored. As long as the youths fouled their own nest, and violence was turned inwards, the Socialists and the Union for a Popular Movement paid little attention. No French government of whatever political colour has ever acknowledged the structured racism faced by those living in the banlieues, nor attempted to check aggressive policing, particularly around identity checks. And this despite, year in year out, urban unrest and rioting.

The Front National leader Marine Le Pen has called for the reinstatement of the death penalty, but many young people have come to believe that French police, who are armed, already operate an undeclared policy of lethal neutralisation. Most of these ‘riots’ came in response to a police shooting or a death in police custody, of which there have been literally hundreds in France over the last three decades (and at least 127 between 2000 and 2014, according to ‘Urgence notre police assassine’), for which no police officer has ever been held to account. These were spontaneous uprisings but in recent years no progressive movement has emerged to direct the anger. Gone are the national movements for social justice that once characterised the banlieues, such as the Marche des Beurs, or the more recent Social Forum of the Banlieues. As left politics was dissipated, angry youngsters, feeling both abandoned and/or manipulated by the ‘official’ anti-racist movements and constantly harassed and racially abused by the police (and by Sarkozy, who called them ‘scum’), found in street life and hustling, and then, in a kind of ghetto Salafism, a means of existence. Just look at all the profiles of the recent ‘terrorists’ in France – from Mohammed Merah to Amédy Coulibaly. They started out as juvenile delinquents, drug pushers and petty criminals, subsequently radicalised in prison. Chérif and Saïd Kouachi, whose French-Algerian parents died when they were 12 and 14, were subsequently raised in a French orphanage, hardly the Islamic upbringing of Nigel Farage’s nightmares. (Similarly, the British-Nigerian murderers of drummer Lee Rigby, also petty criminals, were both converts, having been brought up in a Christian household.) The profiles of all these young men are remarkably similar. Deprivation, criminality, a childhood scarred by racism and exclusion, ignorance, all these formative experiences made them all easy prey for, what David Cameron has now described as, ‘fanatical death cults’.

If Europe is to come out of its darkness, we need to name the problem for what it is. It is a problem of deprivation and alienation, and it affects many of our poor youngsters, whether neo-Nazis or jihadists. And naturally this deep and structured alienation has been made worse by the global violence, broadcast live every minute of the day, that has emanated from the war on terror and now through international fanatical movements, of whatever fundamentalist or ideological bent.

But we need to go further – Europe needs to come to terms with itself, with the violence and decay, the greed and corruption, the dissipation and anomie, at the heart of its political and intellectual life. Just as today there is a revolving door between politics and corporations, with former senior ministers and even prime ministers and Presidents sliding from office straight into lucrative jobs for themselves in the oil and security industry, journalists today are not always what they seem. Too many journalists have become ideologues. Robert Ménard, a founder and former head of Reporters Without Borders – which campaigns for press freedom – is now the FN-backed mayor of Beziers.

Nor is satire free from some of the most harmful ideologies of our times. Cartoonists serve a similar function in society to court jesters, a necessary antidote to hypocrisy, a way of laughing at ourselves. The poor massacred cartoonists of Charlie Hebdo were indeed jesters, but jesters tragically blind to the Islamophobic current they served.

Read original story here.

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

* The Finnish name for the Finns Party is the Perussuomalaiset (PS). The English names of the party adopted by the PS, like True Finns or Finns Party, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and xenophobia. We therefore prefer to use the Finnish name of the party on our postings.

PS youth league’s anti-Islam cartoon contest is all about Islamophobia in Finland

Posted on January 16, 2015 by Migrant Tales

The Youth League of the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* launched a competition to defend free speech in light of last week’s Charlie Hebdo attack, according to YLE in English. It is surprising that an anti-immigrant and especially anti-Islam party like the PS are the only ones who are organizing such a contest and so eager to defend one of our most important civil rights. 

The contest is being organized by the youth wing’s Rahvas magazine.

Writes PS youth league leader and Rahvas editor Sebastian Tynkkynen: “We are worried about the state of freedom of speech in Finland and Europe. The Islamist attacks against a magazine over caricatures have put many other publications on their toes. It is outrageous to limit press freedom and freedom of speech with threats of violence.”

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Read full story here.

One valid question that we should ask in light of the attacks in Paris is if what happened had anything to do with press freedom and if the attackers represented all Muslims.

According the Tynkkynen, the answer is in the affirmative. He stated outright that Charlie Hebdo was an “Islamist attack” even if it was widely condemned by Muslims.

Moreover, why is insulting some group testing the limits of free speech? Why would you want to insult somebody in the first place? Would we further the cause of free speech if we chose to insult conservative Christians by publishing an explicit pornographic cartoon and splashing it on the first page?

A Muslim called Jerry Reddick in Canada tested the limits of free speech after the Charlie Hebdo attack by spreading jokes on Twitter about 9/11 and the Holocaust. He is now under police investigation.

“I know you didn’t think freedom to insult worked both ways,” Reddick is quoted as saying on infowars.com. “My point about free speech being limited was made loud and clear!”

While Reddick’s tweets are tasteless and insensitive to horrendous human suffering, it shows why insulting an provoking groups is a tasteless idea. 

One matter that the PS youth league’s contest reveals is a smelly red herring. Sorry, folks. The PS youth league would care less for free speech because their real aim and interest lies in feeding their Islamophobia and prejudices.

It’s clear that Finnish politicians like their European counterparts are aiming to opportunistically exploit the Charlie Hebdo attack.

* The Finnish name for the Finns Party is the Perussuomalaiset (PS). The English names of the party adopted by the PS, like True Finns or Finns Party, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and xenophobia. We therefore prefer to use the Finnish name of the party on our postings.

The motive of a suspected migrant who killed two people in Oulu will always be shrouded in mystery

Posted on January 15, 2015 by Migrant Tales

The northern Finnish city of Oulu has seen its fair share of violence in recent years. Transexuals and city councillors are attacked, activists are pepper sprayed at gay pride events and a Muslim can be killed in cold blood in a pizzeria, while another one leaps to his death trying to escape attackers who forced their way into his apartment. 

The latest tragic news to come out of Oulu is of a roughly 35-year-old Somali who was shot dead by the police after he attacked one of them with an axe. The suspect had killed two people with an axe earlier at an Oulu pub.

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Watch news story here.

 

The police said that the motive of the killings had nothing to do with religion or politics.

In the past 10 years, the Finnish police have killed three people, according to YLE.

“Certainly the man has be be touched if he leaves home with an axe but we’ll never know what his motive for killing the two people was,” said a member of the Somali community who spoke to Migrant Tales under condition of anonymity. “Will never know the person’s side of the story.”

The first party to exploit what happened in Oulu was the anti-immigration Perussuomalaiset (PS)* party.

PS MP Teuvo Hakkarainen blamed the killings on the Social Democrats.

“In connection to the axe killings of Oulu, is this what Antti Rinne and other Social Democrats mean by [bringing] skilled migrant labor [to the country],” he was quoted as saying on Keskisuomalainen, “where ethnic Finns are killed and in their places are brought people who live off welfare and employ the public sector like the police, among others?”

 

* The Finnish name for the Finns Party is the Perussuomalaiset (PS). The English names of the party adopted by the PS, like True Finns or Finns Party, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and xenophobia. We therefore prefer to use the Finnish name of the party on our postings.

 

PS MP Packalén is still in the dark about integration and cultural identity

Posted on January 14, 2015 by Migrant Tales

The media is part of the problem when it comes to racism in Finland because it gives such people and politicians inflated respectability and importance. A good example of the problem is a story on MTV3 where Perussuomalaiset (PS)* MP Tom Packalén asks Social Democrat MP Maria Guzenina if she would root in a football match for the Russian or the Finnish team.

Guzenina’s mother is Russian.

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Read full story (in Finnish) here.

 

Packalén states that Finland should strive towards “real” integration. What the PS MP means by “real” integration is a mystery. Does Packlén mean one-way adaption or assimilation? Don’t our laws and Constitution speak of two-way adaption or integration?

The PS MP’s idea of how immigrants should adapt in Finland is no different to what Sweden Democrat party secretary Björn Söder said in December about the Saami, Jews and Kurds. He said that even if these groups have a Swedish passport they must give up their identity in order to be considered “real” Swedes.

Making comments that put into question a person’s loyalty or demote his or her status and right to be treated equally in Finland should never be tolerated by the media. This is why MTV3 was chosen as the latest addition to Migrant Tales‘ Hall of Fame of poor journalism.

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Read original posting here.

As the April parliamentary elections near, be ready to read a lot of xenophobic and racist comments by politicians like Packalén.

* The Finnish name for the Finns Party is the Perussuomalaiset (PS). The English names of the party adopted by the PS, like True Finns or Finns Party, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and xenophobia. We therefore prefer to use the Finnish name of the party on our postings.

Racism Review: Je Ne Suis Pas Charlie: A Critical View

Posted on January 13, 2015 by Migrant Tales
To be frank, the magazine Charlie Hebdo deserves criticism, not praise—despite the horrific events that have unfolded. While I am certainly not condoning the murder of its staff members, I do find them guilty of Islam-bashing and inconsiderately expressing religious intolerance, cultural ethnocentrism, and extremely poor human judgment, issues that should be important to antiracists and those who “review” racism. Additionally, being aware of the angst caused by their racist and tasteless cartoons, I find those associated with the magazines’ campaign against Islam to be instigators and un-thoughtful–not creatively satirical–people directly involved in promoting ethno-racial and religious tensions. See NPR’s 2012 story on the social problems caused by publishing the incendiary cartoons. Again, these individuals ought to be condemned as race baiters, not martyred.

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Read full story here.

 

The ridiculous display of support for ‘Charlie,’ particularly in the news media, is disconcerting and demonstrates that many people are equally as uninformed and culturally insensitive as those who promoted the anti-Islamist cartoons. Since the attack, most news outlets have ignored the racism and Islam-tarnishing of Charlie Hebdo and are in a rush to glorify the magazine and deify their racist cartoonists. Ignoring the potential of further inflaming ethno-racial tensions and promoting further anti-Muslim bigotry, a number of media giants, such as the Washington Post, have even decided to reprint the blasphemous cartoons of Muhammad in defiance of what they feel is a threat to free speech.

To state that what occurred is “an attack on free speech” is misguided and plainly ignorant. This is a destructive myth espoused by most Western media outlets in their discussion of this event. See, for example, John Avlon’s The Daily Beast article, “Why We Stand with Charlie Hebdo-And You Should Too,” which naively presents the free speech argument. What Charlie Hebdo’s anti-Islamist cartoons represent is hate images and speech, a defamation of a major world religion and culture, and an obvious attack on Muslims. To cloud this reality is intellectual dishonesty in the wake of reactionary politics.

Stoking the flames of racial hatred through dehumanizing others and their beliefs is nothing new; yet, today it is claimed that those who de-humanize certain groups are expressing their free speech or righteousness in their actions. One might ask why KKK pamphlets that demean black Americans, white nationalists’ periodicals that vilify Jews, and past campaigns of dehumanization by national groups, like the US’s racist cartoons of Japanese, are viewed as intolerable and unacceptable, yet the demonization of Muslims and Arabs is granted a pass.

Islam bashing, Islamophobia, and anti-Arab sentiments are on the rise in Europe, and particularly in France, in large part do to the de-humanizing tactics of people like those associated with Charlie Hebdo. The dehumanization and discriminatory practices of Charlie cartoons provide ammunition for the anti-Muslim intolerance endorsed by rising far right groups in Europe, like the British Freedom Party, National Front, English Defense League, Alternative for Germany, Freedom Party in Netherlands, and PEGIDA (Patriotic Europeans Against Islamization of the West), to name a few. Problematically, with the aid of people who incite discrimination against Muslims, like the cartoonists and editorial staff at Charlie Hebdo, Islamophobia is now moving from the fringes to the mainstream of European societies. (See Joshua Keating’s Slate article, “Xenophobia is Going Mainstream in Germany.”)

As Dr. Muhammad Abdul Bari notes, “the shockwave of the far right National Front polling nearly one-fifth of French voters is still reverberating. Both the socialist candidate and the incumbent president are wooing the support of Marine le Pen” (see Dr. Bari’s Aljazeera article, “Islamophobia: Europe’s’ New Political Disease.”).Indeed, after the attack, as expected, the National Front is attracting more members and support.

Of course, racist and anti-Muslim dehumanizing cartoons are but a symptom of a larger problem that is not addressed, is misdiagnosed or is inverted: European colonialism and the European-sponsored terrorism or Euroterrorism used to support this centuries-old practice. The Iraq war, Afghanistan war, and other Western-sponsored military campaigns against Muslim countries are colonialist wars in which Western powers are attempting to steal natural resources from Muslim countries and rearrange their political structure so that Western business interests might more easily exploit these countries’ people and land. The deaths of innocent Muslims at the hands of Westerners in their colonialist pursuit of profit and power is pure unadulterated terrorism of the worst kind.

Western colonialism that exploded in the late nineteenth century and has been maintained up to this day relied upon and relies upon unimpeded Westerner violence or terrorism, as a number of analysts have documented. In African Perspectives of Colonialism (1987:26-27), A. Adu Boahen explains that Europe’s late nineteenth century technological advances led by the “maxim-gun” promoted Europeans’ “sudden and forceful occupation” of African lands and set in place the “imposition of the colonial system.” Edward Said’s analysis of colonialism, Europeans’ conquest of non-Western lands, in Orientalism (1979) demonstrates that violence and terrorism associated with European colonialism, particularly the British and French versions, are physical as well as cultural and psychological, in certain cases resembling the discriminatory practices and negative imagery of “the Other” discovered in the pages of Charlie Hebdo. In The Wretched of the Earth (1963:36), Franz Fanon observes that colonialism is “marked by violence” and is characterized by “the exploitation of the native by the settler…carried on by dint of a great array of bayonets and cannons.” Undoubtedly, modern day terrorism originated and persists in the practices of Western colonialism and this fact deserves deliberation in any attempt at understanding the various non-Western terrorist acts in reaction to European terrorism.

France’s colonialist exploitation and terrorism of Muslim African nations is one of the primary reasons for the growth of “radical” Islamist groups. Rather than simply dismissing these militarized Islamist groups as anti-Western, Westerners ought to be a little smarter and ask why wouldn’t Muslims attempt to protect their people, land and culture and, in turn, oppose those who terrorize them. Who are the real terrorists? If we consider the numbers of Muslims killed or brutalized at the hands of Westerners in relation to the number of Westerners killed or brutalized by Muslims, the answer is quite clear: terrorists of the West. Ironically, a Western terrorist, Anders Breivik, slaughtered large numbers of Westerners in his anti-Islamist hatred. His mass killing spree slayed far more Westerners on European soil than any attacks by “radicalized” Muslims. Significantly, Breivik’s terrorism was conflated with Islamist terrorism (see the Guardian).

As long as radicalized Westerners accept the killing of innocent Muslims in drone and missile attacks, discount the atrocities of Abu Ghraib, the CIA “black sites,” and other torture facilities, and fail to see how Western colonialism violently maintains operation across the globe, particularly in Muslim countries, the “battle against terrorism” will continue. Along with Europe, the United States has its own zealots and war hawks who promote terrorism directed at Muslim countries. On virtually any day, one can turn to major US news media outlets and witness a host of extremist US politicians, like Peter King, John McCain, Diane Feinstein, Alan West, Michele Bachmann and Chuck Schumer, calling for war or negative actions against one Muslim or Arab country or another. The rhetoric is careless and, at its roots, are the sparks of Western-styled terrorism.

To support US terrorism, French terrorism and other forms of Western terrorism is unconscionable. Similarly, supporting Charlie Hebdo’s discriminatory practices that naturalize and sanctify Euroterrorism against Muslims is abhorrent. Terrorism begets terrorism in a vicious cycle. Neither form can be justified, but the former is where we should direct our focus. For these reasons, Jen ne suis pas Charlie. For those who identify with Charlie, you might re-consider your senseless ties to the racism that Charlie breeds and the racial conflicts that will result from ignorant acceptance of that religious and ethno-racial intolerance and racist ridicule of Others.

The post Je Ne Suis Pas Charlie: A Critical View appeared first on racismreview.com.

Read original blog entry here.

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

Are the sour fruits of the Charlie Hebdo attack the usual ones of hypocrisy and denial?

Posted on January 13, 2015 by Migrant Tales

What fruits will the Charlie Hebido attack yield? Will we engage in debate or find comfort in denial? Will we succumb to easy answers and hypocrisy or to openness? 

Since some claim that free speech was attacked last week, a tweet by Daniel Wickham raised some poignant questions about Sunday’s march against terrorism. The London School for Economics co-president revealed in 21 tweets how those very world leaders that marched on Sunday persecuted journalists and the media in their countries.

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Read full story here.

 

Umayya Abu-Hanna offers us some insight on the types of fruits the Charlie Hebdo attack will bear on her Facebook wall below. She agrees that hypocrisy and denial will remain but a “general fear in the West” as well.

What do we fear the most? Violence? Muslims? Our usual hubris and imperialism?

Or all of the above?

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Finally Gavan Titley sums up the latter questions with a posting on his Facebook page. He said that what he wrote was a reaction after reading a range of columns in the Irish and British Sunday papers.

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Are Bush’s Iraq War and Abu Ghraib torture to blame as well for the Charlie Hebdo attack?

Posted on January 10, 2015 by Migrant Tales

When I reflect on what happened this week in Paris my thoughts drift to George W. Bush and his proclamation that the United States is on a crusade against terrorism. Juan Cole, an expert on Middle East politics, asks an important question on his blog: 

Having American troops occupy it [Baghdad]  for 8 years, humiliate its citizens, shoot people at checkpoints, and torture people in military prisons was a very bad idea. Some people treated that way become touchy, and feel put down, and won’t take slights to their culture and civilization any longer. Maybe the staff at Charlie Hebdo would be alive if George W. Bush and Richard Bruce Cheney hadn’t modeled for the Kouashi brothers how you take what you want and rub out people who get in your way.

Certainly nobody is condoning the Charlie Hedbo attack but neither should we lose focus on the big picture: hundreds of years of colonialism, exploitation, rise of Islamophobia, Palestine and recent wars in the Middle East.

And just as worse, there are the opportunists that are aiming to profit from what happened. Some that come to mind are Marine Le Pen, Gert Wilders, from Finland Olli Immonen and Jussi Halla-aho, both members of the anti-immigration Perussuomalaiset (PS)* party.

 

US President George W. Bush declaring “this crusade, this war on terrorism” shortly after 9/11. According to Juan Cole, the Charlie Hebdo attack could possibly been avoided if Bush wouldn’t have embarked on a reckless war in Iraq.

Then Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg took a totally different strategy to Bush’s 9/11 response. Stoltenberg said after the 22/7 attacks by Anders Breivik that his country’s response would be “more openness, more democracy and greater political participation.” The Norwegian prime minister is today secretary general of Nato.

 

In Argentina during the 1970s, young people had three choices under a dictatorship: take up arms, remain silent and leave the country.

In Finland in 1904, Eugen Schauman became a national hero when he assassinated Governor-General Nikolai Bobrikov. The context was Russification, a powerful-backward empire like Russia that wanted to undermine Finland’s autonomy. From a Russian perspective what Schauman did must have been murder but from our point of view he became a national hero.

I personally am suspicious of violence and war because I’ve seen my fair share of them. I made a promise when I left Argentina in 1977, when it was ruled by a ruthless military dictatorship, to never kill a human being for as long as I live. It wasn’t an easy promise to make at the time.

In a war, the state resolves the moral and ethical issues for you. It gives you the moral answers to justify killing others. When you join a group like al-Qaeda and the likes, however, you have a choice because usually it’s your decision to be a part of such a group.

So what will we learn from what happened in Paris this week? Will we finally learn to sit around a table and negotiate in good faith and with respect to resolve our differences?

Or will the wall that helps our denial get thicker?

* The Finnish name for the Finns Party is the Perussuomalaiset (PS). The English names of the party adopted by the PS, like True Finns or Finns Party, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and xenophobia. We therefore prefer to use the Finnish name of the party on our postings.

European and Finnish politicians that opportunistically exploit the Charlie Hebdo attack

Posted on January 9, 2015 by Migrant Tales

As the pieces settle and attempt to find their places after the Charlie Hebdo attack, it is surprising how not only anti-Islam and anti-immigration groups are taking political advantage of what happened but even those who you thought didn’t have such agendas. Another important expected narrative is what the media is telling us and what it’s not.

Let’s make no mistake, what happened in Paris is a tragedy. Without dishing out simple answers that permit us to remain in our ideological and ethnic comfort zones, there is an important question: Did Charlie Hebdo attack have anything to do with free speech? Or was it about war?

If we seek an answer from Perussuomalaiset (PS)* politicians like MP Olli Immonen, it’s clear that the attack didn’t have to do with free speech. He writes on his blog that as a result of what happened, Finland and Europe should halt immigration from Muslim country and give incentives for those that live in Europe to go back to where they came?

Another politician playing to the Islamophobic I-told-you-so tune is PS MEP Jussi Halla-aho, who paints all Muslims with a single brush on his blog by claiming that the world view of the majority of Muslims is no different from those that carried out the Charlie Hebdo attack.

Such opportunistic statements by Immonen and Halla-aho show how some Europeans think about cultural diversity.  They have no solutions except for spewing hatred and fueling suspicion of other groups. If Europe were run by the likes of them, we’d be on a new crusade like the Spanish Inquisition.

Näyttökuva 2015-1-8 kello 19.56.09

While it’s expected that some politicians are exploiting the tragedy to further their political agendas, it was surprising to read the comments of Risto Uimonen, the chair of Finland’s press watchdog the Council for Mass Media in Finland, who appeared to affirm a clash of civilizations between the West and Islamic world, according to Yle in English.

“This is a strong attack on democracy and freedom of speech,” he was quoted as saying. “It pits two understandings of democracy, western and Islamic, against each other–and they can’t be reconciled.”

Näyttökuva 2015-1-9 kello 15.12.48

If you are interested, why not join the new Facebook group Je ne suis pas Risto Uimonen?

 

The same argument that Uimonen uses is employed by the far right and anti-immigration groups. In simple English it means the following: We want to keep Europe white, ethnically and culturally you will never be like us and therefore you are not welcome to live with us.

* The Finnish name for the Finns Party is the Perussuomalaiset (PS). The English names of the party adopted by the PS, like True Finns or Finns Party, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and xenophobia. We therefore prefer to use the Finnish name of the party on our postings.

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