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Ask Finland’s Romany minority about ethnic profiling by the police

Posted on July 10, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Two talk shows today, one on television and another one on radio, on ethnic profiling follows a report published Tuesday by the European Commission Against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI). Contrary to concerns by the ECRI, the police flatly deny in both shows that ethnic profiling takes place even if a policeman at the Helsinki Railway admitted that people are indiscriminately stopped because “they look foreign.”

Ethnic profiling, and denials that it even takes place, not only reveal how strong institutional racism is in Finland but how far the police will go in defending their right to carry out ethnic profiling of immigrants and visible minorities.

All those terms that serve to exonerate Finnish white privilege should be challenged. Why do you think people who were born here and have lived all their lives in this country are labeled “people with immigrant backgrounds?”  The aim of this label is to socially exclude non-whites as equal members of society and citizens.

What is a person with “immigrant background” anyway? Who decides if you have or don’t an immigrant background?

When the police divide the population into white Finns and “people who look like foreigners,” even if they are Finns, they are given a carte blanche to profile people indiscriminately on ethnic grounds.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-7-10 kello 12.14.40

Watch television program here.

While it’s pretty clear that if the ECRI and Ombudsman for Minorities in Finland have expressed concern about ethnic profiling by the Finnish police, there must be something wrong.

Sadly, the whole debate concerning the issue of ethnic profiling in Finland points to denial by the authorities and Interior Minister Päivi Räsänen, who is either covering up for the police or totally ignorant.

Both the police and Räsänen sound like Perussuomalaiset (PS) chairman Timo Soini playing down racism in his party.  It reflects how the police, one of the most conservative institutions in Finland, doesn’t want to acknowledge that we are today an ever-growing culturally diverse society as well as ignorance.

Maryan Abdulkarim, who was interviewed on television today with deputy Helsinki police chief Lasse Aapio, correctly pointed out that not all “foreign-looking” people are immigrants but Finns.

On the radio program, National Coalition Party MP Kari Toivonen, a former policeman who denied that ethnic profiling takes place systematically, reveals his ignorance by pointing out that a foreigner called him a racist because in his country women can be raped freely.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-7-10 kello 12.15.49

Listen to radio program here.

If Toivonen believes this to be the case, it shows a tremendous amount of ignorance on his part and why ethnic profiling continues to take and why the police don’t get it. No culture or any religion accepts rape as something “normal.”

It’s pretty clear that the same arguments used to justify ethnic profiling of groups like the Romany minority in Finland in the past is being used against immigrants today. Whenever immigrants or non-white Finns are stopped by the police it’s because they are either undocumented or victims of human trafficking.

Instead of going around in circles and wasting years on debating whether ethnic profiling takes place or not, why isn’t Finland’s Romany minority asked its opinion on the matter? What they may tell you is extremely unsettling: Even if they have lived for about five centuries in Finland, ethnic profiling – never mind discrimination – still takes place.

A US state department human rights report stated recently: ”Groups of Roma have lived in the country for centuries, and Roma are classified as a ’traditional ethnic minority’ in the ombudsman’s report. The Romany minority was the most frequent target of racially motivated discrimination, followed by Russian-speakers, Somalis, and Sami.”

Migrant Tales will ask members of Finland’s Romany minority for a future blog entry about ethnic profiling by the Finnish police.

European Court of Human Rights will not review PS MP Hirvisaari’s conviction for ethnic agitation

Posted on July 10, 2013 by Migrant Tales

The European Court of Human Rights has turned down a request by Perussuomalaiset (PS) MP James Hirvisaari to review a conviction for ethnic agitation in December 2011 by the Kouvola Court of Appeals, which was upheld last year by the Finnish Supreme Court.

There was no doubt that far right PS MP Hirvisaari stood a chance of having his conviction reviewed by the European Court of Human Rights after it was upheld by a Supreme Court decision earlier.

Migrant Tales applauds the decision.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-7-10 kello 9.07.49

Lahti-based daily Etelä-Suomen Sanomat wrote about the European Court of Human Rights’ decision. Hirvisaari has declared war on the daily by boycotting it.

In his usual style, Hirvisaari lashes out against the decision not to review his conviction as ”bowing to Mecca.” On a Facebook thread he slams the president of the Kouvola Court of Appeals, Pertti Nieminen, as the ”Great Satan.”

Hirvisaari, who would never have stood a chance of being elected to parliament without the help of Timo Soini, who commonly plays down racism in the party, has been embroiled in numerous scandals during his two years as MP. Some of these include complaining about skid marks on the toilet bowls of parliament to blaming Anders Breivik’s murderous rampage in Norway on immigration policy.

Some of his most infamous remarks aren’t his homophobic views and plans to control what the Finnish media writes,  but hiring Helena Eronen as his aide.

Eronen, who is a member of the far right anti-immigration Muutos2011 party, resigned in August after she wrote a scandalous blog entry that foreigners could help the police in ethnic profiling by wearing sleeve badges.

The reaction of the Finnish and even international media to her blog entry was a clear sign how far out of touch Eronen’s “sarcasm” was with common decency and respect for immigrants and visible minorities.

The last time ethnic groups like the Jews were required to wear identifying badges was during the Nazi regime in Germany.

 

 

Finnish Defence League strikes Mikkeli, Finland

Posted on July 9, 2013 by Migrant Tales

I was quite surprised to find this rude sticker of the far right Finnish Defence League (FDL) near my home today.  That follows another one placed on a lamppost in front of my house in March 2012 by the neo-Nazi Kansallinen vastarintaliike (SVL). 

The good news is that the FDL stickers, which erroneously claim the group supports human rights, are a cinch to peel off but you need a sharp object like a key.

The stickers used  by the neo-Nazi SVL are a bit tougher to peel off. They will, however, come off with the help of a coin or key.

Both the FDL and SVL are pernicious and violent organizations that believe the only way to live with other cultures is to be openly hostility to them.

A study recently linked hate crime to far right groups like the English Defence League.

IMG_1758

 

The far right Finnish Defense League strikes Mikkeli.

skv

The neo-Nazi Kansallinen Vastarinta claims that “multiculturalism is hazardous for your children and grandchildren.”

 

 

 

Council of Europe concerned about ethnic profiling by police in Finland

Posted on July 9, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Is it a surprise that the Council of Europe’s anti-racism body expressed concern in a report that Finnish police ask people’s ID based on ethnic appearance? No need to get an official answer to find out because ethnic profiling doesn’t happen in Finland. Why not ask immigrants and visible minorities instead if you went a candid answer?

The Council of Europe anti-racism body, the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI), published its fourth report Tuesday where it expressed concern over ethnic profiling by the police in Finland, reports YLE in English.

The ECRI report said that the police in Finland have the right to question foreign-looking people in places where they are believed to be causing problems.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-7-9 kello 15.42.05

“There is one [regulation] which increases the risk of racial profiling by the police, so this is the police singling out people based simply on the basis of their visible appearance,” Council of Europe communications officer Andrew Cutting told Yle. “Another issue [the report] raises is that foreigners can be detained whilst their identity can be ascertained in certain situations, and that this too is discriminatory.”

Ethnic profiling is part of the the wider problem of institutional racism in this country.

The fact that the police and Christian Democrat interior minister, Päivi Räsänen, deny any wrongdoing concerning ethnic profiling is highly revealing in itself. Such denials suggest that the contrary does take place and that it is a much wider problem than the authorities want to admit.

The police and the interior minister are, however, adamant: No ethnic profiling goes on in Finland by the police.

But is this the case?

The Ombudsman for Minorities has been in negotiations with the police to have in force this year new anti-ethnic profiling guidelines.

Rainer Hiltunen, the Minority Ombudsman’s head of office, told Migrant Tales last year that he receives calls from foreigners who say they have been repeatedly questioned in the street by police. Some of those stopped are naturalized Finns and visible minorities.

Even if the police and Räsänen claim that foreign-looking people aren’t stopped by the police,  Migrant Tales  understands that the problem is far more common than officials want to admit.

It is, however, a good matter that European organizations like the ECRI are looking into the matter.

Read full ECRI report here.

 

 

 

Racism Review: United Nations’ Universal Declaration Of Human Rights: A Personal Perspective

Posted on July 9, 2013 by Migrant Tales
By Edna Chun

At the conclusion of the forthcoming third edition of Joe Feagin’s Racist America: Roots, Current Realities, and Future Reparations, he recommends that a new constitutional convention for a true multiracial democracy begin with the United Nation’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights ratified in 1948. Feagin points out that the United States has never had a constitutional convention that represented all or even the majority of the population. As he notes, the original constitutional convention that met in Philadelphia in 1787 was comprised of 55 white men, representing only 5 percent of the population, and did not include white women, Native Americans, or African Americans.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-7-9 kello 8.24.29

See original posting here.

Feagin’s identification of the U.N.’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights brings to mind the work of my father, Dr. Hung-Ti Chu, at the United Nations and his great personal admiration for Eleanor Roosevelt who shepherded the Universal Declaration of Human Rights to its ratification by the General Assembly. My father joined the United Nations in 1946 during the time the Declaration was drafted as a member of the Human Rights Division, and remained at the U.N. in the Secretariat until he retired more than twenty years later. He recalled that Eleanor Roosevelt considered the Universal Declaration of Human Rights to be the Magna Carta for all humankind. She viewed her role in securing adoption of the Declaration of Human Rights as her greatest achievement. Several years earlier, as a member of the steering committee of the International Student Conference representing the five great world powers, my father had breakfasted with her in the White House and was invited to sit in on FDR’s Fireside Chats over the radio.

My father came to this country as a scholarship student in recognition of his work in the Chinese nationalist movement, receiving his Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Illinois in 1937. In 1942, he was invited to become President of Yunnan University in his home province of Yunnan, China, but due to political events and the Communist takeover, was not able to return. After joining the United Nations, he later served as the Principal Secretary of the United Nations Temporary Commission on Korea, and gave the opening speech of the first democratically-elected National Assembly in Korean history.

Following the death of Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1946, Eleanor Roosevelt accepted a position offered by President Harry Truman on the first United States delegation to the United Nations. At the time she was the only woman on the delegation and in her words:

I knew that as the only woman, I ‘d better be better than anybody else. So I read every paper. And they were very dull sometimes, because State Department papers can be very dull. And I used to almost go to sleep over them, and– [laughs] But I did read them all. I knew that if I in any way failed, it would not be just my failure; it would be the failure of all women. There’d never be another woman on the delegation.

In a perceptive article titled “Eleanor Roosevelt and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights” John Sears states that many believe that the U.N. Commission on Human Rights that drafted the Declaration of Human Rights would not have succeeded without the skillful leadership of Eleanor Roosevelt in chairing the Commission. Without legal or parliamentary training, she oversaw the drafting of the Declaration through weeks of arguing over the meaning of each word and phrase.

The initial commission appointed to recommend a structure for the Human Rights Commission consisted ofEleanor Roosevelt and representatives from Norway, Belgium, China, India, Yugoslavia and the ambassador to the United States from China, Dr. C.L. Hsia. Dr. Hsia was a close personal friend and mentor of my father.

Furthermore, as Sears notes, Eleanor Roosevelt insisted upon the unequivocal anti-discrimination article in the Declaration. She believed it would support the struggle for civil rights in the United States and was aware of the shortcomings of this country in attaining these rights. She even clashed with members of the State Department who did not believe that economic and social rights belonged in a bill of human rights.

The U.N.’s Declaration of Universal Human Rights adopted by the U.N. General Assembly in 1948 asserts that “all human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights” and that “all are equal before the law and are entitled without any discrimination to equal protection of the law.” Eleanor Roosevelt’s uncompromising view of universal human rights identifies the source of such rights in events close to home, such as in our everyday interactions:

Where, after all, do universal rights begin? In small places, close to home (…) Unless these rights have meaning there, they have little meaning anywhere.

In a time when women’s leadership was not widely accepted, Eleanor Roosevelt was truly “the first lady of the United States,” a skillful and practical negotiator, able to maneuver in confidence in male-dominated diplomatic circles, able to build the consensus necessary to forge a lasting testament to the freedom, equality, and dignity of all human beings.

Read original blog entry here.

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

Former SMP leader links Immonen’s writing to Nazis

Posted on July 8, 2013 by Migrant Tales

The former chairman (1979-89) of the Rural Party (SMP), Pekka Vennamo, linked Perussuomalaiset (PS) MP Olli Immonen’s recent column to Nazis, according to tabloid Iltalehti. The far right PS MP wrote in his most recent blog entry about how nationalism should play a central role in Finnish politics.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-7-8 kello 10.11.02

Vennamo, who is the son of Veikko Vennamo, the late founder and legendary political figure of the SMP from which the PS emerged in the mid-1990s, doesn’t spare Immonen much sympathy. ”[Using the term] nationalism always brings Nazis first to mind,” he said.

Immonen, who is chairman of the extremist anti-immigration Suomen Sisu association that aims to keep Finland white, didn’t take the former SMP leader’s views lightly. “Pekka Vennamo is a turncoat and an old nut,” he said.

The former party chairman said that SMP was never against immigrants and even less against the EU. “We were warmly in favor of the country joining the EU and being in the euro,” he said.

Despite assurances by PS’ chairman Timo Soini that his party isn’t racist or that it harbors racists, its anti-immigration wing has found a permanent home in the PS.

Foreign Minister Erkki Tuomioja has called Soini’s relationship with the PS’ far right as a pack with the devil.

He writes: “The spirit that Soini opportunistically freed from the bottle by accepting extremist [candidates] of the Suomen Sisu [association] to run for office will soon permanently tarnish the ability of the party to cooperate with other ones and may even soon threaten Soini’s position as party leader.”

PS party secretary shoots herself in the leg on immigration and chauvinism

Posted on July 7, 2013 by Migrant Tales

It’s pretty clear from an interview that new party secretary of the Perussuomalaiset (PS), Riikka Slunga-Poutsalo, gave to newsmagazine Suomen Kuvalehti that she has shot herself so badly in the foot that she’ll never recover. Not only does her murky far right anti-immigration opinions follow her as a shadow, but affirmations like ”I’m a chauvinist” as well. 

Admitting that she is a chauvinist was not a slip of the tongue when she spoke to the media right after she was elected as the PS’ new party secretary. Apart from being strongly anti-immigration and chauvinist, she admits that there are no gray areas on how she see things. “Things are usually simple and I’m generally for or against [something],” she said. “One must have opinions in politics.”

On today’s Helsingin Sanomat, columnist Minna Lindgren writes about Slunga-Poutsalo: “Soini assumes that all of us are deep down inside [Finns are] chauvinists, racists and [see everything] black and white – the issue hinges on on being honest [with oneself].”

She concludes: “I have another picture of the Finn. He isn’t a power-hungry person who runs away from responsibility, not a black-and-white chauvinist or even a racist.”

Chauvinism in a Finnish context is this country’s brand of machoism. When you are a machoist, or chauvinist, you loathe anything that promotes cultural diversity. That is why Finnish machoists, men and women alike, see immigrants, blacks, gays, feminists, Muslims, left-wingers, environmentalists and others as a threat.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-7-7 kello 9.17.39

It’s no surprise that Slunga-Poutsalo will call few if any major shots in the PS since the anti-immigration and anti-EU party is effectively a one-man show run by its chairman and creator, Timo Soini.

The Suomen Kuvalehti journalist, Katri Merikallio, asks Slunga-Poutsalo if she’s in favor of Finland becoming a multicultural or culturally diverse society.

”If I have to decide, I’m against it,” she said telling us something we already knew.

Her response is typical of that of an anti-immigration party. There is strong opposition to immigration and cultural diversity but no workable solutions that take into account immigrants and other minorities.

Why? The answer is simple: There aren’t any. Holding back cultural diversity is like prohibiting people from being gay.

But don’t let her general opposition to cultural diversity fool you. If she had her way, she’d implement the far right Danish People’s Party (DPP) immigration policy to fuel xenophobia and near-halt migration from outside of the European Union.

As everyone knows, the DPP were successful for about 10 years in spearheading the most restrictive immigration policy in the EU.

Slunga-Poutsalo, like all of the anti-immigration extremists in the PS, are not only a direct threat to immigrants but to Finland.

Their political views are openly hostile to immigrants and minorities and should be openly challenged.

 

Migrant Tales Literary: Suomi tai Suola, Saltland or Finland (Part II)

Posted on July 7, 2013 by Migrant Tales

By Dana

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Before a storm everything looks great but it will come and it will break and destroy perfectly

Wind will clean all happiness

And trees will cry their best

When a sun can’t make you happy

And when a rain is a curse

When a child is singing  about death

And old men and women can’t rest in their nest

No/one wants them, they are alone

On the beds in hospitals, it is not rare

Oh look they are so sick and tired

Life doesn’t need them any more they are fired

They are crying, but with hidden tears

Death is flying around them with black birds

When children have two dads and moms

They just think about bread, butter and jam

When humans are greedy and cruel

Money is their only goal, they are real fools

When a president is rich and his friends even richer

He has no wisdom, believe me, he needs a teacher

When ministers have fake smiles on their faces

They are afraid of your thoughts, they close your case

When drunks scream in streets, and beer is their jest

Magazine gestures with meaningless pictures, no more no less

Why does the press publish some ugly nude words?

Nobody searches for the truth, where are real roads?

In that time judges can’t open their mouths

and courts cannot stand  for their  false rights

When a president dies like the poor

When a king and queen will fall in a hole

When a dog can see facts about their owners

When a cat will laugh at people in their corners

There won’t be any freedom for you

You will lose all in a moment that is the truth

When salt-land  makes a kingdom of darkness

Big clouds will shower it with blood and sharks

When you close your heart to beauty

You will lose and your life will be bad and dirty

When your life is sad and dirty, means you are a guilty

You deserve no kindness, not even pity

Big round Earth will shake and shake and shake

Moon will laugh at jerk, and berk and jerk

Sigh

There is a storm on the way and nothing can stop it

Nothing can give sweetness to salt

You have zero chances

NOLLA*

* zero

Migrant Tales Literary: Suomi tai Suola, Saltland or Finland (Part I)

Posted on July 6, 2013 by Migrant Tales

By Dana

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

YES, that’s it!

Risk-land and jail-land

What is the opposite of the Nobel Peace Prize? Is there a Nobel Ignoring Prize or such a prize in the world? I mean a Nobel that could be given to people who neglect others?

For sure Finland does not deserve the Nobel  Peace Prize and never will…  that’s very, very clear… i have never felt peace  in my life in Finland but it does deserve a Hate Prize because i’ve got so much hate constantly, right and left.

There is no human right in Finland… oh, okay, there are human rights organizations , well they claim to be but they all play the same music and melody…. La la la la  that’s not my job, la la la la call another place, la la la la i am sorry,…. And on and on and on.

So there is no reason to offer the Nobel Peace Prize to Suomi or Suola.*

Like in their  Parliament there r different groups and sides…A, B, C, kok, mock , pork,

D, E, F  fake, fake this is what u will take.

They are all one body in different shadows.

They all play the same music with the same piano and same notes

Do re mi fa so la si do

Oh do re mi fa suola doors

Dol si la so fa mi re do

Wolves are hungry, racists sing so

And who chose and chooses them?

For sure not the aliens, but Finns.

And what is the Finnish people’s idea about their government?

Wouldn’t it be better if Finland never accepted a united EU?

And it could build some ironic doors on the ground and sky around itself?

With a currency they could call the suola?

Or paras

The best

Hmmm

Is there a best in this world?

Truly what is best? What is better? What is good?

Who knows?

What do you think about this as a human being?

Do you enjoy to being a human?

Have you ever asked yourself who and what i am?

Some of us are not human, even if we looks human with a face and body.

What makes us human?

For sure it’s not the face and body but a deep matter in us. What is it?

Who knows? Again who knows? Who knows – hands up, no i never seen a hand up.

How many questions are you asking yourself every day?

And how many answers do WE get?

What is your most important question?

Have you ever judged yourself? What happened to you then?

Do you have dreams?

Do u remember them? Have you had the same dreams? What do they mean to u?

Yes, i’ve had the same dreams… in different shapes…. My mama was with me, in a shop and streets…everywhere…we were talking and feeling safe….suddenly i lost her. she parted so fast… i saw her, i could not go behind her, i lost her… that happens all the time in my dreams.

I’ve seen this dream many times in the last months, before mama started a new life…. and now

After she left this earth

Those dreams are gone

I don’t see them anymore

Finish

I could not get the message

It was meaning to convey

mama will go… sigh, oh Mama I  Love You So Much, just wish a touch, come and touch me, now i can’t talk anymore about my mama because i will cry. stop, stop.

But about Suola.

Can anything grow on salt? No wisdom ( that’s why there is no-one in Parliament that talks with wisdom; they are all in union, in union about the same thing, but they play different roles like a TV with different channel, but it is one TV with one system and one voltage and  program) can grow on salt, no morals, no ideas, no creativity, just bitterness.

Finland is a risky country. Come to Finland if you hate yourself and you want to punish yourself… If you have no hope come here too; if you are lazy and tired of running come here.

Before you come here go and buy yourself ironic shoes because you will run here and there.

Do not come here if you are an intelligent foreigner….oh everything will be against you.

Every law and organization will be against you because they need a slave not a brave person who can think.

Do you want to tell me now about your tough experience in Finland?

Or maybe you’re experience is holy – so what?

 1, 2, 3

Tell me more about how free you are

4, 5, 6 living in Finland is a risk.

* Salt 

Julian Abagond: How to tell if a white person is a recovering racist

Posted on July 6, 2013 by Migrant Tales

By Julian Abagond

drug_addict

In America there are only racists and recovering racists. It is like alcoholism. There is no point at which you are rid of it completely – racist thinking is too much a part of American culture. No one completely escapes it, not even people of colour.

Signs that a White American is a recovering racist (the signs for a person of colour are different):

  1. Admits to racism, both in one’s self and in American society. Like with alcoholism, the first step to recovery is to break out of denial.
    • That means not getting upset at being called the r-word.
    • That means giving up the “Anything But Racism” kneejerk reaction.
    • That means not downplaying or excusing white racist words and acts, either now or in history.
    • That means not blaming the victims of racism for inequality.
    • That means calling out racism.
  2. Takes what people of colour say seriously. Assumes that they are just as capable as white people in making observations and coming to conclusions, that they are just as intelligent, that they can think for themselves and know what is in their own best interest. Recovering racists do not necessarily always agree with people of colour – they think for themselves too! – but neither do they assume that people of colour are children who imagine stuff, whine, need to be talked down to – or saved. Recovering racists do not assume that whites always know best, that they are the moral centre.
  3. Sees both whites and people of colour as equally imperfectly human: Sees the good and bad in both, puts themselves in the shoes of others. Just as racists demonize and look down on people of colour, noticing all their faults while dismissing their successes, so they also idealize whites, playing up the good things about them while giving a huge pass to the the bad they do. Both demonization and idealization are racist and unrealistic.
  4. Assumes that the lives, feelings and concerns people of colour are important, just as important as those of white people.
    • That means that white people should not always get their way.
    • That means seeing Asian, Black, Latino, Native and Muslim Americans as Real Americans.
    • That means taking the anger of people of colour seriously rather than trying to police their tone.
    • That means not seeing people of colour as a “drain on society” or a “waste” of (white) taxpayer money.
    • That means pushing for policies to make society more equal – you know, as if everyone’s life mattered, not just those of rich, white men.
  5. Accepts people as they are, not as they “should” be, not “in spite of” what makes them different. They see colour, but they also see that different is just different, not “less than”.
  6. Respects people of colour. Does not tell then what to feel or think or act high-handed. Does not tell them to “Get over it.” Does not put them down for their race, does not call them racial slurs or tell racist jokes. Does not ” href=”http://abagond.wordpress.com/2009/04/08/derailing-for-dummies/”>derail their talk of racism.                           

Read original story here.

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

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