
A letter from the brother of the Somali victim of Oulu, Finland
By Enrique Tessieri
Migrant Tales was surprised Thursday evening to get a message from the brother of the Somali victim who died tragically in Oulu, Finland, this week after trying to flee from three people who barged into his home with a metal pipe. At the most, the three suspects will be charged with manslaughter (kuolemantuottamus).
The incident touches a sensitive nerve of the immigrant and Somali community, the fourth largest in Finland. Even if what happened was not a hate crime, according to the police, it brings out the despair, futility and muffled outrage of some Somalis who live in this country.
If the victim’s tragic death, whom his brother calls Abdirashid, can shed light on the plight of Somalis in Finland and the hardships they face, the better.
By writing about what happened in Oulu we are showing respect to the Somali community. Their sadness has a voice in Finland even if many would like to drown it with colorblind arguments.
It should be also mentioned that sensible Finns are just as saddened by what happened as some members of the Somali community.
Abdirashid’s big brother, Jirde, sent the following letter* to Migrant Tales and a picture of the victim:
Jirde’s two brothers. The baby is Abdirashid.
My little brother was born in Ethiopia in a refugee camp to the second wife of my father in 1989. During the civil war between the Siad Barre regime and northerners [of Somaliland], my brother was taken to Dijibouti to be treated for rubella by my father’s first wife [Jirde’s mother].
I am the eldest brother [of a large family]. We contacted all the physicians in Dijibouti [to treat my brother]. We had to go to Europe. My brother had lost his sight due to cataracts. We managed to get him to Germany. His big brother, who lived at the time in Paris [, France], and with the assistance of God and Germany, the operation on his eyes was successful.
Four months [after the operation] and after the end of the war [against Siad Barre] my father requested the government of Germany to return his family to the country [Somalia]. My little brother [Abdirashid] returned…
We request this great nation of civilized people to do justice for my little brother.
Signed: Mr. Jirde, the big brother.
*The letter has been edited.
Immigrant youths have greater chances of being marginalized in Finland
By Enrique Tessieri
The number of magainalized youths is especially pronounced among immigrant youths aged 15-29, reports YLE in English, citing a study by think tank Finnish Business and Policy Forum (EVA) . The study claims one out of every three youths with immigrant background is marginalized compared with one out of eight youths nationally.
The study defines a marginalized person as anyone who is not part of the workforce or enrolled in any study program and has not studied beyond primary school.
In 2010, there were some 51,300 marginalized youths, accounting for about 5% of all people in that age bracket.
“Over a quarter of marginalized youths have foreign backgrounds,” said Pekka Myrskylä, EVA’s head of development at Statistics Finland’s Population Statistics Department, was quoted as saying on YLE in English. “Their entry into Finland’s education and labor markets is four or five times more difficult than that of their native Finnish counterparts.”
The study suggests education can play a key role in preventing marginalization.
Certainly education plays a crucial role in the integration of any person in society but it should not be seen as a panacea. Another important point that the EVA study could have stressed is how attitudes of the majority population fuel marginalization of youths with immigrant backgrounds.
How many of these one in four marginalized youths with immigrant backgrounds have lived most of their lives in Finland? How come some of them feel rejected by society?
In the answers of those two questions you may find some of the causes for marginalization.
Why write about a Somali immigrant who died in Oulu, Finland?
One of the matters that has surprised after Migrant Tales scooped more information about the tragic death of a Somali national in Oulu Monday is the total lack of empathy for the victim. Finland and the Nordic region have not been the same after the April election and when Anders Breivik went on the rampage in Norway in July killing 77 victims.
In both cases above, anti-immigration and anti-Muslim rhetoric were the smoking guns.
One gets the impression by some of the threads on Migrant Tales and My Finland is International that we should not give much importance to what happened in Oulu since it will not be seen as a hate crime by the police.
Some have gone as far as to claim that what happened in Oulu has nothing to do with immigration or ethnic issues.
I beg your pardon!?
What happened in Oulu has everything to do with immigrants and social ills like violence threatening our society. Somebody must speak out for the victim and we are very proud of being one of those voices.
Add to what happened in Oulu the horrific events in Norway in summer and Finland’s ever-worsening atmosphere for immigrants and minorities, it is only natural that we react to a crime involving an immigrant, especially one where three Finns break into his home by force and perpetrate his death.
Migrant Tales will continue to report crimes against immigrants and hopes it will have the opportunity to do so in the future.
OP-Pohjola-Group Kangasniemi only serves customers in Finnish and Swedish
By Enrique Tessieri
Below is an incident that happened at the offices of insurance company OP-Pohola-Group in Kangasniemi, a small town located between Mikkeli and Jyväskylä. The letter, published on the www.kangasniemi.info website, is a complaint to the company for refusing to offer service to a man because he did not speak Finnish or Swedish.
Writes Lucien den Arend: “Well… you can make your own decision. They don’t want to do business a family of five with many objects to insure, because, although the father speaks English, Dutch, German, French, Spanish and a little Russian, he speaks no Swedish or Finnish yet.”
Below is the letter sent to OP-Pohjola-Group by the couple:
Dear Mr. Karhinen,
We are writing you because we have not been able to get past your sub leaders (personel). It is about the fact that the members of our family of five are all Finnish except me. And that your representative in Kangasniemi let us leave her office after she told us that it is company policy not to speak English – only Finnish and Swedish. We had been invited to come and listen to OP Pohjola Group’s offer for insurance for our Kartano, island, five cars and art collection. My wife gave her information in Finnish and when it was my turn (I do not speak Finnish) the woman/girl, your representative, said (in Finnish to my wife) that she does speak English but refuses to because it is company policy to only speak Finnish and Swedish.
So last week we had a very active discussion about this on the facebook group IESAF – or International English Speakers’ Association of Finland. In more than sixty posts we discussed this problem.
How can it be that your company name is in English; and your website has English pages, but it is its policy not to converse with a customer who cannot speak Finnish or Swedish?
And why do I get no answer to my question about this serous problem – posted on your site’s form last week Monday. And why does my wife not get a response to her question, in Finnish, posted one day later?
Yours Sincerely,
Lucien den Arend and Marjo Heikkinen
*Thank you Sheri Mylene Chang for the heads up!
Police unlikely to pin hate crime on the death of a Somali in Oulu, Finland
By Enrique Tessieri
The police announced Wednesday that the eighteen-year-old Somali national who died in hospital Tuesday slipped from the sixth floor while trying to escape three people who barged into his home Monday night, according to tabloid Iltalehti. Migrant Tales spoke with Seppo Leinonen of the Oulu police, who said it was unlikely that the death of the young man was a hate crime.
The police will announce at noon Thursday whether they will imprison the three suspects.
One of the three persons, a woman, knew the victim. She apparently had a disagreement with the man and told her brother about it, who then went with a metal pipe to resolve the matter, reports Ilalehti. Since the victim did not open door, the brother kicked a whole in the door and opened it from the inside.
Both the brother and sister were under the influence of alcohol.
The victim tried to escape but fell to his death from the sixth floor.
JusticeDemon makes a good point on one of his threads by asking if what happened was a “Finnish honor crime?” Below are a list of sad examples of Finnish men mending their broken family with a shotgun, service revolver or knife:
November 2011, Tyrnävä
October 2011, Varkaus
April 2011, Ikaalinen
February 2010, Lappeenranta (fortunately nobody was killed)
December 2008, Lohja (that was a retired police officer)
November 2008, Hattula
October 2008, Helsinki
October 2008, Oulu
June 2008, Ylitornio
March 2008, Pori
Migrant Tales had got in touch with residents and acquaintances of the victim in Oulu. While they claimed the three entered that had apartment the victim’s home with a chainsaw, the police could not confirm this.
Somali victim of Oulu, Finland: The tragedy that brings us closer to the problem
By Enrique Tessieri
The reaction and threads concerning the tragic death of a Somali national in Oulu, Finland, Tuesday after three white Finnish suspects barged into his home reveals the strong divide between “us” and “them.”We still have a long ways to go as a society to deal with social ills like discrimination. Paradoxically, tragedies like what happened in Oulu bring us ever-closer to the issue.
While we should give the Finnish police the benefit of doubt and trust their professionalism, there are many cases that show the opposite and undermine the credibility of law enforcement officials. Some that come to mind immediately are the decade-long coverup by the German police of hate crimes by neo-Nazi groups, and the infamous L.A. riots, when three policemen were acquitted in 1992 after being videotaped beating a black motorist.
The L.A. riots caused the death of 53 people and as many as 2,000 were injured. The cost of the riots was between $800 million and $1 billion.
While the work of the police should reveal fairness and abiding duty to the cause of justice, factors like politics and prejudice do unfortunately get in the way.
If there are police credibility issues among Finland’s immigrant community, the police should find ways to increase trust.
While we believe in the professionalism of our law officers, we at Migrant Tales are concerned about the ever-worsening atmosphere for immigrants in Finland. What happened in Oulu Monday night does not assure us that matters are getting better.
We do not have to venture far from Migrant Tales to grasp what is wrong with Finland today when it comes to the attitudes of some Finns. Here is one thread by Allan that is especially worrying: “Now if it so happens to be some gluesniffers on bad acid after drinking kärpässienikilju, where exactly are you blaming *them* ? No, you are blaming all Finns for having that as their social norm.”
Another blogger, Depressed N Worried Immigrant, writes: “I went to read iltalehti chatting room and i was shocked literally, there is no one single person condemning the death of this young man theye’re giving all kind of excuses…”
The police is one important source in resolving the tragedy that took place in Oulu Monday night.
It is the second incident so far in Oulu in a month where a person has fled perceived danger by jumping off the balcony. You can read the story (in Finnish) here.
Let’s wait for their verdict.
UPDATE 2: Somali young man leaps to his death in Oulu, Finland
By Enrique Tessieri
The Oulu police have now admitted as Migrant Tales did first in Finland that the victim who leaped to his death from a sixth floor was a Somali. Kaleva, the Oulu daily, quotes Antti Räsänen of the police stating that “nothing points to racism [hate crime] but we haven’t ruled out that possibility.”
What next?
The interesting matter to watch is how long it take the police to announce the motive of the crime.
We know from a police statement on Tuesday that three people barged into the home of the Somali before he leaped from the sixth floor.
UPDATE: Somali young man leaps to his death in Oulu, Finland
By Enrique Tessieri
The cause of the death of a Somali male in Oulu on Tuesday appears to be as Migrant Tales correctly reported a hate crime involving three Finns who entered the man’s home by force and caused him to leap from his sixth-floor apartment balcony. The young man died the same day after taken to hospital.
Police have not yet confirmed the nationality of the victim but Migrant Tales understands the person to be Somali.
Here is a statement by police statement stating that they have detained three suspects in the crime.
“We don’t have that much information [about the causes or whether he was assaulted],” the police told Migrant Tales earlier.
A resident of the neighborhood claimed that the Somali was attacked by a group of Finns who forced their way into his home with a chainsaw.
“They [the Finns] entered the [Somali’s] home and fearing for his life he tried escaping by leaping from the balcony,” said a Somali resident of the neighborhood who knew the victim.
The apartment, located in the neighborhood of Toppila, houses many immigrants.
Somali young man leaps to his death in Oulu, Finland
By Enrique Tessieri
The cause of the death of a Somali male in Oulu on Monday night is still unresolved after he leaped to his death from his sixth-floor apartment balcony. Police have not confirmed the cause of death but neighbors contacted by Migrant Tales claim that the eighteen-year-old was attacked by a group of Finns who had entered his home by force
“We don’t have that much information [about the causes or whether he was assaulted],” the police told Migrant Tales.
A resident of the neighborhood claimed that the Somali was attacked by a group of Finns who forced their way into his home with a chainsaw.
“They [the Finns] entered the [Somali’s] home and fearing for his life he tried escaping by leaping from the balcony,” said a Somali resident of the neighborhood who knew the victim.
The apartment, located in the neighborhood of Toppila, houses many immigrants.

