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Tag: anti-immigration

YouTube Perussuomalaiset candidate: We don’t want asylum seekers in Finland – leave

Posted on April 5, 2017 by Migrant Tales

This interview by an Iraqi asylum seeker of Tampere Perussuomalaiset (PS)* municipal election candidate, Elisa Hiltunen, reveals candidly why many migrants see the PS as a hostile party that is set on placing obstacles on migrants’, especially asylum seekers’ lives. The PS candidate reveals as well the extreme egoism and her outright ignorance of our laws and international commitments. 

But that’s “ok.” She’s a member of the PS.

* The official translation to Finnish of the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party is the Finns Party. In our opinion, it is not only a horrible translation, but one that is misguided. A direct translation of Perussuomalaiset in English would be something like “basic” or “fundamental Finn.” Such terms like the Finns Party of True Finns promote as well in our opinion nativist nationalism and xenophobia. We, therefore, at Migrant Tales prefer to use in our postings the Finnish name of the party once and thereafter the acronym PS.

MP Ozan Yanar: The Perussuomalaiset are obsessed by migrants, they don’t have anything better to do

Posted on March 28, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Finnish Green League MP Ozan Yanar socks it to the Perussuomalaiset* (PS) city council candidate Erlin Yang and Laura Kolbe of the Center Party. What he said on the municipal election debate show explains what the PS is to a tee. 

Yanar: “For example the Perussuomalaiset, there are a lot of people obsessed with migrants. Just liked obsessed, they don’t have anything else to do. Sadly Kokoomus and Keskusta, which normally are good parties, are playing along. That’s the situation right now.”

Yang: “That’s discriminatory. Those are not nice words at all!”

Kolbe: “These are democratically elected representatives.”

Yanar: “You are doing your politics and we are criticizing [it] and that’s politics. Welcome to politics.”

You can watch the full election debate here. 

* The official translation to Finnish of the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party is the Finns Party. In our opinion, it is not only a horrible translation, but one that is misguided. A direct translation of Perussuomalaiset in English would be something like “basic” or “fundamental Finn.” Such terms like the Finns Party of True Finns promote as well in our opinion nativist nationalism and xenophobia. We, therefore, at Migrant Tales prefer to use in our postings the Finnish name of the party once and thereafter the acronym PS.

How Sampo Terho’s essay in 2007 is still the norm but in a different context to fuel fear and racism of migrants and minorities

Posted on March 19, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Finnish Perussuomalaiset (PS)* parliamentary group leader Sampo Terho wrote a decade ago in Kanava an essay with the classic far-right populist rhetoric about the threat of migration. His point of view in the essay is not only sinister but was a central argument used by parties like the PS to attract voters and that their racism was “normal.”  

UPDATED (20.3): By publishing this baloney in a respected publication like Kanava, Terho’s aim is to substantiate his racist points of views.  

Many politicians who wrote racist things in the past and which helped them get elected want us to forget.

We cannot and should not forget for the sake of decency and respect for future generations.

Terho is not just any PS MP with racist views, but one that is vying to become chairman of the anti-immigration party after Timo Soini steps down in early June.

In a letter to the editor to Helsingin Sanomat, Terho claims that his or Halla-aho’s election to the helm of the party will not force it a path of “sheer darkness and evil.”

Columnist Yrjö Rautio wrote in Helsingin Sanomat Friday that if either Terho or Halla-aho become chairman of the PS it would not only mean the end of Soini’s populist project but a slip into “sheer darkness and evil.”

We disagree with part of Rautio’s analysis. The PS was always a party of “sheer darkness and evil” and its main architect is Soini.

Who is Terho anyway and what are his thoughts about migration and cultural diversity?

Even if the PS MP has tried to hide what he wrote in Kanava, it is a classic example of the racism and ethnocentrism that is spread by far-right and right-wing populist anti-immigration groups at the time to instill fear, hostility and racism against migrants and minorities.

Let’s look at some of the main points of Terho’s essay headlined, “European’s past and future.”

Read full essay here.
  • Terho groups humans in the essay into three racial groups: “Negroid, Mongoloid and Caucasian;”
  • The European population of Africans will grow three-fold by 2050;

Continue reading “How Sampo Terho’s essay in 2007 is still the norm but in a different context to fuel fear and racism of migrants and minorities”

A small far-right Suomi ensin! demonstration again and the media cherishes a story

Posted on November 26, 2016 by Migrant Tales

Suomi ensin! (Finland first!) is a far-right group that goes to different places in Finland to stir up anti-immigration sentiment and hatred for migrants. Even if their demonstrations attract few people, they get a lot of attention in the national media. On Saturday afternoon their demonstration attracted 300* people to the eastern Helsinki neighborhood of Itäkeskus to listen to their xenophobic rhetoric. 

One of the matters that the Suomi ensin! demonstrators complained about was too many foreigners at public swimming halls, according to Helsingin Sanomat. The demonstrators didn’t lose the chance to warn listeners about Islamization and how the government’s immigration policy is synonymous to treason.

Suomi ensin! calls itself a nationalistic movement, which is code for fascism.

Taking into account how this group pesters and antagonizes migrants in Finland,  what would happen if a group of visible migrants went in front of the Perussuomalaiset* party’s headquarters and demonstrated in the same manner and make the same outrageous claims?

Ever wonder what kind of a media storm that would create? We doubt that the media would cover our demonstration in such a neutral manner as

We seriously doubt that the media would cover our demonstration in the same neutral news story manner as Helsingin Sanomat did with Suomi ensin today!

na%cc%88ytto%cc%88kuva-2016-11-26-kello-20-05-58

Today’s demonstration at Itäkeskus. Note the two skinheads on the right. Photo by Migrant Tales reporter.

Continue reading “A small far-right Suomi ensin! demonstration again and the media cherishes a story”

Family reunification in Finland can easily cost a migrant thousands of euros

Posted on October 23, 2016 by Migrant Tales

Affluent Nordic countries like Finland are making it legally near-difficult never mind costly to reunite families of migrants thanks to the tightening of family reunification guidelines that came into force in July.  How much would it cost for an asylum seeker who got a residence permit before July and applied to get his wife and three children aged 9, 7 and 4 to Finland?

Is your answer 1,000 euros or over 10,000 euros?

na%cc%88ytto%cc%88kuva-2016-10-23-kello-13-23-15

The Finnish government places a price tag on migrant families. No money, no family. Source: Arab News.

If the figure is a four-digit number, where are these people, who are former asylum seekers, going to raise thousands of euros if many have lost everything to come to Europe?

Why would a country like Finland, which claims to abide by Nordic values such as social equality and respect for family life, want to separate families indefinitely?

Zygmunt Bauman is one of the best-known social thinkers of our time. He believes that asylum seekers who come to Europe instill fear in some of us for a very basic reason.

“[They are] people who yesterday were proud of their homes, were proud of their position in society, were very often very well educated, very well-off and so on,” Bauman is quoted as saying in Al-Jazeera. “But they are refugees now…Refugees, ’embody all our fears’ of losing everything. Yesterday they were very powerful back in their country, like we are here [in Europe] today.”

In order to answer voters’ uncertainty and their fear of losing everything, populist anti-immigration politicians tell us a big lie:  Vote for me and I will give you security. We will take these refugees and hide them from your sight. We won’t allow their families to come here so they cannot reporduce here and upset our white society. If we don’t see these people, they won’t remind us  – as Bauman stated – that we may be one day in the same boat as they.

Without going into a deep discussion about the fear of losing our standing in society, the Finnish government tightened family reunification guidelines in June. The new guidelines came into force in July.

If you are lucky to have received your residence permit before July, you won’t have to make 2,600 euros after taxes in order to bring your spouse and two children to Finland.

But let’s go back to the original question: How much would it cost a former asylum seeker who got a residence permit to bring his wife and three children to Finland?

According to the Iraqi who got a residence permit before July, the total cost to bring his family would be over 10,000 euros. There is no guarantee as well that the Finnish Immigration Service will grant his family a visa to live in Finland even if he raises such a sum of cash.

Continue reading “Family reunification in Finland can easily cost a migrant thousands of euros”

YouGov survey reinforces what we’ve been seeing in some EU countries: authoritarian populist sentiment

Posted on October 11, 2016 by Migrant Tales

A recent YouGov survey on authoritarian populist opinions in 12 European countries revealed something that we all knew. Authoritarian populist opinions are defined by the survey as people who have anti-immigration, anti-human rights, anti-EU institutions, and power as well as strong opinions on foreign policy. 

Near 50% of the 12,000 people surveyed held anti-immigration views.

The most authoritarian populist countries in the survey were: Romania (82%), Poland (78%), France (63%), Holland (55%), Finland (50%), Denmark (49%), Britain (48%), Italy (47%), Sweden (35%) and Spain (33%).

The country with the lowest authoritarian populist opinions was Germany at 18%.

na%cc%88ytto%cc%88kuva-2016-10-11-kello-8-25-09

Read the full story here.

In Finland, we’ve seen the rise of authoritarian populist sentiment through the Perussuomalaiset* party supported by mainstream ones like the National Coalition Party and Center Party.

Continue reading “YouGov survey reinforces what we’ve been seeing in some EU countries: authoritarian populist sentiment”

Our new message to the world: Finland doesn’t like you so don’t even think of moving here!

Posted on September 2, 2016 by Migrant Tales

It’s clear that the government of Prime Minister Juha Sipilä doesn’t like asylum seekers never mind cultural diversity. In the last few months, we’ve seen a tightening of immigration policy by the government, which sends out a clear message to would-be asylum seekers and migrants: Don’t even think of moving here! 

Some may appear surprised by the government’s draconian and heartless measures that have far-reaching consequences for members of our ever-growing culturally diverse society.

When you do away with residence permits under humanitarian grounds, enact laws that make it virtually impossible to bring your family to the country  and shorter appeal times for asylum seekers, you tell the world that all those nice things about being a tolerant country that respects human rights is a lie.

The message is clear: We don’t want you here – don’t even think of coming to this country!

Some very big questions that the latest law on shorter appeal periods is the right of asylum seekers to use lawyers when interviewed by the Finnish Immigration Service (Migri). Migrant Tales has heard that asylum seekers don’t have any longer the right to a paid lawyer at the Migri interview.

Imagine how difficult and complicated has Migri, with the blessings of the government, made life for asylum seekers in this country. Not only have they shortened the appeal periods but made legal help more expensive and complicated.

In Finland, it’s nothing strange that lawyers charge around 200 euros an hour for their services.

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-9-1 kello 23.16.01

Read the full statement here.

There are countries like the United States, Canada, Australia and Argentina that have a rich history of how migrants built the country.

Continue reading “Our new message to the world: Finland doesn’t like you so don’t even think of moving here!”

Anti-immigration racism in Finland isn’t more common now

Posted on August 2, 2016 by Migrant Tales

Anti-immigration racism in Finland isn’t more common now, it’s showing its face thanks to the government’s shameful indifference towards asylum seekers and social media.

http://www.valomerkki.fi/puheenvuorot/ville-ranta-turvapaikkaa-hakemassa/ville%20ranta.jpg/@@images/a2b8f35d-086e-42d9-8577-a7a25b1c5d6f.jpeg

Will you stop squirting us [with blood]? Cartoon by Ville Ranta. Source: Valomerkki.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Finland’s shameful asylum policy should be changed

Posted on July 31, 2016 by Migrant Tales

Some Finnish politicians from parties like the Swedish People’s Party, Greens and Left Alliance have expressed concern about the government’s ever-tightening asylum policy and a recent decision by the Finnish Immigration Service (Migri) to deny an Iraqi asylum.

Writes YLE News: “According to the decision, first made public when it was posted on social media Wednesday, the [Iraqi] man was able to successfully prove to the Finnish Immigration Service that his home in Mosul had been bombed, the army had tortured him and that ISIS was persecuting him.”

Even if some may seem surprised by the latter, it’s “business as usual” considering that the anti-immigration Perussuomalaiset (PS)* party are calling the immigration policy shots in government.

The PS shares power in government with the Center Party and National Coalition Party (NCP). In exchange for its support for the Center Party’s and NCP’s austerity policies, the PS has been given a virtual free hand to tighten immigration policy as it sees fit. As long as the PS remains in government the plight of migrants and minorities in Finland will worsen.

Tighter family reunification laws is one sad example of the latter never mind the party’s near-constant racist comments that continue to poison the atmosphere for migrants and minorities in this country.

One question that tighter immigration policy raises is if they are constitutional. According to Section 6 of the Finnish Constitution guarantees that “everyone is equal before the law.” Moreover, the EU Convention of Human Rights (Article 8) and Article 16 of the UN Declaration of Human rights guarantees that “the family is the natural and fundamental group unit of society and is entitled to protection by society and the State.”

Professor of Public International Law Martin Scheinin also criticized the decision, saying that he has reason to believe that Finland’s tougher asylum policy may be in conflict with the country’s constitution.

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-7-31 kello 10.20.34

Read full story here.

Even if some Finns correctly point out that we were the first country to grant women the right to vote in 1906, we were the last country in Europe together with Romania to grant Jews political rights in 1917.

Continue reading “Finland’s shameful asylum policy should be changed”

How “safe” is Iraq? Who is safe in Iraq?

Posted on July 4, 2016 by Migrant Tales

An Isis suicide attack ripped Baghdad Sunday causing the death toll to rise today to 217 dead., according to Al Iraqya TV. 

It wasn’t a long time ago when the Finnish Immigration Service (FIS) with the ok of the government, which comprises of the anti-immigration Perussuomalaiset (PS),* Center Party and National Coalition Party, stated that Iraq, Afghanistan, and Somalia are safe countries to return asylum seekers.

These are apparently “safe” countries to return asylum seekers. The foreign ministry advises Finns not to visit these three countries.

So while members of the PS, government, and public officials enjoy their peaceful holidays by a quiet lake, there is a slaughter house not too far away where you can feel the chilling breath of death.

Viewer discretion is advised. The content of the pictures below may be disturbing.

Continue reading “How “safe” is Iraq? Who is safe in Iraq?”

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