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Tag: ethnic profiling

How the police, National Border Guards and white Finnish institutions keep visible migrants and minorities on a short leash

Posted on February 4, 2018 by Migrant Tales

What would you say if the police, the National Border Guards, Regional State Administrative Agencies (AVI), Customs, Rescue Department, and City of Helsinki health inspectors came knocking on your door on a Saturday afternoon? Such a thing happened yesterday at the Puhos shopping center of Easter Helsinki, where the majority of customers are visible migrants and minorities.

A Migrant Tales reporter, Muhammed Shire, who was at Puhos Saturday afternoon, asked one of the police why they didn’t carry out similar inspections of white Finns’ stores and stop their customers?

The police didn’t answer his question.

Even people coming out from a mosque were stopped and asked for identification.

Writes Shire in an email: “At the Rukous kerho (mosque), people can’t enter the premises or leave through the main entrance since the police carefully check everyone’s identity. At the main entrance, the police prohibited a young man from going in [the mosque] or leave and checked the person’s identity and registered it in the laptop. Other congregations in Finland don’t have to put up with these types of inspections in Finland.”

A very good question and we know the answer: Migrants, especially Muslims, are political cannon fodder for the government and a constant obsession about security marks these people and gives the police and authorities justification to get more funds.

 

The big question that emerges is if this operation by the police and other authorities is just another case of ethnic profiling.


 

The police and other officials like the Finnish Border Guards at Puhos on Saturday.  Photos by Muhammed Shire.

And why wouldn’t you believe that ethnic profiling was at play? Can we trust the police when it comes to relations with non-white Finns? Remember June when a secret Facebook page with over 2,800 members made openly racist comments about Muslims? That amounts to about one-third of Finland’s police service of 7,000, according to the Long Play scoop.



Read the full story here.

What about a year before that, in April, when the police and National Border Guard carried out spot checks on “foreign-looking” people? There’s also the Musta Barbaari case where his mother and sister were stopped by the police.

When was the last time you were stopped by the police?

Do the police ethnically profile people? I am pretty certain that you will get a candid answer from members of the Roma minority, who have lived in Finland for over 500 years.

As long as the police and other public officials continue to have obsolete and racist views of Others, the less migrants and minorities will trust the police and continue to see them as enemies.

One of the “short leashes” that officials use to keep migrants and minorities oppressed and treated like second-class citizens is ethnic profiling.

 

 

 

 

 


 

Police and other authorities carry out identification checks at the Puhos shopping center of Eastern Helsinki

Posted on February 4, 2018 by Migrant Tales

On Saturday about 3 pm, the police, the National Border Guards, Regional State Administrative Agencies (AVI), Customs, Rescue Department, and City of Helsinki health inspectors started to ask foreign-looking people for their identification in Puhos, a shopping center in Eastern Helsinki frequented by migrants. 

The big question that emerges is if this operation by the police and other authorities is just another case of ethnic profiling.

The police and other officials like the Finnish Border Guards at Puhos on Saturday.  Photos by Muhammed Shire.

“I asked a policeman [at Phos] why they are asking people for their identification and why they don’t ask those who go to shops run by white Finnish?” he queried, adding that the police said that “on a weekly basis they do these types of operations, but he wouldn’t say where.”¨

Migrant Tales will follow up on this story on Sunday.

 

Musta Barbaari’s mother and sister charged by the police in “ethnic profiling” case

Posted on August 1, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Singer Musta Barbaari’s mother and sister are going to be charged for resistance to cooperate with law enforcement officials and insubordination, according to YLE.  In a highly publicized case in social media last year, Musta Barbaari, whose real name is James Nikander, wrote that plainclothes police officials stopped his mother and sister in downtown Helsinki.

According to a then-Helsingin Sanomat story, the singer’s sister refused to show her passport and asked the police why they were arbitrarily stopped and questioned.

“The plainclothes police didn’t answer [my sister’s question] but proceeded to handcuff both of them rudely and forced my mother to lie on the ground,” he wrote. “My sister asked once again why they were being treated in such a way and what they had done but didn’t get an answer from police. My mother feared for her life and thought she was going to be beaten since the behavior of the police was very rude!”

The police were cleared of all wrongdoing in the case and went further by clearing the police of ethnic profiling while monitoring migrants in 2016, according to YLE News.


One of Musta Barbaari’s latest videos called, “Who’s afraid of the dark?”

In the spring of 2016, the police carried out spot checks with the Finnish Border Guard on “foreign-looking” people in the Helsinki, Espoo, and Vantaa.

The idea that officials are looking for people who “look foreign” should raise some questions. One of these is what is a “foreign-looking” person look?

The University of Turku will publish the findings of Finland’s most comprehensive study about ethnic profiling in 2018.

Up to now, the police service has denied that it ethnically profiles people.

 

A Helsinki bus driver who publishes video tapes of Somali clients he’s insulted

Posted on July 13, 2017 by Migrant Tales

What would you say if a bus driver, who only video tapes Somalis, starts calling them liars and forces them off the bus even after one of them wanted to pay for the bus fare? Ethnic profiling? Racist or all of the above? 

Add to the latter a story authored by Paavo Tajukangas and the message and intent of the story is clear.

Tajukangas is a member of the far-right white supremacist Suomen Sisu association. His trademark is making up stories to suit his racist writings.

We won’t publish the videos because we don’t want to bring more suffering to the victims.

According to a Facebook posting, the bus driver of Russian origin seeks a lawyer because he found out that he cannot videotape customers and publish them.

Migrant Tales got in touch with the company, which promised to call back.

Continue reading “A Helsinki bus driver who publishes video tapes of Somali clients he’s insulted”

A tragic weekend that encourages us to challenge social ills like racism, bigotry and inequality in Finland, Europe and globally

Posted on June 5, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Over the weekend a lot of things happened: The European Network Against Racism (ENAR) hosted a seminar in Helsinki on anti-migration racism Saturday that was overshadowed by a closed Finnish police Facebook page with racist comments, a comprehensive story on ethnic profiling in Finland, and another terrorist attack in London that left seven killed and 48 injured.

If so much bad news can happen in one day, it shows once again the crucial importance of anti-racism activism, human rights, the rule of law and exposing those who want to capitalize politically on terrorism and water down our inalienable civil rights.

ENAR’s seminar on Saturday in the Eastern Helsinki neighborhood of Myllypuro discussed a lot of salient issues facing Finland such as equality data collection, ethnic profiling, anti-racism education, hate crime laws and migrants in sports.



If there was one clear message from the panelists and the participants that took part in the seminar, it was that activism, lobbying and intersectionality are just a few vital tools to challenge social ills facing our society.

At the end of the seminar, the participants voted in favor of advancing the cause of equality data collection in Finland as well as hate crime legislation.

The aim of the seminar in Helsinki was to debate, identify and prioritize burning issues in Finland concerning racism.

With ENAR’s resources and expertise, the participants plan to further equality collection data collection and improve hate crime legislation.

A follow-up seminar will be held at the end of October.

Source: Facebook.

Three events that overshadowed ENAR’s seminar over the weekend was a racist Finnish police closed Facebook site that was exposed and made Interior Minister Paula Risikko and National Police Commissioner Seppo Kolehminen look awkward after their countless assurances that the police service has zero tolerance for racism.

Continue reading “A tragic weekend that encourages us to challenge social ills like racism, bigotry and inequality in Finland, Europe and globally”

Defining white Finnish privilege #32: The white Finnish police service and “them”

Posted on December 22, 2016 by Migrant Tales

If there is an institution that is the epitome of white Finnish privilege that is doing everything possible to hinder cultural and ethnic diversity among its ranks, that institution is the Finnish police service. 

Am I exaggerating?

Just go to the police service’s online pages and you will not find a single person who is a visible minority.

Gathering from the police service’s website, women are well-represented but nothing, absolutely nothing, is said about visible minorities never mind the police’s sensitivity towards our ever-growing culturally diverse community.

Visit the Finnish police service’s web page here.

Definition #32

The fact that there isn’t a single visible minority on the Finnish police websites shows us that they are far behind the times of other European nations like the United Kingdom and Sweden.

There must be a lot of opposition to cultural diversity as well if  a recent poll showed that about half of the police surveyed claimed to have voted for the National Coalition Party and the anti-immigration populists Perussuomalaiset.*

Continue reading “Defining white Finnish privilege #32: The white Finnish police service and “them””

Ethnic profiling in the EU is illegal and discriminatory

Posted on December 7, 2016 by Migrant Tales

Please share: 

#EthnicProfiling is unfair & discriminatory. @EU_Justice we need EU standards on #FairPolicing #SingledOut 

When police use ethnicity as a basis for a stop & search it is #discrimination. EU member states must stop #EthnicProfiling #SingledOut 

#EthnicProfiling can damage trust & alienate local communities. EU must develop standards on #FairPolicing @EU_Justice #SingledOut 

39% of Roma surveyed in Greece said they felt that they were stopped by police because of their ethnicity #EthnicProfiling #SingledOut 

Continue reading “Ethnic profiling in the EU is illegal and discriminatory”

Finnish government party Perussuomalaiset MEP claims ethnic profiling needed to fight terrorism

Posted on October 13, 2016 by Migrant Tales

Perussuomalaiset (PS)* MEP Jussi Halla-aho, who hungers for public attention, tries to surprise us with the following suggestion: The police should be allowed to ethnically profile Middle Easterners, North African and Central Asian people irrespective if it is in infringement of these people’s fundamental rights and human rights.

It’s clearly evident from Halla-aho’s comment that his own racist and bigoted statements blind his sensible judgment.

Doesn’t a lot of ethnic profiling happen in Europe today?

Halla-aho makes these types of statements because he has to feed his own bigotry and craves headlines.

But the only headlines Halla-aho makes is soiling the name of Prime Minsiter Juha Sipilä’s government and that of Finland’s image.

na%cc%88ytto%cc%88kuva-2016-10-13-kello-7-12-14

A cartoon by Ville Ranta after the Paris attacks of November 2015 showing that Islamophobes were the first to capitalize on the death of victims.

Ethnic appearance has little to do with what people think. That is a racist idea from the days of eugenics, a pseudo-science that fell from grace after the horrors of World War 2 Nazi-run death camps were exposed to the world.

Continue reading “Finnish government party Perussuomalaiset MEP claims ethnic profiling needed to fight terrorism”

Perussuomalaiset MP Leena Meri: Hiding coded bigotted statements as jokes

Posted on July 12, 2016 by Migrant Tales

One matter is what happened on Friday to singer Musta Barbaari’s mother and sister when they were stopped by plainclothes police Friday, the other is a bigotted comment by an anti-immigration politician and former police officer concerning the alleged ethnic profiling case. The MP, who is a member of the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* party, Leena Meri, said that if the singer doesn’t like living in Finland he’s welcome to go back to where he came from.

What the MP didn’t grasp at first is that the singer is a native Finn from the city of Turku.

Meri, whose anti-immigration and human rights opinions are well-known, apologized Tuesday for what she said in Ilta-Sanomat, a tabloid that gained notoriety in the 1990s for labeling minorities like the Somalis in a racist manner. She wrote off what she said by claiming it was “a joke” and she didn’t mean to hurt anyone.

The PS MP’s apology is a good example of how low Finland’s politicians and the police service have stooped in recent years.

Meri worked as a police service officer before she was elected to parliament.

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-7-12 kello 17.03.34

Read full story (in Finnish) here.

Continue reading “Perussuomalaiset MP Leena Meri: Hiding coded bigotted statements as jokes”

When will the Finnish police service stop denying that ethnic profiling isn’t an issue?

Posted on July 11, 2016 by Migrant Tales

The Finnish police service acts as if it has never heard of ethnic profiling. Even if ethnic profiling cases by the police are rarely brought to the attention of the media, there was one case made public Friday by singer Musta Barbaari, whose mother and sister were – according to a Facebook posting – treated in “a rude manner” and were “humiliated publicly” by the police. 

Musta Barbaari writes on his Facebook wall that after spending the night in Helsinki’s city center, his mother and sister were stopped by two plainclothes police officers who asked them for their passport. Even if the posting and the

Even if the posting and the Helsingin Sanomat story doesn’t mention that the conversation with the police took place in the Finnish language, the singer’s sister refused to show her passport and asked the police why they were being arbitrarily stopped and questioned.

Musta Barbaari writes: “The plainclothes police didn’t answer [my sister’s question] but proceeded to handcuff both of them rudely and forced my mother to lie on the ground. My sister asked once again why they were being treated in such a way and what they had done but didn’t get an answer from police. My mother feared for her life and thought she was going to be beaten since the behavior of the police was very rude!”

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-7-11 kello 4.21.05

Read full statement here.

The singer has brought criminal charges against the police.

Continue reading “When will the Finnish police service stop denying that ethnic profiling isn’t an issue?”

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