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Tag: Finland

Police University College: Hate crimes in Finland in 2018 were down 21.9%. Is it a good sign?

Posted on November 4, 2019 by Migrant Tales

THIS STORY WAS UPDATED

Suspected hate crimes reported to the police in Finland during 2018 totaled 910 cases, which is a 21.9% fall from 1,165 hate crimes in the previous year, according to the Police University College.

As in previous years, the lion’s share (86.8% versus 89% in 2017) of all hate crimes were motivated by national-ethnic origin (635 cases) and religion (155). That was followed by sexual orientation (73) and disability (48).

The only group that saw a rise in hate crime compared with 2017 was sexual orientation, which rose by 21.7%.

Suspected hate crimes during 2011-2018: Ethnic or national background (etninen tai kansallinen tausta); religion or belief (uskonto tai vakamus); sexual orientatation (seksuaalinen suuntatuminen); disability (vammaisuus); total (yhteensä). Souce: Police University College.

Of all national groups, the Iraqis faced the highest frequency of hate crime due to national and ethnic origin. The majority of hate crimes due to religious backgrounds were against Muslims.

“One of the biggest reasons why Iraqis saw the highest frequency of hate crime [in 2018] was because they were in 2015 the majroity of newcomers,” said W. Che, a Migrant Tales associate editor. “Vigilante groups like the Soldiers of Odin justified hate crimes with the support of a hostile environment against Muslims supported indirectly or directly by the police, politicians and the media.”

Twelve percent of all hate crimes reported were directed towards a member of the Roma minority. in Finland.

Jenita Ranta, a researcher at the Police University College, believed that a number of factors caused the fall in reported hate crime cases.

“The first [reason] is that hate crimes went down and that there were less of them,” she was quoted as saying in Yle. “One reason could be that people don’t report them to the police. I believe that the biggest reason is that in 2015, there came a lot of migrants and asylum seekers, which after that we saw a rise in hate crimes. Now there haven’t been so many immigrants [coming to Finland], and it could explain the fall [in hate crimes].”

According to some estimates, only one in five hate crimes is reported to the police in Finland.

Sometimes hate crimes aren’t treated as such as was the case of a Pakistani who was attacked by three Finnish youths in February 2018, who still believes that he was a victim of a hate crime.

A salient question that can be asked in light of the Pakistani case is how the Finnish police treat hate crimes.

The European Network Against Racism (ENAR) highlighted the case in its 2014-2018 shadow report on Racist Crime & Institutional Racism in Europe:

Case Abdirahim Husu Hussein (again) and the racism of the Perussuomalaiset party

Posted on November 4, 2019 by Migrant Tales

Helsinki City Councilperson Abdirahim Husu Hussein has a lot of grit against racist parties like the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* and its band of followers. The latest incident proves beyond any shadow of a doubt that the PS is a racist party.

Hussein is a courageous politician who gets stronger with every racist death threat and harassment hurled at him. In July, the white fragility of the party suffered a blow in summer when Hussein tweeted that the PS, those who voted and supported the party, are racists.

In their misguided and blind racism, politicians like PS leader Jussi Halla-aho, who was convicted of ethnic agitation and breaching the sanctity of religion in 2012, take constant snipes at Hussein. They ask themselves in anger how a black Finn can question their white supremacy and racism?

Hussein tweeted Monday that while he was driving his taxi, a passenger started to insult him in a racist manner. The councilperson decided that he had heard enough and told the passenger to get out of the car.

“He [the passenger] was quite surprised that I did not accept his money [for part of the ride]. I told him that I do not accept money from racists.”

Hussein asked in the tweet why the passenger thought he had the right to insult him in such a racist manner. “I would not go to your work an start to tell you off,” he ended the tweet.

Traffic law section 37: “A motor vehicle cannot stop on the motorway. We don’t want Somali taxi culture [in Finland], thank you!

Attempting to score political points and to satisfy his hatred of the Somalis, Halla-aho tweets that what Hussein did was wrong and that you cannot ask a passenger to get off a vehicle on a motorway.

Halla-aho even gives us that the section of the law that incorrectly prohibits motor vehicles from stopping on the freeway. Indeed, people on buses or in a taxi can get off on the motorway if there is a bus stop.

The PS under Halla-aho has shown clearly its far-right racist colors. Robin DiAngelo gives an excellent definition of racism that sits perfectly with the PS leader and his followers.

A racist is an individual, always an individual, who does not like people based on race – must be conscious – and who intentionally seems to be mean to them.

Blogger Saku Timonen offers some advice to Hussein.

“He [the passenger] could have been taken to the nearest police station [and charged with racist harassment and hate speech].”

*A direct translation of Perussuomalaiset in English would be something like “basic” or “fundamental Finn.” Official translations of the Finnish name of the party, such as Finns Party or True Finns, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and racism. We, therefore, at Migrant Tales prefer to use in our postings the Finnish name of the party once and after that the acronym PS.

What Yle leaves out when it tells us why labor discrimination exists in Finland

Posted on October 27, 2019 by Migrant Tales

THIS STORY WAS UPDATED

If there is one matter that shines brightly from the editorial standards of Yle, it is its whiteness and how little regard they have for our people to voice the concerns of our ever-growing culturally diverse community.

OK, true, there was a lot written this week about job discrimination and how having a foreign-sounding name may not land you a job interview.

We need more of these types of articles and studies and much more activism on top of them.

Take for instance, the Yle article on five reasons why there is discrimination in the Finnish labor market.

The Yle article points out five of them:

  • (1) Discrimination in the labor market has broad support among Finns;
  • (2) employers are ignorant of labor discrimination laws;
  • (3) employers believe they will lose money if they follow the law;
  • (4) discrimination at the workplace is difficult to prove;
  • (5) victims are reluctant to report to the authorities because they fear reprisals.

All of the latter are valid points, but I would have wanted Yle to dig deeper. This is a valid point because of the level of discrimination is so prevalent.

There are other culprits as well as lack of leadership and resolve from politicians, the police, media, policymakers, and a long list of others who shape public opinion.

Moreover, if discrimination is so widely accepted, it means that our education system has failed.

I have lived in Finland on a semi-permanent basis since 1978. One of the first matters that I learned when I moved here was that my “foreign name,” despite having a Finnish mother, was a disadvantage even when trying to rent an apartment.

Racism is real and an ogre in Finland, and it is impoverishing Finland socially and economically. We need studies and articles but more than ever, action and leadership in tackling such social ills and call out and bring to account those who spread them.

Exposing Finnish white privilege #65: Racism exists because our society profits from it

Posted on October 26, 2019 by Migrant Tales

What thoughts race in your head whenever a politician, public official, or white Finn rambles on about how social justice is a key value of our society and why racism and discrimination, which are illegal, have no place in Finland?

While the latter is important for newcomers to know, the issue is how such topics are taught and framed to students that have little idea of Finnish society.

I am a sociologist who has been an immigrant-Other all my life. It should not surprise you why I am interested in immigration topics.

The editor of Migrant Tales, Enrique Tessieri, with author and journalist Reni Eddo-Lodge, who authored Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race. Her book that focuses on feminism and structural racism is a classic of the anti-racism movement. Photo by Bashy Quraishy.

One of the courses I teach is “active citizenship” (Aktiivinen kansalainen). Nearly all my students came to Finland as refugees or are seeking asylum. Since I have a lot of respect for the students, I tell them frankly: Do you want me to teach the hypocrisy, spread myths, and lies about your new home country or tell how we can change matters?

When we talk in class about social ills like racism, the Perussuomalaiset*, and other toxic topics that impact newcomers negatively, I encourage them to organize and use all the democratic means available to change matters.

For those who whine silently, I offer them handkerchiefs.

None of the students cry. Some listen more attentively than others.

Finnish white privilege #65

Today, Saturday is a better example than any to show the impunity of Finnish white privilege in the media. An article by Yle on five reasons why discrimination exists in the labor market offered only a partial view of the issue. Helsingin Sanomat published a human interest story on the same day about PS first vice-president, Riikka Purra.

One of the problems with the Yle article is that it absolves the police, politicians and other public officials for doing little to nothing to challenge discriminatory practices in the labor market. If you disagree, look at the underwhelming number of discrimination cases that are mentioned by the Yle article.

Likewise, the Helsingin Sanomat article of Purra is another example of toothless Finnish white privilege journalism. Nowhere in the story does the writer challenge Purra’s Islamophobic far-right views. Even the book she is reading by James Burham, “Suicide of the West,” exposes the PS politician’s ideology, which is mistrustful to migrants and Western liberal values.

Hungarian strongman Viktor Orbán dispises Western liberalism.

Purra’s party and herself are the ones fueling the hostile environment against migrants and minorities in Finland. The Helsingin Sanomat article offers us, instead, exalting pictures of Purra.

Both articles highlight why racism and discrimination have impunity in Finland. Both articles were written by white Finns who have never suffered racism in their country. Moreover, they don’t grasp how these articles fuel the hostile environment.

If the Roma minority has lived in Finland for over 500 years and faces racism and social exclusion even today, at this pace migrants and minorities will have to wait centuries for matters to improve.

Do we have to wait so long? Do we have to accept that we are second-class members of society?

Matters will never improve as long as our voices are faintly heard and our activism half-hearted. Even so, we are fortunate. We have many exemplary activists who are challenging the present order of things.

Migrant Tales wants to congratulate Maryan Abdulkarim, a true activist for social justice, for being awarded the Minna Canth award.

Canth (1844-97) was one of Finland’s foremost writers who wrote about social issues like women’s rights in nineteenth-century Finland.

See also:

  • Defining white Finnish privilege #1: I have it and you don’t
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #2: Third culture children versus “pupil with immigrant background” 
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #3 No history, no doctrine, no heroes and no martyrs
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #4 Holding the short end of the stick
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #5 It’s ok to be a racist
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #6 Not having a voice and the media
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #7 A definitive guide
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #8 Underrated and less intelligent
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #9 Mohammad Ali’s insight
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #10 I can victimize and make up any story I like about migrants because I’m white
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #11: Case Teuvo Hakkarainen
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #12: Case Tom Packalén
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #13: Case Matti Putkonen
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #14: Losing sight of the real issue
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #15: Case Halla-ago on the PS
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #16: Rosa Emilia Clay and my history versus yours
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #17: The Perussuomalaiset and our civil rights
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #18: Labeling others according to your prejudice
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #19: My rape statistics about your group
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #20: Labeling Others to strengthen “us” and “them.”
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #21: Who can be a Finn?
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #22: From racist, fascist to a politician without memory
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #23: Greater police powers to monitor migrants and minorities
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #24: Becoming a heartless accomplice in wars and people’s suffering
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #25: This land is my land, this isn’t your land
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #26: Are you an ethnic Finn?
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #27: White versus Other media
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #28: Are you an ethnic Finn (Part 2)?
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #29: Your family is worth less than mine
  • White Finnish privilege #30: Whitewashing and racializing the news
  • White Finnish privilege #31: The Soldiers of Odin and the Finnish media
  • White Finnish privilege #32: The white Finnish police and “them” 
  • White Finnish privilege #33: Appropriating our narrative to maintain the status quo, amass more power and privilege
  • White Finnish privilege #34: Building a political career on privilege and nativist nationalism   
  • White Finnish privilege #35: Case Sampo Terho and the ministry of (dis)culture
  • White Finnish privilege #36: Hate speech and censorship
  • White Finnish privilege #37: The master of near-everything
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #38: Cultural appropriation and racism are quaint discussion topics between white Finns
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #39: The Hollywood ending of racism that will never happen in Finland
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #40: To whitewash or to disenfranchise
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #41: An Islamophobic politician and gender equality 
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #42: Labeling and shaming
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #43: White versus dark skin
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #44: Defending Nazis’ rights to march is ok as long we agree on the common enemy
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #45: Do blondes have more fun? 
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #46: Teuvo Hakkarainen = white racism and sexism 
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #47: President Sauli Niinistö’s “culture inside four walls”
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #48: Allow me to smear your religion so mine can shine
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #49: When white privilege backfires 
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #50: Caving in to white narratives
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #51: The police are the defenders of white power and privilege
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #52: Having no privilege is dangerous
  • White Finnish privilege #53: Plan Finland’s unplanned pregnancy campaign #ProtectBlackGirlsToo #Whatofme
  • White Finnish privilege #54: Disguising your racism, bigotry, and prejudices effectively
  • White Finnish privilege #55: It’s that time of the year – Christmas! 
  • White Finnish privilege #56: How Islamophobic is Finland?
  • White Finnish privilege #57: Finland’s “hostile environment” against migrants
  • White Finnish privilege #58: How the police, media and politicians fuel Finland’s hostile environment against Muslims and migrants
  • White Finnish privilege #59: In this country, you are guilty before proven innocent
  • White Finnish privilege #60: Oulu, OULU! Awaken and sniff the racist coffee.
  • Exposing Finnish white privilege #61: #NoRacismInUniversity #WeAreNotSkinColour
  • Exposing Finnish white privilege #62: On free speech and scared white men
  • Exposing Finnish white privilege #63: Silence and acting dumb are the swords of institutional racism
  • Exposing Finnish white privilege #64: The cancer of institutional racism in Finland

*A direct translation of Perussuomalaiset in English would be something like “basic” or “fundamental Finn.” Official translations of the Finnish name of the party, such as Finns Party or True Finns, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and racism. We, therefore, at Migrant Tales prefer to use in our postings the Finnish name of the party once and after that the acronym PS.

MP Wille Rydman’s racist malarkey is a copy-and-paste job of the Perussuomalaiset

Posted on October 25, 2019 by Migrant Tales

Wille Rydman is a National Coalition Party (NCP) MP who has built his career on xenophobia and racist soundbites. For some in the NCP, he is known as the Halla-aho of the party.

Perussuomalaiset (PS) chairperson Jussi Halla-aho is largely responsible for steering the party further to the far-right. He was convicted of ethnic agitation and breaching the sanctity of religion in 2012.

Contrary to Halla-aho, Rydman likes to regurgitate what some of the PS’ most racist and hateful messages, like the Islamization of Europe, among other hogwash.

He wrote earlier this month that the ethnic composition of Europe is changing due to low birth rates and that such ethnic diversity is negative for the region.

He claimed in the blog entry that migratory pressure on Europe in recent decades is so drastic that what happened to Rome, when non-Roman tribes invaded it, is small change compared to what is happening today.

PS first vice-president Riikka Purra has spread such myths about how white Finns will be a minority due to migration from outside of Europe.

Read the full story (in Finnish) here.

Certainly, the bullshit that Rydman spreads is xenophobic and racist. Somebody, maybe his party although I’m not holding my breath, should condemn what he said and tell the NCP MP that Europeans are not only white.

Europe is a continent that is historically culturally and ethnically diverse. Talk of whites becoming a minority is extolling white supremacy, which Rydman does.

Apart from a long list of racist soundbites earmarked for public consumption, I had an opportunity to chat with Rydman in 2010. Back then, he wrote in a letter to the editor of Helsingin Sanomat that the state should neither support nor fund multiculturalism because it would hinder the adaption of immigrants into our society.

When I corrected him that his opinions were a letter to the editor, he insisted that it was “an article” published by Helsingin Sanomat.

Some of Finland’s most hot-headed Islamophobes were allegedly bullied in school. That is the case of Halla-aho, James Hirvisaari, and others. Were Rydman’s name and ethnic background a source of bullying?

That now leads us to the Stockholm syndrome: A condition where a victim may start to identify with or form a close connection to the people who have taken him or her hostage. In the latter cases of Halla-aho and Hirvisaari, the oppressor is the bully and the victim, the bullied.

That then leads us to Uncle Tom, Tuomo-setä, but that is another story.

The xenophobic stand of politicians like Rydman of the NCP, show how right-wing conservative parties like in the UK have succumbed to populist anti-immigration rhetoric while threatened from far-right parties like the UKIP. It is unfortunate that the NCP is heading towards the same ruinous path as the Tories of the UK.

There is no UKIP in Finland but we have the PS.

I’d like to dedicate the following quote to Rydman by Toni Morrison:

“But when you take it away, take your race away, you are all strung out,” she said. “All you got is your little self, and what is that? What are you without that? What are you without racism? Are you any good? Are you still strong? Are you still smart? Do you still like yourself?”

*A direct translation of Perussuomalaiset in English would be something like “basic” or “fundamental Finn.” Official translations of the Finnish name of the party, such as Finns Party or True Finns, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and racism. We, therefore, at Migrant Tales prefer to use in our postings the Finnish name of the party once and after that the acronym PS.

Exposing Finnish white privilege #64: The cancer of institutional racism in Finland

Posted on October 23, 2019 by Migrant Tales

THIS STORY WAS UPDATED

There are many types of social ills that are cancerous, but the one I want to speak now is about institutional racism in Finland. Institutional racism is a racket, a criminal conspiracy, to exclude people by ethnic, religious, and cultural backgrounds.

Institutional racism is a racket that maintains a system that is exclusive and unjust. It destroys lives and robs people of their opportunities that should be guaranteed by law.

Racialization is one of the accomplices of institutional racism.

In Finland as elsewhere, there are many people who stand up to racism. Even so, such people are too few.

Toni Morrison (1931-2019), the novelist, essayist, book editor, and college professor, stated that race is a social construct. If so, why does racism exist?

“It [racism] has benefits,” she said, “money can be made off it, people who don’t like themselves can feel better because of it, it can describe certain kinds of behavior that are wrong or misleading; so it has a social function – r a c i s m.”

In the video below, Morrison makes an excellent point to racists or people who profit directly or indirectly from such a social ill.

“But when you take it away, take your race away, you are all strung out,” she continued. “All you got is your little self, and what is that? What are you without that? What are you without racism? Are you any good? Are you still strong? Are you still smart? Do you still like yourself?”

Finnish white privilege #64

In the same way that Islamophobic parties like the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* claim that immigration costs taxpayers hundreds of millions of euros, we can argue that institutional racism costs Finland hundreds of millions, if not billions of euros.

Where is this money wasted? You will find it spent on many integration programs that don’t integrate and make newcomers active members of society; and in maintaining racist structures that fuel social exclusion and high social welfare costs to name a few.

In Finland, it is easy to give a two-faced image of ourselves. Institutional racism permits us to keep our closet prejudices and racism intact while claiming to help migrants in state- and EU-sponsored programs.

The final judge of the effectiveness of these programs is the results: Did you get hired with a dignified salary? Did the program say a whimper to expose and challenge institutional racism?

It is upsetting to see people who claim to want to advance the opportunities and rights of migrants but are stone quiet.

We are all accomplices if we cover our eyes to institutional and all forms of racism and respond to such cancerous forms with our silence.

See also:

  • Defining white Finnish privilege #1: I have it and you don’t
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #2: Third culture children versus “pupil with immigrant background” 
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #3 No history, no doctrine, no heroes and no martyrs
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #4 Holding the short end of the stick
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #5 It’s ok to be a racist
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #6 Not having a voice and the media
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #7 A definitive guide
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #8 Underrated and less intelligent
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #9 Mohammad Ali’s insight
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #10 I can victimize and make up any story I like about migrants because I’m white
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #11: Case Teuvo Hakkarainen
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #12: Case Tom Packalén
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #13: Case Matti Putkonen
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #14: Losing sight of the real issue
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #15: Case Halla-ago on the PS
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #16: Rosa Emilia Clay and my history versus yours
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #17: The Perussuomalaiset and our civil rights
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #18: Labeling others according to your prejudice
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #19: My rape statistics about your group
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #20: Labeling Others to strengthen “us” and “them.”
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #21: Who can be a Finn?
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #22: From racist, fascist to a politician without memory
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #23: Greater police powers to monitor migrants and minorities
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #24: Becoming a heartless accomplice in wars and people’s suffering
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #25: This land is my land, this isn’t your land
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #26: Are you an ethnic Finn?
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #27: White versus Other media
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #28: Are you an ethnic Finn (Part 2)?
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #29: Your family is worth less than mine
  • White Finnish privilege #30: Whitewashing and racializing the news
  • White Finnish privilege #31: The Soldiers of Odin and the Finnish media
  • White Finnish privilege #32: The white Finnish police and “them” 
  • White Finnish privilege #33: Appropriating our narrative to maintain the status quo, amass more power and privilege
  • White Finnish privilege #34: Building a political career on privilege and nativist nationalism   
  • White Finnish privilege #35: Case Sampo Terho and the ministry of (dis)culture
  • White Finnish privilege #36: Hate speech and censorship
  • White Finnish privilege #37: The master of near-everything
  • Defining white Finnish privilege #38: Cultural appropriation and racism are quaint discussion topics between white Finns
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #39: The Hollywood ending of racism that will never happen in Finland
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #40: To whitewash or to disenfranchise
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #41: An Islamophobic politician and gender equality 
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #42: Labeling and shaming
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #43: White versus dark skin
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #44: Defending Nazis’ rights to march is ok as long we agree on the common enemy
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #45: Do blondes have more fun? 
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #46: Teuvo Hakkarainen = white racism and sexism 
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #47: President Sauli Niinistö’s “culture inside four walls”
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #48: Allow me to smear your religion so mine can shine
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #49: When white privilege backfires 
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #50: Caving in to white narratives
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #51: The police are the defenders of white power and privilege
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #52: Having no privilege is dangerous
  • White Finnish privilege #53: Plan Finland’s unplanned pregnancy campaign #ProtectBlackGirlsToo #Whatofme
  • White FInnish privilege #54: Disguising your racism, bigotry, and prejudices effectively
  • White Finnish privilege #55: It’s that time of the year – Christmas! 
  • White Finnish privilege #56: How Islamophobic is Finland?
  • White Finnish privilege #57: Finland’s “hostile environment” against migrants
  • White Finnish privilege #58: How the police, media and politicians fuel Finland’s hostile environment against Muslims and migrants
  • White Finnish privilege #59: In this country, you are guilty before proven innocent
  • White Finnish privilege #60: Oulu, OULU! Awaken and sniff the racist coffee.
  • Exposing Finnish white privilege #61: #NoRacismInUniversity #WeAreNotSkinColour
  • Exposing Finnish white privilege #62: On free speech and scared white men
  • Exposing Finnish white privilege #63: Silence and acting dumb are the swords of institutional racism

*A direct translation of Perussuomalaiset in English would be something like “basic” or “fundamental Finn.” Official translations of the Finnish name of the party, such as Finns Party or True Finns, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and racism. We, therefore, at Migrant Tales prefer to use in our postings the Finnish name of the party once and after that the acronym PS.

The Soldiers of Odin threaten to take over and defend by force the northern Finnish border checkpoint of Tornio

Posted on October 22, 2019 by Migrant Tales

The head of the far-right Nazi-spirited vigilante group Soldiers of Odin, Mika Ranta, threatened in a statement to take over the Tornio border checkpoint and defend it by force if the Swedish authorities let in asylum seekers as in 2015.

Center Party MP Mikko Kärnä states in the Center Party newspaper Suomenmaa that he has asked the police to investigate if the far-right group, which has ties with the Islamophobic Perussuomalaiset (PS)* party, broke the law by stating that it would take over the Tornio border checkpoint and defend it by violence.

The lion’s share of the over 32,000 asylum seekers that came to Finland in 2015 did so through the northern city of Tornio, located 737 km north of Helsinki. Source: Yle.

Kärnä also said that if the Soldiers of Odin’s association broke the law, they should be banned.

Soldiers of Odin founder Mika Ranta, who promises to pay 1,000 euros to anyone who knock a woman’s teeth down her throat. Source: Twitter.

What has overtaken this country if we have violent far-right public figures spread hatred with relative ease? Finland was slow to react and is still reacting. National Police Commissioner Seppo Kolehmainen and then Minister of Employment Jari Lindström openly supported in 2016 vigilante gangs like the Soldiers of Odin while then-Interior Minister Petteri Orpo was skeptical.


Source:
soldiersofodin.fi

“If the Swedish border guards plan to slide from their responsibilities and imagines that it can let in people without appropriate travel documents to cross the Finnish side of the border, we will organize in Tornio to protect our people.
If the Finnish government does not before that take responsibility for the country’s internal security and initiate effective border controls to curb organized crime and prevent undocumented aliens from entering [our country], it is the task of brave Finns with their iron determination to take over the border checkpoint in Tornio. If we face after that violence from aliens, we will meet in The Hague [court of justice]. It is the same if we face violence from the authorities. We will use force if necessary.
This nonsense must stop.
Bring back respect for legality and bring the traitors to justice.

MRanta

Sticking one’s head in the snow will not make the far-right threat disappear.

That is why we need a concerted effort to challenge such groups in order to defend our Nordic democratic institutions.

*A direct translation of Perussuomalaiset in English would be something like “basic” or “fundamental Finn.” Official translations of the Finnish name of the party, such as Finns Party or True Finns, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and racism. We, therefore, at Migrant Tales prefer to use in our postings the Finnish name of the party once and after that the acronym PS.

The high social and economic cost of xenophobia and doing very little about it

Posted on October 19, 2019 by Migrant Tales

As Finland faces an ever-worsening labor shortage due to the greying of its population, the number of EU nationals that want to work in Finland has taken a nosedive, according to Seura.

The number of EU nationals that were granted work permits in 2018 totaled 4,179, which is a 28.1% fall from 5,699 in 2015, according to the Finnish Immigration Service. In 2017, 4001 EU nationals were granted work permits. The corresponding figure for 2016 was 5,247.

EU labor stats look bleak for 2019, as well. During the first six months of the year, 1,744 work permits were granted, which suggests that the total number for 2019 will be below 4,000.

Go directly to the Finnish Immigration Service website here.

So what gives?

Even if the article in Seura doesn’t mention it, have you ever heard of the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* party? They have, with the help of other mainstream parties and institutional racism, spearheaded during this decade the hostile environment against migrants and asylum seekers.

As a small indication of the PS’ Islamophobia, all of their MEP candidates agree that migrants crossing the Mediterranean should not be rescued by the EU and allowed to drown.

The PS is Finland’s second-biggest party in parliament. Why would anyone want to move and work in a country that has a largely unchallenged racist party spreading hatred against migrants? Moreover, in such an environment, institutional racism, bigotry, and discrimination are normalized.

Many studies that reinforce a social ill like racism in Finland. One of these is a 2018 study by the European Agency of Fundamental Rights (FRA) that reveals that a third of people of African descent (PAD) surveyed have experienced racial harassment in the last five years. Muslims are another group that is frequently targeted by Islamophobic groups, according to the European Islamophobia Report 2018.

Everyone is an accomplice in the hostile environment: the media, police, and public servants. Very little is done to challenge this hostile environment because it runs against the norm. Despite the situation, there is an ever-growing growing number of people who are standing up to the hostile environment.

If one tries to understand the ongoing debate about migrants and migration to Finland, there is one matter that dominates it: asylum seekers, which account for about 10% of all migrants in Finland. The party dominating this debate is the PS.

Labeling and victimizing a group like asylum seekers impacts the whole migrant community, even if you are a white EU citizen because it reinforces social ills like racism.

While the PS is clearly today a far-right Islamophobic party, other mainstream parties like the National Coalition Party (Kokoomus), Center Party, Christian Democrats, and others want to play political ball with them.

Moreover, Prime Minister Antti Rinne’s government appears to get cold feet in challenging the misconceptions and racism that the PS spreads.

All that this cowardice does is to make Finland an unattractive country for skilled EU labor. If you are “a person of foreign origin,” code for non-EU citizen and/or person of color, you would have to be pretty desperate to come to such an unfriendly country where suspicion is the norm.

The xenophobia that grips Finland today is like shooting its economic and social wellbeing in the leg. If we do not wake up in time to challenge parties like the PS and other groups like them, we will have nothing but ourselves to blame for our impoverishment and limited democracy.

*A direct translation of Perussuomalaiset in English would be something like “basic” or “fundamental Finn.” Official translations of the Finnish name of the party, such as Finns Party or True Finns, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and racism. We, therefore, at Migrant Tales prefer to use in our postings the Finnish name of the party once and after that the acronym PS.

Kotoutuminen #3: To touch or not to touch

Posted on October 18, 2019 by Migrant Tales

Many times I wonder where people who work and assist asylum seekers and migrants get their cultural training. If you are a teacher, is it stated, for example, in the national curriculum, how cultural diversity is supposed to work in the classroom? If you are a social worker, how do you promote two-way adaption?

These are important questions. If we do not deal with them properly, our integration program, which claims to be a two-way process, is nothing more than assimilation (one-way adaption).

Another big challenge is the lack of proper oversight. Which body ensures that our teaching or guidance isn’t racist?

After many years of studying and observing integration policies and practices in Finland, I have yet to understand what two-way integration means in practice.

While there are teachers and culturally sensitive social workers who are a source of inspiration to some newcomers, there are still too many poor examples around.

These poor examples of cultural insensitivity and fueled by exceptionalism only serve to confuse and relegate migrants to take their roles as second-class members of society.

KOTOUTUMINEN #3

Below are four cases that are good examples of a toxic brew: disrespect for other cultures, Finnish exceptionalism, and white privilege.

Case 1: We are sitting at a table with middle-aged Muslim women who wear hijabs (veils). A counselor, who assists and counsels these people, comes to greet them and touches one woman on the shoulder. Those who work with Muslims understand that men do not touch women if the person isn’t his father or brother. Even so, it is the woman who decides if she wants to shake you hand or not.

Case 2: I was told that another counselor mocks a Muslim for noticing that pork was cooked in the same oven he was going to make food. Instead of expressing some understanding for the Muslim’s concern, the worker stated that the state that pays his social welfare eats pork so he’ better get used to it.

Case 3: On planning earlier this year a seminar on hate crime, a social worker brings up the topic of gay rights, which is important. All hate crimes, irrespective of their motives are important to debate publicly. However, the social worker insisted and showed more preference for hate crimes against gays because she probably believes that Muslims are homophobic. Some are, some aren’t. Ninety percent of all hate crimes in 2017 are due to a person’s ethnic or religious background compared with 4.9% due to sexual orientation.

Case 4: Muslims, who are still trying to make sense of their new home country, are given the usual tasa-arvo treatment that “in Finland, women have equal rights.” True in many respects and commendable, but they forget to tell them that our country is one of the most violent in the EU against women. While it is a good matter that women work and become independent, a person has a right to chose his or her lifestyle. If the person stays at home and takes care of her children, wears a hijab, or is an avid Muslim worshipper, these are the person’s personal choices and should be respected.

By forcing our culture and our exceptionalism on migrants, we do nothing more than retard the process of making such people active members of society.

See also:

  • Kotoutuminen #1: A good synonym for kotoutuminen is too many times the reinforcement of structural racism
  • Kotoutuminen #2: A tool of white fragility to rule you

Dedicated to the “let them drown” MEP candidates of Finland

Posted on October 17, 2019 by Migrant Tales

Islamophobes and other racists believe that those they victimize have short memories. Wrong. We remember and will do everything for our children and grandchildren to remember their viciousness.

Migrant Tales published a shameful list of Finnish MEP candidates who answered an Alma Media election compass question: “Is it the obligation of the EU to save all those migrants who attempt to come to Europe and who are at risk of drowning in the Mediterranean?”

Believe it or not, 36% of the candidates (85/234) answered that the EU had no obligation or had no opinion in saving people drowning in the Mediterranean.

The child asks where is Europe and the mother replies, at the bottom of the sea. Source: Facebook. Thank you Xur Piñera Alonso for the heads-up.

The party where 100% of the candidates agreed that people should be allowed to drown in the Mediterranean were from the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* party.

Even so, Henna Virkkunen of the National Coalition Party, a party that claims to uphold human rights, “disagreed” that the EU should save people from drowning in the Mediterranean.

The first vice president, Riikka Purra, reiterated this recently at a session of parliament stating that the EU should not save people from drowning because otherwise, it would be a pull factor.

MEP candidates:

Perussuomalaiset

TOTALLY DISAGREE (LET THEM DROWN, IT’S THEIR PROBLEM)

SIMO GRÖNROOS
TEUVO HAKKARAINEN
ILPO HELTOMOINEN 
LAURA HUHTASAARI
ASSERI KINNUNEN
LAURA KORPINEN
OLLI KOTRO

MAURI PELTOKANGAS
MIKA RAATIKAINEN
MIRA NIEMINEN
SAMULI SIBAKOFF
SEBASTIAN TYNKKYNEN
TANJA VAHVELAINEN 
MATTI VIREN 

DISAGREE (LET THEM DROWN)

ARTO LUUKKANEN
MINNA REIJONEN
PIRKKO RUOHONEN-LERNER

NO OPINION (I DON’T HAVE AN OPINION IF PEOPLE DROWN IN THE MEDITERRANEAN)

KARRI OLLILA
MINNA PARTANEN

National Coalition Party

TOTALLY DISAGREE (LET THEM DROWN, IT’S THEIR PROBLEM)

PIIA KURKI

I DISAGREE (LET THEM DROWN)

HENNA VIRKKUNEN
LEENA ZITTLING
JYRKI KOIVIKKO
KIMMO SASI
SAMI YLI-RAHNASTO

NO OPINION (I DON’T HAVE AN OPINION IF PEOPLE DROWN IN THE MEDITERRANEAN)

EIJA-RIITA KORHOLA
JANIKA TAKATALO
MATILDA AF HÄLLSTRÖM

Center Party

TOTALLY DISAGREE (LET THEM DROWN, IT’S THEIR PROBLEM)

NONE

DISAGREE (LET THEM DROWN)

JANNE KAISANLAHTI
ANNINA RUOTTU
PETRA SCHULZE STEINEN
ANNA SIRKIÄ

NO OPINION (I DON’T HAVE AN OPINION IF PEOPLE DROWN IN THE MEDITERRANEAN)

MIIKKAEL AZAIZE
RAUL KAJAK
OLLI NYBERG

Christian Democrats

TOTALLY DISAGREE (LET THEM DROWN, IT’S THEIR PROBLEM)

None

DISAGREE (LET THEM DROWN)

MIKA EBELING
ESA ERÄVALO
KITTI KUMPULAINEN

NO OPINION (I DON’T HAVE AN OPINION IF PEOPLE DROWN IN THE MEDITERRANEAN)

SARI ESSAYAH

Social Democratic Party

TOTALLY DISAGREE (LET THEM DROWN, IT’S THEIR PROBLEM)

None

DISAGREE (LET THEM DROWN)

NIKO ESKELINEN

NO OPINION (I DON’T HAVE AN OPINION IF PEOPLE DROWN IN THE MEDITERRANEAN)

None

Swedish People’s Party

TOTALLY DISAGREE (LET THEM DROWN, IT’S THEIR PROBLEM)

None

DISAGREE (LET THEM DROWN)

FILIP HAMO-DROTZ

NO OPINION (I DON’T HAVE AN OPINION IF PEOPLE DROWN IN THE MEDITERRANEAN)

FILIP BJÖRKLÖF
MARTIN NORRGÅRD
MAX SCHULMAN

Left Alliance and Green League

TOTALLY DISAGREE (LET THEM DROWN, IT’S THEIR PROBLEM)

None

DISAGREE (LET THEM DROWN)

None

NO OPINION (I DON’T HAVE AN OPINION IF PEOPLE DROWN IN THE MEDITERRANEAN)

None

*A direct translation of Perussuomalaiset in English would be something like “basic” or “fundamental Finn.” Official translations of the Finnish name of the party, such as Finns Party or True Finns, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and racism. We, therefore, at Migrant Tales prefer to use in our postings the Finnish name of the party once and after that the acronym PS.

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  • Xassan-Kaafi Mohamed Halane & Enrique Tessieri
  • Yahya Rouissi
  • Yasmin Yusuf
  • Yassen Ghaleb
  • Yle Puhe
  • Yuliet Tresa
  • Yve Shepherd
  • Zahra Khavari
  • Zaker
  • Zalina Ametova
  • Zamzam Ahmed Ali
  • Zeinab Amini ja Soheila Khavari
  • Zimema Mahone and Enrique Tessieri
  • Zimema Mhone
  • Zoila Forss Crespo Moreyra
  • ZT
  • Zulma Sierra
  • Zuzeeko Tegha Abeng
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