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Tag: Finland

Case Hussein al-Taee: The Finnish media should end its double standards and hypocrisy

Posted on May 3, 2019 by Migrant Tales

Indeed, the racist and homophobic writings of Social Democrat MP Hussein al-Taee, which came to light after the April 14 parliamentary election, are shameful. However, what is even more shocking are the media’s double standards.

The al-Taee affair exposes once again the dark side, a blind spot: our collective denial of racism as a society.

White Finns can write racist things, even get convicted for ethnic agitation, lie and plagiarize their thesis like Perussuomalaiset* MP Laura Huhtasaari did and continue with their political lives.

Rarely, if ever, will such people be called by the media racists, liers or asked to resign.

Tabloids like Ilta-Sanomat and Iltalehti, which have themselves a long and shameful history of publishing racist stories, now present themselves as the moral guardians of this country. A columnist of Iltalehti slammed al-Taee as a racist, and an editorial of Ilta-Sanomat demanded that he resign from office.

As Sakari Timonen correctly pointed out in his latest blog post, accusing al-Taee of being a racist and asking him to resign is unprecedented in Finnish journalism.

If you are a white Finns, however, you can say racist things and even get convicted for ethnic agitation. How many politicians were branded by the media as racist? Has Jussi Halla-aho? Laura Huhtasaai? Teuvo Hakkarainen? Sebastian Tynkkynen?

Why is an openly Islamophobic and racist party like the PS the second-biggest party in parliament?

Racism in Finland is the new normal. Politicians who spew racist rhetoric and sometimes get convicted for ethnic agitation become famous and get voters to elect them.

Apart from Iltalehti and Ilta-Sanomat exposing their racism and double-standards, both tabloids have forgotten how they have insulted and treated migrants and refugees in a racist manner.

Below is one racist billboard.


If you want to see the worst journalism based on racism, read Ilta-Sanomat like this billboard from 1994. It reads: “Somalis got asylum by swindling [the authorities].”

Continue reading “Case Hussein al-Taee: The Finnish media should end its double standards and hypocrisy”

Presidentti Sauli Niinistön sitaatit maahanmuutosta ja moninaisuudesta paljastavat jotain ikävää hänestä

Posted on May 2, 2019 by Migrant Tales

Joka kerta kun Presidentti Sauli Niinistö kommentoi turvapaikanhakijoita, maahanmuutosta, kaksoiskansalaisuudesta, rasismista tai perussuomalaisista, hän useasti päästä samakoita  suusta. 

Jos olemme reiluja, Presidentti Niinistö on taitava ulkopolitiikassa ja osaa edusta Suomea.

Tasavallan Presidentti vaati, että ihmisten pitää noudattaa Suomen lakeja ja arvoja. Olemme samaa mieltä. Mutta…

Tässä ovat Presidentti Niinistön paljastavat sitaatit vuodelta 2015-2019:

Peussuomalaisista

Uudelle Suomelle 25.4.2019

”Silloin 2017 perussuomalaiset kävivät puheenjohtajakamppailua televisiossa ja kuulin lauseen, että maahanmuuttaja ei ole pelkästään esteettinen haitta. Jotenkin se minun korvaani särähti. Nyt en ole kuullut sen tyyppisiä kommentteja”, Niinistö vastasi.

Eikö? Muistako hän perussuomalaisten vaalivideo, joka kannustaa väkivalta turvapaikkahakijoita  vastaan, ja kuinka perussuomalaiset käytti Oulun seksualirikoksia houkutella äänestäjiä?

Hirviö videossaan tarkoitus on poistaa väkivalloilla korruptoitunet päättäjät, jotka ovat vastuussa suomen pakolaispolitiikasta.

Kultturisesti moninainen Suomesta

Presidentti kanslia 1.9.2019

“Täällä oleville on annettava mahdollisuus osallisuuteen. Vastaavasti on oikeus edellyttää tahtoa sopeutua yhteiskuntaamme. Ja vastuun kantamista, myös omiaan ohjaamalla. Lakiemme ja arvojemme vastainen käytös lisää riskiä kokonaisten ihmisryhmien leimaamiselle ja luo syvää epäluuloa, jopa vihaa.”

 

Lue alkuperäinen juttu tästä.

Ylen aamu-tv 16.1.2018 (katso 10.00-15.30 min)

“Luin lehdestä irakilaisten miehestä, joka oli pidempään ollut Suomessa. Hän kertoi näin [ettei] tämä mitä ongelma ole, että kun minä lähden kotoa töihin, kauppaan, mihin tahansa, minä käytäytyyn niin kun suomalainen, niin tässä yhteisössä pelisäännöt ovat, mutta sitten kun minä tulen kotiin minulla on siellä irakilainen kulttuuri, oikea upea, ja varmasti tuttavien kanssa voi hyvin yhdessä sitä harjoittaa. Muta kyllä lähtökohta on se, että suomen arvomaailma noudatan, demokraattia, tasa-arvoa.” 

Entä tasavertaisuus? Saako ihminen vain harjoittaa oma kulttuuria neljä seinän sisällä?  Perustuslain 17§ sanoo: “Saamelaisilla alkuperäiskansana sekä romaneilla ja muilla ryhmillä on oikeus ylläpitää ja kehittää omaa kieltään ja kulttuuriaan.”

Tässä ei lukee missän, että kultturia on pakko harrastaa piilossa.

Hallitsematon maahanmuutto Continue reading “Presidentti Sauli Niinistön sitaatit maahanmuutosta ja moninaisuudesta paljastavat jotain ikävää hänestä”

Is Oulu, Finland, a safe place for Muslims?

Posted on April 29, 2019 by Migrant Tales

Maters have calmed down in the face of sexual harassment cases in Oulu after the April 14 parliamentary elections. Even so, many visible minorities and migrants don’t feel safe in public. 

One Muslim resident of Oulu, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that Muslims don’t feel safe in public even if matters have calmed down after the elections

“The [Perussuomalaiset*] politicians got what they wanted from the [sexual assault] cases [by coming in second and almost winning the election),” the Muslim said. “Some of us don’t go out alone for fear that something might happen. People yell at us in public calling us rapists, and they attacked a Muslim family in Oulu. Finland is not a democracy.”

The Muslim resident, who said that the latest parliamentary election result is proof that Finland is a racist country, stated that he commonly gets strange looks whenever he enters a store.

“I entered a shop recently, and everyone inside looked at me as if I were an alien in the wrong planet,” he said. “I want to leave this country.”

Dr Abdul Mannan is the imam of the Oulu mosque and chairperson of the Islamic Society of Northern Finland. He has lived in Finland for 27 years.


Dr Abdul Mannan.

“Muslims of Oulu don’t feel safe even to go to the city center in the afternoon,” said Dr Mannan. “I have five children who grew up here, and I never had to worry about their safety as some families do now.”

The mosque, which was vandalized nine times since September 2017, had decided after the Christchurch attacks [March 15] to place 10 voluntary members to guard the premises during Friday prayer.


The suspect used a bike rack on February 26 to smash the window at 5.10 am and threw a smoke grenade inside the premises. It was the ninth time that the mosque was vandalized since September 2017 Source: Dr Abdul Amman.

“We asked the police to patrol the area, but our calls were not heeded,” he said. “They didn’t take our request seriously [so we took matters in our hands]. We asked them to put a squad car near the mosque, but they did not do anything.”

Dr Mannan says that those that vandalized the mosque do so in the early hours or late at night when there is nobody at the mosque. One matter that surprises him as well as other members of his congregation is that after nine attacks nobody has been brought to custody.

The Imam said that the present situation does nothing more than erode trust in the police.

* The Perussuomalaiset (PS) party imploded on June 13, 2017, into two factions, the PS and New Alternative, which is now called Blue Reform. In the last parliamentary election, Blue Reform has wiped off the Finnish political map when they saw their numbers in parliament plummet from 18 MPs to 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.

 

 

 

 

Part I: Racism causes trauma and mental suffering

Posted on April 28, 2019 by Migrant Tales

Maailman Kuvalehti, a periodical which often takes up issues of xenophobia and racism in Finland more bravely than the mainstream media, cited the article Häpeää, itsesyytöksiä, masennusta – toistuvan rasismin vaikutukset mielenterveyteen voivat olla vakavat (Shame, self-blame, and depression – continuous racism encounter impact on mental wellbeing can be severe). Dated April 24th to a study by Robert T. Carter (University of Columbia), it stated that day-to-day exclusion encounters cause mental depression and symptoms similar to war trauma. Read the article here.

The article refers mainly to exclusion experiences of non-white Finns. It is obvious that ethnic (or naturalized!) non-white Finns or non-white immigrants/refugees are far more exposed to day-to-day racial assaults in public than a white immigrant. Xenophobic encounters are sadly on the rise (for example) when speaking another language in public or “looking different.”


 

Read the full report, Respond to Racism Guide, published by ENAR Ireland here.

Michaela Moua, as cited, specializes in mental problems of minorities and considers mutual trust as the most crucial part of therapy work with a patient. The reality, however, is this: “You report your experiences to a psychotherapist, but s/he responds “Was it so? Things like that don’t happen in Finland!”, the article says. How can trust be built when patients’ feelings, experiences, and inner struggles are belittled or denied?

Continue reading “Part I: Racism causes trauma and mental suffering”

The Finnish media should refer to the Perussuomalaiset as a far-right party

Posted on April 26, 2019 by Migrant Tales

Helsingin Sanomat goes to some length in a story about the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* being referred to by the chairperson of the Social Democratic Party (PSOE), Pedro Sánchez,  as a “far-right”[1]  party. We could not agree more with Sánchez’ description of the PS as a far-right party. 

Sánchez was quoted as saying in El País: “Look what happened in Finland [on April 14], where an opinion poll predicted as a given fact that the Social Democrats would win by a wide margin and the far right [PS] would come in fifth. They won by 6,000 votes the far right!”


Spain’s Social Democratic leader Pedro Sánchez called the PS a far-right party. Read the full story (in Spanish) here.

Spain holds snap parliamentary elections on Sunday.

Is only Sánchez and El País the only ones who call the PS a far-right party?

It is not the first time. Others that have referred the PS as a far-right party are: the Financial Times of London, The Guardian, Politico, Spiegel Online, EUObserver,The Local SE, and others.

If the PS is seen as a far-right party by the media in Europe, why isn’t it called that in Finland by Helsingin Sanomat and others?

For one, the national media rarely uses in Finland such a term of a party that has members in parliament. Considering that over a half a million Finns vote for the PS, newspapers like Helsingin Sanomat are dependent on subscribers and ads.

Continue reading “The Finnish media should refer to the Perussuomalaiset as a far-right party”

Finnish President Sauli Niinistö’s disinformation bubble about racism and Others

Posted on April 26, 2019 by Migrant Tales

Is it surprising that whenever President Sauli Niinistö comments on asylum seekers, Muslims, and the Perussuomalaiset (PS)*, he sticks his foot in his mouth?

The latest gaffe comes on Wednesday at a new session of parliament, where President Niinistö was quoted as saying about he hasn’t heard similar comments about migrants made by the Islamophobic PS as in 2017.

“At the time in in 2017, the Perussuomalaiset were electing a new chairperson and in the debates on television migrants were not just framed as an aesthetic disadvantage,” he was quoted as saying in Uusi Suomi. “That caught my attention. Now I have not heard any comments of the kind.”

One matter that caught my attention about this story is that it was only reported in Uusi Suomi.

Mr. President, when you make such incredulous claims, aren’t you normalizing racism in this country, which runs contrary to the Finnish values you want migrants to embrace?

Have you heard of the Oulu sexual assault cases and how parties like the PS, and the National Coalition Party with equal gusto, have used it to spread fear and attract voters? Do you remember what you said about these cases in your New Year’s speech?

Does President Niinistö recall a PS campaign video that encourages people to violence against asylum seekers and migrants? Here is the link.



President Niinistö’s prejudices and apparent ignorance about racism is one source that feeds Finland’s hostile environment against migrants and minorities.

Continue reading “Finnish President Sauli Niinistö’s disinformation bubble about racism and Others”

Tapani Brotherus: The present refugee atmosphere in Finland “is part of a phase”

Posted on April 25, 2019 by Migrant Tales

Former ambassador to Chile (1971-76) Tapani Brotherus, 80, is a hero to many. Thanks to his efforts, many enemies of Augusto Pinochet’s military junta would have ended imprisoned, tortured, and dead today. 

Brotherus’ example to help Chileans escape the clutches of a brutal regime inspired the screening of a six-part television series in spring called Invisible heroes.


See original TV interview (in Finnish) here.

Even if 9/11 is a day of mourning for the United States, the original 9/11 happened in Chile in 1973, when General  Pinochet violently overthrew democratically elected President Salvador Allende with the full backing of the United States.

Continue reading “Tapani Brotherus: The present refugee atmosphere in Finland “is part of a phase””

Actions of the Finnish police and Yle reveal multicultural incompetence in coverage of Oulu sexual assault cases

Posted on April 24, 2019 by Migrant Tales

It is odd how little Yle takes the blame for being the facilitator of anti-immigration and anti-Muslim sentiment in regards to the sexual assault cases of Oulu. Migrant Tales documented 77 stories published between November 27 and February 13. On January 14, Yle published in one day 13 stories about the topic!  

When compared with a similar sexual abuse case of minors involving white Finns, there was a different reaction. The story about the pedophile ring accused of sexually abusing 6-15-year-old boys lasted only a week in the news with 7 stories published by Yle.


Are attacks against Muslims more common today due to the hostile environment against migrants and minorities? As far as we know, the picture above is of a 10-year-old Muslim girl who was attacked by a classmate. It reads: “What do they teach [children] at Finnish homes? That Muslims are terrorists? The little girl [in the picture above] is spending a normal day at school when four boys [classmates] tried to rip off her hijab from her head and kicked her unconscious. We are not talking now about a migrant but about a victim. @iltalehti [tabloid] I want you to write out loud that racism must stop once for all, this girl is an angel!” Read the full story here.

Typically, the police are tightlipped about giving statements about sexual abuses against minors, but in the case involving people of migrant backgrounds, there is an exception.

Writes Yle: “Police have faced criticism for quickly publicizing the case and other similar ones in Oulu. Their response is that grooming on social media seemed to be a phenomenon at the time, and it was necessary to inform and warn the public. Authorities stress that online grooming cases have included both Finnish and foreign suspects.”

Continue reading “Actions of the Finnish police and Yle reveal multicultural incompetence in coverage of Oulu sexual assault cases”

PART II: Migrant child custody in Finland aren’t always open-and-shut cases

Posted on April 22, 2019 by Migrant Tales

This is a follow-up story that was published on April 13 about a family and four daughters who have come under the scrutiny of the child-protection authorities. 

The ongoing drama of the Muslim family continues: three of the girls, aged 9, 7 and 2, are in a foster home while another one aged 14 is in another one for older children. The mother, who is an Iraqi who moved to the country in the early 2000s, is without her children but lives again together with her husband. 

The family has a lawyer but they are not too happy with him after child protection took custody of their children four months ago.


Go to the original website here.

“He [the lawyer] never explains anything to us and when we demand answers from him, he says that he knows what he’s doing and does not need any advice from us,” said a relative of the couple on the phone.

The mother of the four daughters once asked the child-protection staffers why she cannot have her children back. They allegedly told her it was because she is “a bad mother” who “cannot protect her children.”

It appears that the parents of the four children under child-care custody have not been told that the mother has a right to get them back. The mother can ask for such a plan from child protection, who in turn will give a list of demands that she must fulfil to get custody of her children.

“This ordeal happened four months ago when the mother and father were fighting at home,” said the relative. “Both were yelling at each other and the mother asked one of the daughters to call the police. The police came and the mother and children ended up in a shelter. After a while, the mother had to leave but her daughters remained [under child protection custody].”

Continue reading “PART II: Migrant child custody in Finland aren’t always open-and-shut cases”

Does the Press Freedom Index give us a complete story about freedom of the press?

Posted on April 21, 2019 by Migrant Tales

Freedom of expression is a human right. To express oneself without fear of being persecuted, killed, harassed and/or jailed, is a fundamental right. While the 2019 Press Freedom Index ranks countries according to how journalists can conduct their work safely, the index isn’t comprehensive, even misleading. 

Should there be an index for what the media allows minorities and migrants to write and challenge the national narrative about such groups? Stories about migrants like asylum seekers are commonly one-sided and only give an incomplete picture of their lives.

The media is interested in writing about drowned asylum seekers in the Mediterranean but less so about their rights and exploitation on land.

If there were an index that would measure how much the national media permits minorities and migrants to write about their narrative on their own terms, I would bet that the Press Freedom Index list would be very different.

In Finland, the country where I live, ranks second on the 2019 Press Freedom Index list. Even so, can minorities and migrants write freely about racism and discrimination in society? Why do large dailies like Helsingin Sanomat treat such stories with less interest if it does not fit their news narrative?

Moreover, why are there so few minorities employed as full-time reporters and why aren’t there any working as editors?

I know for a fact that if I were to write about migrants and minorities for the Finnish media like I do in Migrant Tales, there would be a good chance that my writing would be rejected.

Disregarding Other voices in society is a serious matter and should be addressed in the Reporters Without Borders index.

Go here if you want to read about how biased in 2015 the Finnish media was when writing about migrants.

Go to website here.

 

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