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Tag: neo nazi groups

Matti Putkonen takes the Perussuomalaiset to the Twilight Zone

Posted on August 26, 2015 by Migrant Tales

Here’s what happened Wednesday. Perussuomalaiset (PS)* MP Olli Immonen, who’s been pictured with neo-Nazis and recently declared war on “the nightmare of multiculturalism,” gave a press conference where he promised to write clearer text so that nobody could interpret them as racist or having neo-Nazi overtones. 

Immonen also announced that he’d step down until October from the PS parliamentary group, writes YLE in English.

But that’s not all, PS strongman MattiPutkonen went on to point his finger at a number of politicians, professors and editors who, according to him, were “slandering and taunting the Perussuomalaiset party as well as inciting people and the media to threatening hate speech.”

According to online publication Uusi Suomi, PS member Matti Putkonen announced the following people were guilty of “hate speech” against the PS. These were four Social Democratic Party politicians (Eero Heinäluoma, Annti Rinne, Tytti Tuppurainen and Erkki Tuomioja), Li Andersson of the Left Alliance, Green League chairman Ville Niinistö, National Coalition Party’s Henna Virkkunen, former Rural Party head Pekka Vennamo, two professors and three editors are guilty of hate speech against the PS.

The PS enter the Twilight Zone.

Once again we see how the PS twists words like a magician out of a hat. One of the most incredible ones used by the party recently was “illegal refugees.”

What is an “illegal” refugee anyway?  Continue reading “Matti Putkonen takes the Perussuomalaiset to the Twilight Zone”

The language and actions of anti-immigration parties and groups are based on violence

Posted on August 2, 2015 by Migrant Tales

Some 40 members of the neo-Nazi Suomen Vastarintaliike (SVL) took part in a demonstration Saturday ended violently, according to YLE in English. Thirty-two people were detained in the central Finnish city of Jyväskylä by the police and charged with rioting and assault.

While the SVL have always been a violent group, the statements that were made after what happened in Jyväskylä are the most surprising.

One of these is by the new National Police Commissioner Seppo Kolehminen, who claimed on YLE that he was surprised that the SVL demonstration turned violent in such an organized manner.

The police may have been surprised by what happened in Jyväskylä but many aren’t. What can you expect from a group that openly wants to change Finland into a Nazi state with violence?

The other surprising statement was from Perussuomalaiset (PS) MP Olli Immonen, who declared in recent a Facebook post war on multiculturalism states, now claims that he “doesn’t support the use of violence under any circumstances.

The first thing that strikes me about these two statements is their incredulity. Before making such statements as the above, both Kolehminen and Immonen could ask the following questions:

  • Have the SVL grown in recent years?
  • If it hasn’t grown why has coverage of its violent acts become more visible in the media?
  • Is violence only physical? Can words be violent and/or cause acts of physical violence?
  • If a party like the PS constantly victimizes and excludes certain groups from being equal members of Finnish society, isn’t such a stance just as bad as an act of physical violence?

Iltalehti

Here’s one example of how rhetoric can turn in to violence. Tabloid Iltalehti reports that multiculturalism caused tempers rise to such a point that a man shoved a six-year-old.

Apart from posing with a group of SVL members in a picture in June, one could ask what Immonen really meant by condemning all forms of violence if his political career has been based on violent statements against migrants and minorities?

Continue reading “The language and actions of anti-immigration parties and groups are based on violence”

Close your eyes and repeat: The PS of Finland isn’t a neo-Nazi and fascist party…

Posted on July 12, 2014 by Migrant Tales

We’ve seen this before, haven’t we?  Members of Finland’s third-largest party in parliament, the Perussuomalaiset (PS)*, flirting with a neo-Nazi group like the Kansallinen Vastarinta (SVL). Teemu Lahtinen is a PS councilman of the city of Espoo who allegedly “liked” the neo-Nazi group’s Facebook page, according to Paljastettu and other sources.  

After this was uncovered, Lahtinen allegedly vanished from the page by “unliking” it.

Espoo, located next door to Helsinki, is Finland’s second-biggest city.

The PS councilman, whose far-right sympathies are well-known, was president of Suomen Sisu in 1998-2002 and 2005-2007 and involved in IKL, a far-right association that had close ties with the National Front of France in the 1990s.

The Espoo councilman has been toying with the idea of founding the White Guards,  a local militia that was dissolved after Finland signed an armistice with the former Soviet Union in 1944.

If the PS aim to be a credible party, why do some of their members seek membership or like neo-Nazi groups like the SV that aim to convert Finland into a one-party state? There are two reasons:

  • The PS doesn’t care;
  • It’s July, most of Finland is on holiday and nobody reads the papers anyway.

One PS MP, Juho Eerola, who is third vice-president of the party, admitted being “attracted” to Benito Mussolini’s fascism.

Näyttökuva 2014-7-12 kello 11.51.51

Read full blog entry by Timo Saarinen here.

If the Lahtinen story is true, the Espoo councilman has a lot of explaining to do. “Liking” a neo-Nazi group is no light matter. The first ones to take action should be the PS. I wouldn’t, however, hold my breath.

If the PS decides to let Lahtinen slide, it reinforces once again what we’ve known all along about the party that has based its support on anti-EU, anti-immigration, homophobic and especially anti-Islam sentiment and is a menace to this country.

 

* The Finnish name for the Finns Party is the Perussuomalaiset (PS). The names adopted by the PS, like True Finns or Finns Party, promote in our opinion nativist nationalism and xenophobia. We therefore prefer to use the Finnish name of the party on our postings. 

Finnish Defence League strikes Mikkeli, Finland

Posted on July 9, 2013 by Migrant Tales

I was quite surprised to find this rude sticker of the far right Finnish Defence League (FDL) near my home today.  That follows another one placed on a lamppost in front of my house in March 2012 by the neo-Nazi Kansallinen vastarintaliike (SVL). 

The good news is that the FDL stickers, which erroneously claim the group supports human rights, are a cinch to peel off but you need a sharp object like a key.

The stickers used  by the neo-Nazi SVL are a bit tougher to peel off. They will, however, come off with the help of a coin or key.

Both the FDL and SVL are pernicious and violent organizations that believe the only way to live with other cultures is to be openly hostility to them.

A study recently linked hate crime to far right groups like the English Defence League.

IMG_1758

 

The far right Finnish Defense League strikes Mikkeli.

skv

The neo-Nazi Kansallinen Vastarinta claims that “multiculturalism is hazardous for your children and grandchildren.”

 

 

 

Risto Helin: The PS says it’s ok to hang around neo-Nazi groups

Posted on March 30, 2013 by Migrant Tales

As Migrant Tales correctly predicted on Thursday, Vaasa Perussuomalaiset (PS) councilman Risto Helin got away with a warning from the party for giving a clock with Hitler to an anti-immigration neo-Nazi group, reports tabloid Ilta-Sanomat.

The PS sends a loud and clear message with this decision: It’s ok to hang around neo-Nazi groups and even have the same racist ideas as them concerning Jews, undesirable minorities, real and imagined enemies of the Third Reich.

What the Nazis did was ok.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-3-30 kello 16.40.19

Vaasa city councilman Risto Helin posing with his neo-Nazi “blood and honor” t-shirt during the municipal elections.  Source: Facebook.

Helin was quoted as saying that he was happy with the decision from the party leadership.

“I have given as a present said clock but it happened way before I was a candidate for councilman,” he said. “You can give Nazi clocks to Nazis and to Stalinists Stalin clocks.”

What kind of message does the PS send when it approves members who openly support neo-Nazi groups? The answer is simple: We don’t have an issue with Nazism and it’s perfectly fine to give Nazi clocks by PS members to neo-Nazi clubs.

Considering the terror and mass-murder that Hitler’s Germany brought on Europe between 1933 and 1945, the decision by the PS to do nothing to Helin is like a slap in the face to the victims that perished under Nazism.

 

Holocaust toll was much higher than believed – what will the deniers and Counterjihadists now say?

Posted on March 5, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Don’t look for intolerance in complex and distant places because it sits and hides right under our noses.

A story on the Huffington Post, reveals that researchers from the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum found over 40,000 Nazi death camps and ghettos that existed during Adolf Hitler’s reign of terror between 1933 and 1945. The total is much higher than previously believed, reports The New York Times.

Even if Counterjihadists claim to be pro-Israel, that is only lip service to hide their intolerance for diversity. If they ever got rid of the Muslims from Europe like their modern “final solution,” their next target would most likely be the Jews.

While the terror that the Nazi regime sowed is clear to most sensible people and the proof is out there in ever-greater quantities, there are some who are still in denial about the horrors of fascism and the Holocaust. Those who play down such atrocities committed against the Jews, Roma and other minorities in World War 2, can be found in parties like the Perussuomalaiset (PS) of Finland.

One of the matters that has always struck me about Counterjihadists, Holocaust deniers, populist right-wing radicals and anti-immigration politicians, is how they believe that history can be rewritten and forgotten to suit their opinionated ignorance and hatred.

Their denials are the brush that’s supposed to whitewash the truth.

Let’s look at a few of the many PS politicians what they think about fascism and the Holocaust so we don’t forget who they are.

A politician who made his questionable political career on spreading racism and hatred is PS MP Jussi Halla-aho.

What did he say?

  • “It’s quite justifiable to claim that the Nuremberg trials are a farce. Their guilt was decided beforehand and the convictions were carried out for absurd reasons.”
  • “Retroactively opposing the Holocaust is nicer and easier than getting involved in solving present-day problems. It is nice to accuse the Germans because it’s what everyone does. Armenians are irrelevant because Armenians don’t own Hollywood and the American media.”*

Halla-aho was convicted in June 2012 by the Supreme Court for ethnic agitation and breaching the sanctity of religion.

PS Kotka councilman Freddy Van Wonterghem, who claimed in May 2011 on Iltalehti that even though excesses happened during World War II, the Holocaust was an “exaggerated” fabrication by the former Soviet Union.

An appeals court upheld in February Van Wonterghem’s ethnic agitation conviction.

What did Van Wonterghem write? He said it was ok if Saudis kill a Muslim woman because that person would not give birth to anymore Muslims.

On a Migrant Tales blog entry on Uusi Suomi, Van Wonterghem had no regrets about what he wrote.

And then there’s a long list of others who are dazzled by far right ideology and who don’t hide their admiration for fascism.

PS MP Juho Eerola’s far-right and anti-immigration views are well-known. He once wrote in a blog entry that he liked Italian fascist Benito Mussolini’s economic system because there was full employment.

His aide, Ulla Pyysalo, applied for membership in the neo-Nazi Kansalinen Vastarinta.

Eerola didn’t want Pyysalo to resign. He said he’d be more worried if she’d apply for membership in a far-left group.

PS MP Jussi Niinstö, who chairs the defense committee, showed his political colors in the fall of 2011  when he quoted in parliament Nazi playwright Hans Johst’s Schlageter, “Wenn ich Kultur höre … entsichere ich meinen Browning” (“Whenever I hear of culture… I release the safety-catch of my Browning”).

Niinstö substituted the word “culture” in Johst’s play for parliamentarism.

Heidi Kuittinen is a PS politician from Kirkkonummi, located near Helsinki. She is another Holocaust denier: “Hitler’s mother’s father was apparently related to the Rothschilds. The six million dead have been proven to be a hoax anyway. The amount of Jews in Europe before and after the war just doesn’t match with the numbers of the supposed holocaust.”’*

Occasionally the PS shows its romanticism of Nazism as a group. The PS of the western Finnish city of Pori launched their municipal election campaign with a former Nazi catch phrase: “One city – one leader.”

The Nazi motto was: Ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Führer (One People, One Nation, One Leader).

Here’s what a former PS member, Atte Pulli, was quoted as saying recently: “SIEG HAIL! …Oops, I slipped. I’m drunk.”*

And another one by Amon Rautiainen, a Kotka city councilman: “People are too uptight with Nazism, if someone has a Totenkopf on a shirt or somebody questions the amount of people killed at concentration camps, you’re immediately branded with Hitler.”*

Rautiainen is being investigated  by the police for suggesting that Prime Minister Jyrki Katainen and Economy Minister Jutta Urpilainen should be killed and Muslims boiled alive, according to YLE in English.

In the face of playing down Nazism, fascism, the Holocaust and, of course, racism, it’s important that we the voters do not forget who these PS politicians are and what they really stand for behind their populist sound bites.

* Original source: truefinns.tumblr.com

Post-Jyväskylä: Where do we go from here?

Posted on February 2, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Considering how the media treated before the April 2011 election racism and far right ideology and how social media sites were teeming with racist online lynch mobs, we are today waking up from the hangover of our state of social inebriation. The aftereffect will not go away in a day, week, or month but will take a very long time to wear off. 

Instead of alcohol, Finland has been consuming and experimenting with racism, nationalism and far right ideology as answers to our ever-growing cultural diversity The more it drinks, the more we lose touch with reality and what is good for us.

Was it a coincidence that the attack in Jyväskylä marked exactly the  eightieth anniversary when Adolf Hitler rose to power in Germany as chancellor  and transformed the country into a totalitarian state?

When speaking of far right violence and racism in Europe, we cannot avoid addressing social ills like intolerance.

Claiming that social exclusion of white Finnish youths is one of the main factors behind what happened in Jyväskylä is only addressing part of the problem without seeing the whole picture.

Reading a number of editorials about what happened in Jyväskylä, only one by Savon Sanomat cited racism as the real culprit. It wrote: “An even  greater threat from organized extremist movements is a sort of daily racism that is targeted against immigrants and even to our [Swedish-] language minority. Attitudes in Finland have changed course, which isn’t anything to brag about.”

Kuvankaappaus 2013-2-2 kello 10.35.33

The Kuopio-based daily makes a valid point. Every day racism, xenophobia and attacks against our Swedish-speaking minority feed far right and populist-nationalist groups. They are the 98 octane fuel that permit it to spread their intolerance.

Bears hibernate in winter but so can countries for many years when they live in a state of denial. Finland is no longer a nation owned and controlled by just white Finns. It is a fact that we are an ever-growing culturally diverse nation.

Let’s not give an Andres Breivik the opportunity to commit murder on a mass scale before we understand that our response to intolerance was inefficient.

Everyone in Finland has the right to be treated as an equal member of society and with respect.

Some sectors of our society have a very hard time accepting this. They are not only white marginalized Finnish youths, but a far bigger group that extends to all sectors of our society.

Jyväskylä is (another) wakeup call to growing far right violence and intimidation

Posted on January 31, 2013 by Migrant Tales

Wednesday’s attack by neo-Nazi thugs at a book presentation in Jyväskylä is a wakeup call to the growing menace of far right violence in Finland. Was what happened in the central Finnish city a surprise? 

The answer is no if you ask researcher Vesa Puuronen of the University of Eastern Finland.

”When we consider recent political and ideidological developments in Finland and Europe,” he was quoted as saying on YLE in English, ”then this is by no means a surprising incident.”

Considering that a group of suspected neo-Nazi Suomen Kansalinen Vastarinta (SKV) members tried to disrupt a peaceful meeting where people were exercising their right to meet and express themselves is a cause for concern.

In many respects the rise of far right and neo-Nazi (see Hungary and Greece) are fuelling and emboldening likeminded groups in Finland. It would be naive to think that we are some island immune to their ideology.

One has only to go back to the April 2011 election, when the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party won a historic election victory to become Finland’s third-largest party in parliament.

While not all PS MPs and party members belong to the far right, a group led by MP Jussi Halla-aho  pretty much dictates policy on immigration and cultural diversity. Their view of on these issues is similar to other far right groups in Europe like the Sweden Democrats and Danish People’s Party.

As long as politicians, civil leaders, policy makers and the general public remain quiet and play down  the threat that far right groups in this country, we’ll be  emboldening them to new acts of violence. Racism, xenophobia and prejudice are some of the fuels that these groups thrive on to grow.

What happened in Jyväskylä is not only disgraceful, but a directattack against all of us who believe in the rule of law.

Suspected neo-Nazis attack book presentation event on the far right in Finland

Posted on January 30, 2013 by Migrant Tales

A group of men with bottles and knives barged in a book presentation in the central Finnish city of Jyväskylä on far-right extremism, according to Yle in English. The men, who called themselves ”patriots,” injured one of the body guards who was taken to hospital. The attackers fled the scene. 

Members of the neo-Nazi Suomen Kansalinen Vastarinta (SKV) are suspected to have attacked the book presentation.

Two of Äärioikesto Suomessa’s (Far right in Finland) three authors, Li Andersson and Mikael Brunila, were present at the event but weren’t hurt.

The police, who haven’t yet  caught the suspects, said that they are investigating the incident as aggravated assault.

MTV3 reported on the 10pm news that two of the attackers ave been identified but could not confirm if the police had apprehended them.

skvThis neo-Nazi SKV sticker was found in front of my home in spring.

The attack in Jyväskylä demonstrates that far right and neo-Nazi groups in Finland are getting bolder. 

Far right in Finland ‘s third author, Dan Koivulaakso, was attacked with pepper spray in June at a North Pride event in Oulu.

If the police would connect all the recent dots about the presence of far-right violence in this country, I’m certain that some would be concerned.

The same way that the police plays down the threat of these groups, it doesn’t appear too concerned either by the rising number of hate crimes and racism inflicting this country.

Kuvankaappaus 2013-1-30 kello 22.03.00

I spoke with Alain Minguet, a Green Party city councilor and president of JoMoni, over a year ago that something like what happend in Jyväskylä  could take place, or worse.

Many who write about racism in Finland get harassed. The first story I wrote about how badly Somali’s were treated in Mikkeli in the early 1990s for a major Finnish magazine landed me two death threats by phone. There was a third caller who harassed and insulted me over the phone.

The death threats and threats in general haven’t stopped. I filed a complaint to the police last spring about such cases but haven’t heard a word from them. The policeman investigating the case doesn’t even answer my phone calls.

Believe it or not, the police in Mikkeli and Pieksämäki have told me that I should not report racist harassment cases to the police.

It’s time for the authorities to get tough with neo-Nazi and far right groups that use violence and death threats to get across their message.

 

The Finnish city of Kemi gives us Harri Taurianen of the PS

Posted on November 1, 2012 by Migrant Tales

Harri Taurianen, the new Perussuomalaiset (PS) city councilor of the northern Finnish city of Kemi,  is a good example of how the PS continues to attracts a generous number of people who are multiculturally challenged.

Taurianen, who claims it’s good to uphold Finnish values and likes to spread far-right blah blah, imported his campaign slogans directly from foreign groups like the Ku Klux Klan and the American Nazi Party.

 Some of Turtiainen’s campaign slogans on his Facebook page: “Save our race” and the white power symbol.

It appears that the new city councilor got a call on Wednesday from the PS in Helsinki since his Facebook page has mysteriously vanished.

Iltalehti quotes Taurianen giving the following advice to immigrants: ”Check and make sure you have a good reason to move to Finland. Make sure that you are the only person moving to Finland.”

 And continues: ”It’s incredible that this human trash [convicted foreign criminals] aren’t put in their places. Put a stamp on their asses and deport them for good from Finland.”

Amon Rautanen of Kotka is another PS candidate who got a boost from his violent threats towards government officials and Muslims.

* The original story mentioned incorrectly Tauriainen’s name as Turtiainen. 

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