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Tag: Perussuomalaiset

Oops! Incorrect suspected sexual assault cases for 2020

Posted on October 8, 2021 by Migrant Tales

Sexual assault, especially suspected cases, is heatedly used by anti-immigration parties like the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* and public services like the police to demonstrate how some foreigners are. The police admitted today to a mistake in tabulating suspected sexual assault cases during 2020.

The mistake originates from a foreigner suspected of sexually assaulting his wife 141 times. Since the person was reported as 141 individual suspects, the amount for 2020 is therefore too high.

The police and Statistics Finland have confirmed the mistake.

The correct percentage of all suspected sexual assaults last year was 27.2%, not 38.5%.

Another interesting finding of the sexual assault statistics is that Northern Europeans, not Western Asians (Middle Easterners, Persians, and other nationalities), committed most suspected sexual assaults.

Why didn’t the media make a bigger deal about this fact?

Northern Europeans had the most sexual assault cases (58.9%), as many as 80% of alleged sexual assault against children.

Another important legal point that media coverage forgot to mention is that a person is innocent before proven guilty by a court of law. The number of convicted cases for sexual assault is only a fraction of the suspected ones. In 2019, 12.9% of all suspected cases were handed convictions.


Continue reading “Oops! Incorrect suspected sexual assault cases for 2020”

Finnish government to ease (alas) strict family reunification law

Posted on October 7, 2021 by Migrant Tales

The Finnish government of Prime Minister Sanna Marin plans to overturn the country tightened immigration law and family reunification requirements, which came into force a year later after a record 32,477 asylum seekers came to Finland in 2015. The then government of Center Party Prime Minister Juha Sipilä, the anti-immigration Perussuomalaiset (PS)* party was a partner together with the National Coalition Party (Kokoomus), tightened the immigration law that, among other matters, made family reunification harder.

If passed, the new law will come into force in 2022.

While some may claim that there is nothing dramatic about doing away with tightened rules that came into force in 2016, there was already a tightening of the law in 2011.


Isn’t it a surprise that Helsingin Sanomat did not publish a person of color to go with the story? The Finnish media usually publish such pictures when migrants or asylum seekers are the topic. Read the full story here.

It shouldn’t surprise anyone that one of the main factors behind these changes was the anti-immigration Perussuomalaiset (PS) party’s growing popularity in the polls and its historic election victory in April 2011.

Continue reading “Finnish government to ease (alas) strict family reunification law”

PS MP Sebastian Tynkkynen gets a third ethnic agitation conviction

Posted on October 4, 2021 by Migrant Tales

THE STORY WAS UPDATED

Perussuomalaiset (PS)* party MP Sebastian Tynkkynen was convicted for a third time of ethnic agitation, according to Yle News. The two previous convictions were handed down in 2016 and 2017.

The Oulu District Court handed Tynkkynen, who is the PS’ third vice president, 70 day fines amounting to 4,400 euros.

The PS MP naturally denied any wrongdoing, and that conviction ran against his right to free expression.

“Why was it necessary to speak [out against Muslims who are a danger to society], taking into account what was happening behind the scenes with respect to the sexual abuse of children and how it undermined security in general,” he was quoted as saying in Iltalehti and continues: “I saw back then that I had a moral obligation to speak out against this.”

A “moral obligation” to speak out against sexual harassment? How disingenuous of you, MP Tynkkynen.

Read the full story here.

Let’s look at media coverage and how the police and politicians reacted to sexual harassment cases of minors in Oulu in 2018-2019. Back then, MPs like Tynkkynen were fueling the fires of fear against asylum seekers, which are mostly Muslims.

Continue reading “PS MP Sebastian Tynkkynen gets a third ethnic agitation conviction”

Exposing white Finnish privilege #81: Racializing crime, perpetuating stereotypes and racism

Posted on October 2, 2021 by Migrant Tales

Treat with tweezers whenever percentage figures are used to depict sexual assault cases by migrants.

A government-commissioned study published Thursday concluded that migrants are over-represented in suspected sexual assault crimes, perpetuating a toxic narrative. Such generalizations give ammunition to Islamophobes like the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* party to maintain and reinforce racist stereotypes. 

To look at how the Finnish media reported the study, we’d have to look at what the media and study did not mention. 


Read the full story here.

For one, the study cites suspected sexual assault cases but also mentions convictions. The media took the bait and cited with gusto suspected cases and concluded that “migrants are overrepresented” in sexual assault crime, accounting for 37.5% of all cases. That compares to 57.4% of sexual assaults by Finns.

In Finland, as in other Western countries, a person is innocent until proven guilty by a court of law.

Continue reading “Exposing white Finnish privilege #81: Racializing crime, perpetuating stereotypes and racism”

Exposing white Finnish privilege #80: Violence against you counts but mine doesn’t

Posted on October 1, 2021 by Migrant Tales

Radical-right Islamophobic Perussuomalaiset (PS)* party MP, Sebastian Tynkkynen, who has two ethnic agitation convictions and a third pending, is trying to get the most political mileage from an incident at an #elokapina demonstration. 

Some unknown persons at the demonstration allegedly attempted to attack Tynkkynen and shoved him. The police asked if the MP wanted to press charges, and he said it wasn’t necessary apparently because nothing serious happened.

All types and forms of violence should be condemned, but why are the PS making up a big fuss about the incident? The whole affair, in my opinion, appears like a storm in a teacup.



The incident with Tynkkynen overlooks other forms of verbal and physical abuse and violence that the PS have promoted for years and continue to spread.

Why don’t we see more leadership among politicians? What about the media? Why don’t they openly condemn racism, and especially Islamophobia, and appear worried about the growth of these social ills thanks to the likes of Tynkkynen and the PS?

White Finnish privilege #80

The answer to the above question lies in the double-standards of our society made possible thanks to white Finnish privilege.

Violence against white Finns gets a lot more attention than what migrants and minorities see.

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
  • Exposing Finnish white privilege #65: Racism exists because our society profits from it
  • Exposing Finnish white privilege #66: Abdirahim Husu Hussein and dealing with racist passengers in a racist environment
  • Exposing Finnish white privilege #67: Pirkka-Pekka Petelius’ apology exposes deep-rooted white Finnish supremacy
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #68: The party that injects Finland’s Islamophobia with steroids and other hate-enhancing drugs
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #69: At the dentist – do you speak Finnish?
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #70: At the dentist’s and where are you from?
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #71: Hate speech is an example of white supremacist privilege
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #72: False police reporting is an example of violence and open hostility
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #73: Stoking and exploiting white suspicion
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #74: The anti-Semitic beast inside Jussi Halla-aho
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #75: Obsession with race, ethnicity, and us versus them
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #76: Two news stories that expose entitlement
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #77: The PS are Finnish white supremacists
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #78: the spread and acceptance of white nationalism
  • Exposing white Finnish privilege #79: Spreading lies at our economic peril
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Finnish lawmaker has three ethnic agitation convictions to his name

Posted on September 22, 2021 by Migrant Tales

The Oulu district court found Perussuomalaiset (PS)* MP Sebastian Tynkkynen guilty of ethnic agitation for his Facebook postings in 2017, according to Yle. While no Finnish media mentioned it, the third conviction for ethnic agitation is a record for a Finnish lawmaker. 

Hiding behind Islamophobic arguments and that the sentence violated his free speech rights, Tynkkynen said that he will appeal the ruling by the district court.

The court fined him 4,050 euros.

The PS elected a new five-person board in August. Apart from Tynkkynen, the third vice president, the second vice president, Mauri Peltokangas, is also facing ethnic agitation charges.


Finland’s worst Islamophobists: Sebastian Tynkkynen and Junes Lokka. Source: Facebook

The prosecutor defended his case by saying that Tynkkynen had targeted asylum and immigrants in his Facebook posts by blaming, among other things, that all Muslims are terrorists.

Continue reading “Finnish lawmaker has three ethnic agitation convictions to his name”

QUOTE OF THE DAY: Finland’s hardline and bureaucratic immigration policy is deadly for democracy

Posted on September 9, 2021 by Migrant Tales

“Finland’s hardline and bureaucratic immigration policy based in great part on suspicion and fear of outsiders is partly to blame for the rise of a populist and hostile anti-immigration party in the last decade and even for high migrant unemployment. A systematic policy of exclusion suggests that our plans to bring foreign labor will fail. A good example of this never-never land thinking is the Perussuomalaiset* party, which wants to sell residence permits for 50,000 euros.”

Unpublished Finland Bridge column: Hold the Fort (Until Sanity Returns)

Posted on September 5, 2021 by Migrant Tales

Migrant Tales insight: After publishing a regular column for Finland Bridge of Finland Society (Suomi-Seura), the column below written in 2015 was the last one. Apparently, the content of the column was too much for the editor of the magazine, who scolded me for being too critical of the Perussuomalaiset (Finns Party). I had to rewrite the column. Even so, I decided to end my long relationship with the magazine.

Over twenty years of contributions to the Finland Bridge did not even end with a thank you.


Finland is in quite a rut these days. In some ways, it resembles a cocktail with the following ingredients: lethargic economic growth since 2013, fiscal deficits, sizeable budget cuts, an ever-greying population that will put more strain on the welfare state mixed with a spoonful of nationalist populism and a record number of asylum seekers.

Nothing has been the same on the political front ever since the nationalist-populist Finns Party (PS) joined the government as a partner with the Center Party and National Coalition Party (NCP).

Matters haven’t been helped by government plans to make massive public spending cuts to the tune of billions of euros, which will impact negatively some of our proudest social accomplishments from the last century like social welfare, health, and education.

Matters have gotten so bad in Finland these days that even the police, in a campaign against tax dodgers, asked consumers in the fall to report to the authorities if pizzas are sold for under 6 euros.

The police state that it’s impossible to sell pizza in an expensive country like Finland for less than 6 euros unless you are evading taxes.  Apart from the attention that the story got on social media, it was picked up by the BBC and Corriere della Sera, an Italian daily.

Writes the BBC: “Finns commenting on social media have reacted to the campaign with a mixture of bemusement and disbelief. ‘This pizza-receipt hunting is ridiculous,’ writes one user on the [Finnish police service’s] Economic Crime Investigators’ Facebook page. ‘Shouldn’t they concentrate those limited police investigative resources where real problems are?’” 

Nordic Nationalism

All Nordic countries have seen in recent years the rise of populist parties that are anti-EU, anti-cultural diversity, and especially anti-Islam. In Iceland and Norway, we have the Progressive Party, while in Denmark the Danish People’s Party (DPP) calls the shots. Both the DPP and PS are the second-biggest parties in parliament in their respective countries.

Sweden is the only Nordic country that has refused to play ball with such ultranationalist groups. While various polls place the Sweden Democrats (SD) in second or third place, all mainstream parties in that country have agreed not to cooperate with the SD.

There are many ways to skin a nationalist-populist cat. One of them, like in Finland, is to invite them to form part of the government. Only after a few months in government, the PS saw its support plummet by a record 7 percentage points to 10.7% from the April elections, according to a YLE poll.

Considering the massive cutbacks in spending planned by Prime Minister Juha Sipilä’s government, it’s understandable the those who voted for the PS are riling mad since such budget cuts will impact their living standards directly.

Another issue that PS voters feel betrayed by is immigration policy. Even if the party has promised to take a tough stand on immigration, Finland is seeing today a record number of asylum seekers coming to the country. Some estimates place the number of asylum seekers to rise to 35,000 this year and by as many as 50,000 in 2016.

Disappointing poll results, accusations of broken campaign promises, and angry PS supporters don’t make party chairman Timo Soini’s job any easier even if he is accustomed to running a tight ship with near-absolute powers.

PS third vice president, Sebastian Tynkkynen, who is also chairman of the party’s youth league, is one visible example of the growing dissension in the party. If Tynkkynen and his followers had their way, the PS would exit the government and take a much stiffer stance against asylum seekers and migrants, even if they breach international agreements and are unconstitutional.

Tynkkynen’s membership in the party was revoked in October and that caused quite a media and social media uproar. Some analysts believe that what happened to Tynkkynen is another example that there is very little room for criticism at the party.

While the Soini-Tynkkynen row may have receded into the background by December, it is ironic that the very people that the PS leader gave a political voice to like MEP Jussi Halla-aho, MP Olli Immonen, and others, are the ones who could threaten to destroy party unity.

Two examples

Contrary to the PS, the DPP of Denmark has a totally different strategy on how to maintain its popularity and power. The DPP’s recipe for political survival has been to stay out of minority governments but support them in exchange for tougher immigration and refugee policy.

Like the rest of the nationalist-populist parties in the Nordic region, the DPP uses as well anti-immigration and especially anti-Islam rhetoric to capture voters.

According to Politiken, one of Denmark’s leading dailies, some of the initiatives supported by the DPP in the past include: the removal of satellite dishes that receive Al Jazeera; deport immigrant families if one member is a criminal; end Muslim migration; 50% of the music played on ‘Denmarks Radio’ must be Danish; immigrants must speak Danish in their homes, among others.  

The only Nordic country that is holding the fort until political sanity returns to this part of Europe is Sweden.

While there are split opinions about Sweden’s strategy to shun the SD, the Finnish and Danish examples suggest that if nationalist-populist parties are given power anti-immigration and anti-Islam sentiment will grow.

I hope that Sweden’s strategy to isolate the SD will bear fruit and that voters in the next elections will send the PS back to the political minor leagues.  

Why?

Because xenophobia, racism, and bigotry are based on a huge lie that only aims to exclude and marginalize other groups at a high cost to our society. 

By dividing society into “us” and “them” we end up undermining Nordic values such as social equality.

PS’ Riikka Purra feeds Afghans to the dogs

Posted on September 4, 2021 by Migrant Tales

The new chairperson of the far-right Perussuomalaiset (PS)* party, Riikka Purra, will soon be calling out the knives. In her latest tweet, she reveals her radical cruelty against the vulnerable.

In the Tweet below, she feeds the Afghans to the dogs and shows the worst of Finland.

No experts, human rights activists, defenders of the rule of law, feminists, journalists. No Afghans to Finland.

No requests from the United States, Nato, the EU, or UNHCR.

No debt of honor, four-year residence permits, family reunifications, citizenship.



Will, we read any editorial on Sunday or any objection by politicians to Purra’s far-right battle cries?

I doubt it.

The far right and their xenophobic diatribes score another point for now.

Riikka Purra and her PS cronies want to make discrimination and racism legal

Posted on September 1, 2021 by Migrant Tales

We all know about Perussuomalaiset (PS)* new chairperson Riikka Purra’s radical views on cultural diversity and migration in general. Yes, she’s the one warning about how Muslims are taking over Europe and how brown and black Finns will replace white Finns.

Her latest Tweet below suggests that white Finns should be the only beneficiaries of social welfare, but Finland must reform the constitution to do this. Purra states that she is ready to reform the constitution if she becomes the next prime minister.

The new PS chairperson lives in a time warp constantly attacking windmills. Purra speaks highly of Denmark, the Nordic region’s most Islamophobic country, and hopes to wipe out migrants and minorities with the help of discrimination, social exclusion and far-right nationlism. She can try, but she will fail beceause our ever-growing diversity as a nation is growing and blossoming every day.

The question that all of Purra’s and her party’s hostile attacks against migrants and minorities should raise a question: Are we going to allow it to happen?

Riikka Purra Tweets: “Should we consider changing our social security system that would be based on nationality (taking into account the EU). There are no good options [because the state] is running out of money. Such a change would require, for example, a reform of the constitution so it would not be a simple change of the law.”


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