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Tag: Perussuomalaiset

The Finnish media gives a lot of space to Halla-aho and the PS but none to us

Posted on June 12, 2017 by Migrant Tales

It’s clear that the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* is a different party after this weekend, when Jussi Halla-aho, Laura Huhtasaari, Teuvo Hakkarainen and Juho Eerola were elected to lead the anti-immigrant and anti-EU party. Halla-aho spoke of in his policy speech of “nationalistic forces,” which is code for anti-immigration, anti-cultural diversity and anti-EU policies. 

Halla-aho said that the PS should align itself with such forces in the Nordic region, which means Islamophobic parties like the Danish People’s Party, Sweden Democrats and the Progress Party of Norway.

Halla-aho will meet at 10am with Center Party Prime Minister Juha Sipilä and National Coalition Party head Petteri Orpo about whether the PS will continue to be in government.


Read the full story here.

Considering that Halla-aho and PS second vice president Hakkarainen have convictions for ethnic agitation, and that Huuhtasaari and Eerola have a dubious reputation because of their acceptance of fascism and hostility towards cultural diversity, it is surprising that no newspaper in Finland asked a single Somali Finn, Muslim or visible minority what they thought about the “new” PS.

Continue reading “The Finnish media gives a lot of space to Halla-aho and the PS but none to us”

The PS steers further right exposing its shameless Islamophobia, racism, bigotry and ultranationalism

Posted on June 11, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Like rubbing salt on Finland’s wound, Perussuomalaiset (PS)* newly elected chairman Jussi Halla-aho’s far-right anti-immigration policy got reinforcement after three Islamophobes were elected to lead the PS: Laura Huuhtasaari, Teuvo Hakkarainen and Juho Eerola were elected first, second and third vice-president, respectively.

Center Party Prime Minister Juha Sipilä stated Saturday that the election of Halla-aho meant that the PS is a different party when led by former chairman Timo Soini. ”The Perussuomalaiset is a completely new party with new policies now,” Sipilä was quoted as saying Saturday in YLE News.

 



The new chairman of the PS refusing to resign in 2012 because the sentence handed to him by the Supreme Court on ethnic agitation and breaching the sanctity of religion was “a personal interpretation.” Source: Migrant Tales.

 

The most interesting issue to watch isn’t what the next move of the newly elected board of the PS will be, but what will be the reaction of the party’s coalition partners, the Center Party and National Coalition Party. Will the PS exit or remain in government?

Will they let Halla-aho and his band of Islamophobes slide and will we see something politically toxic like in Denmark emerging? The PS has always had a semi-secret love affair with the Danish People’s Party (DPP). They have now come as close as ever to being that type of party in Finland.

The DPP thrives as we can see below on Islamophobia and spreading anti-immigration rhetoric in Denmark.


Source: Migrant Tales.

Continue reading “The PS steers further right exposing its shameless Islamophobia, racism, bigotry and ultranationalism”

Teivo Teivainen: How Finns Party’s Racist Turn Might Shake Government of Finland?

Posted on June 10, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Now it’s real. Finland’s government includes a party that just elected a person convicted for a racist crime (ethnic agitation) as its new leader. The question is obviously not simply about Jussi Halla-aho’s criminal record, but that the party has decided to take a turn away from its agrarian populist roots and toward racism.

What will happen next?

The leaders of other governmental parties have been unwilling to comment on this before the Finns Party election, but now they will have to start talking.


Read the original op-ed piece here.

Many eyes are on Kokoomus, the most traditional right-wing party of Finland and one of the three governmental parties. Its newly elected and quite popular Mayor of Helsinki, Jan Vapaavuori, has been one of the most explicit political leaders on this issue: Kokoomus should not be in the same government with Halla-aho. Will the desire to keep the government together make the leadership of Kokoomus opt for a more pragmatic solution?

The Centre Party has more to lose if the government breaks down. It has the prime minister’s post but would be unlikely to do all that well in a new election. One possible option is let go of Finns Party but find a couple of smaller parties to join the government and avoid new election.

Overall, most commentators do not seem to find new election very likely.

Whatever else happens, Finland is now likely to get a new Foreign Minister. Halla-aho has been very explicit that Timo Soini, the leader of the party for decades, has to step down also as a minister. Had Sampo Terho, Halla-aho’s main contender, been elected, Soini would probably have continued as minister.

More generally, the election of Jussi Halla-aho can be considered a sad end for the long and in many ways successful career of Timo Soini as the leader of Finns Party.

Among leftist commentators, opinions about the desirability of Halla-aho’s election have been divided. Some say that since both of the main candidates, Terho and Halla-aho, are almost equally racist or otherwise right-wing anyway, it is better to get the more explicitly racist person in front.

Compared to Terho, Halla-aho’s election is more likely to shake the current right-wing government of Finland and therefore cause trouble for the massive transformation (privatization) of health care that the government has been pushing through. Therefore, some leftists say, it is preferable to have Halla-aho in charge of the Finns Party.

These are simply some of the very first impressions immediately after the vote at the meeting of the Finns Party. The meeting still goes on, and Jussi Halla-aho is expected to give a major speech tomorrow Sunday. It is possible that the governmental coalition partners want to wait and see what he says. In any case, they will need to take a stand soon.

Read the original op-ed piece here.

This piece was reprinted by Migrant Tales with permission.

Jussi Halla-aho elected PS chairman. What happens next and will the party remain in government?

Posted on June 10, 2017 by Migrant Tales

While it’s no surprise that Perussuomalaiset (PS)* Jussi Halla-aho was the clear winner against Sampo Terho 949 votes against 629, the big question is how the PS’ government coalition partners Center Party and National Coalition Party (NCP) will digest Halla-aho’s victory.

Halla-aho will take over as chairman after Timo Soini led the party for 20 years.

A number of NCP politicians like forthcoming Helsinki Mayor Jan Vapaavuori was quoted as saying that his party cannot be in the same government where Halla-aho is PS chairman.  “It’s clear for me that the National Coalition Party cannot be in the same government with Halla-aho’s PS,” Vapaavuori was quoted as saying in tabloid Iltalehti. “It’s important to defend liberal democracy. The PS have to decide for themselves.”


Read the full story here.

NCP chairman Petteri Orpo has made similar statements about Halla-aho.

While Orpo and Vapaavuori have made it clear that it would be difficult to be in the same government with Halla-aho, don’t be surprised if everything will continue as normal after the new PS chairman meets Prime Minister Juha Sipilä on Monday.

Continue reading “Jussi Halla-aho elected PS chairman. What happens next and will the party remain in government?”

Timo Soini (2013): “No. I’m a Catholic Christian by definition, I cannot be a racist”

Posted on June 10, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Check this interview dating back to 2013 in BBC’s HARDtalk when outgoing Perussuomalaiset (PS)* chairman plays down the party’s racism problem and defends MEP Jussi Hall-aho, who is going to purge him as foreign minister if elected as PS chairman. The PS elects over the weekend a new chairman with the two favorites being Halla-aho and Sampo Terho. 

Those who remember the HARDTalk interview can recall when Stephen Sacker grills Soini on his promise to fire any party member who is convicted for ethnic agitation. Soini backtracked and defended his decision not to sack Halla-aho, who had, according to him, suffered enough for his racist writings about Muslims.

Well, now, we’ve come full circle with Halla-aho appearing to be the favorite to become the next PS chairman. If elected, it spells trouble and humiliation for Soini.

A lesson to be learned?

For one, you cannot control racism and bigotry and keep it on a short leash, even if such a rabid dog attracts attention and lures voters.

Will we miss Soini as he bows out as chairman of the PS? Not at all. If you think of it, it’s him who gave Finland’s racist and anti-immigration groups a forum to lash out at our ever-growing culturally diverse community.

His rise and fall as PS chairman resembles the plot of the 1931 classic Frankenstein movie, where a monster is brought to life that later kills his creator.

Soini is Dr. Frankenstein and Halla-aho and a long list of others, the Frankensteins.

A good example of how journalists should handle politicians who use racism and bigotry to gain political power.

* The official translation to Finnish of the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party is the Finns Party. In our opinion, it is not only a horrible translation, but one that is misguided. A direct translation of Perussuomalaiset in English would be something like “basic” or “fundamental Finn.” Such terms like the Finns Party of True Finns promote as well 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 thereafter the acronym PS.

 

 

The Finnish police service’s deep denial of racism among its ranks is no surprise

Posted on June 5, 2017 by Migrant Tales

The publishing of the racist comments in a secret Facebook group for the Finnish police by online news site Long Play shouldn’t surprise us, even if Interior Minister Paula Risikko  and National Police Commissioner Seppo Kolehminen suggest the contrary. 

A Somali Finn, who spoke on condition of anonymity, wasn’t surprised at all by the news of the secret Facebook group.

“The news doesn’t surprise me at all because the police in Finland are racist,” he said. “They can be racist and nothing happens to them. Who can you trust?”

According to Helsinki Times, some racists comments on the secret group’s wall include ridiculing the asylum seeker who attempted to commit suicide by hanging himself from a tree at Helsinki Station Square in March. The comment claimed that the hapless asylum seeker couldn’t even succeed at hanging himself.

Other comments argued that black people are inferior due to their culture and genetic makeup. The policeman substantiated his claim by stating that blacks hadn’t succeeded in any country.

The Facebook group shared articles from anti-immigration and racist groups like online magazine MV-lehti, far-right groups Suomen Sisu and Britain First.

The Facebook group consisted of over 2,800 members, or about one third of Finland’s police force of 7,000,according to Long Play.


Read the full story here.

Despite the Minister Risikko’s and National Police Commissioner Koleheminen’s constant assurances that the police service has zero tolerance for racism, the exposure of the secret Facebook group reveals much wider problems like denial and disrespect towards our ever-growing culturally diverse community.

Continue reading “The Finnish police service’s deep denial of racism among its ranks is no surprise”

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

Posted on June 5, 2017 by Migrant Tales

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

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

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



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

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

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

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

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

Source: Facebook.

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

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

Even if politics makes strange bedfellows, Timo Soini’s bed partners are eerie

Posted on June 1, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Remember the speech below when Timo Soini and the Perussuomalaisiet were riding the crest of a wave after his populist anti-immigration won the parliamentary elections of 2011, when it saw its MPs rise to 39 from 5 in the previous election?

Today as foreign minister of Prime Minister Juha Sipilä’s government, Soini wants to keep as big as distance from the UKIP which he once admired because of that party’s anti-EU stance.

If we look at UKIP today, all we can say is that its leader Nigel Farage made a big impact on the United Kingdom’s exit from the European Union and then imploded.

Moreover, Farage, who is a “person of interest” in FBI investigation concerning US President Donald Trump and his relations with Russia, called Vladimir Putin the leader he most admired, in a 2014 interview.

One matter that Farage and Soini have in common is that they don’t know how to judge their political allies.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cl5PviXNRyk

From the historic victory of the PS in 2011, the party is being eaten alive today by the very racist and ultranationalistic forces that Soini unleashed.

The story of the UKIP is a bit similar.

Continue reading “Even if politics makes strange bedfellows, Timo Soini’s bed partners are eerie”

Sampo Terho’s and Jussi Hallo’s political calling to keep Finland white

Posted on May 24, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Watching the A-studio debate between Sampo Terho and Jussi Halla-aho, the two candidates vying for the leadership of the Perussuomalaiset (PS)*, was a good example of how low Finland has stooped as a nation.

These two politicians, which have made good careers with the help of social media by spreading hatred, mistrust and hostility towards certain ethnic and religious groups in Finland, parroted their hardline stances on an even tougher immigration policy for the country.

It does seem incredible that a nation like Finland, which claims to be a Nordic welfare state built on social equality, has representatives of a government party speaking of asylum seekers, migrants and cultural diversity as if it were political canon fodder to secure their own political careers and that of the party’s.


 
Watch full debate here.

Terho mentioned that the most important issues facing Finland was the “crisis” brought on by asylum seekers and slow economic growth. Halla-aho was no different: He was worried about EU federalism, immigration and entrepreneurship.

The message of both politicians is clear: Let’s keep Finland white.

Both of them went on record saying that all asylum seekers should be put in detention centers like in Viktor Orbán’s Hungary, make Finland officially a monolingual country at the cost of Swedish, and close the borders to asylum seekers even if it meant breaching international agreements.

If these two politicians were able to lead Finland, it wouldn’t take long for it to join the same club as Hungary and Poland, where basic civil rights are being challenged.


* The official translation to Finnish of the Perussuomalaiset (PS) party is the Finns Party. In our opinion, it is not only a horrible translation, but one that is misguided. A direct translation of Perussuomalaiset in English would be something like “basic” or “fundamental Finn.” Such terms like the Finns Party of True Finns promote as well 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 thereafter the acronym PS.

How the Finnish government, institutions and President Sauli Niinistö pander to anti-immigration sentiment and groups

Posted on May 21, 2017 by Migrant Tales

Just the way Prime Minister Juha Sipilä’s government can give a tacit pat on the back to far-right groups like Suomi Ensin (Finland First), the police give the green light to extremist  vigilante groups, or President Sauli Niinistö give the thumbs up to the Finnish version of the Okie from Muskogee, all of them if they wanted could land a big blow to such racist groups by stating that they are unacceptable and out of touch with our Nordic values. 

Too much complacency and mixed signals from government officials and the president of Finland only feed the ogre and the trolls.

The recent French presidential election was a positive example of how to challenge racism spread by far-right politicians.


Read the full story here.

Emmanuel Macron did not hide his views of Marine Le Pen. He accused her in a national debate of “feeding off” French people’s unhappiness and called her a “parasite” by manipulating voters’ anger usually against minorities and Muslims.

We’ve seen it over and over again. If you are too complacent and try to compete with far-right anti-immigration parties by stealing their rhetoric  you are going to lose. Why would a voter vote for a copy if he or she can get the real thing?

Thus the only way to challenge the onslaught of populist anti-cultural diversity rhetoric polluting Europe these days is by facing it and challenging it head on with little diplomacy, if necessary.

Finland is less of a sad example today of how traditional parties like the Social Democrats tried to use the populist rhetoric of the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* before the April 2011 election. Add to the latter a national media that couldn’t tell the difference between racism and its own Nordic Western values and the historic victory of the PS was sealed.

It has taken us in Finland over five years of PS rhetoric and populist arguments since 2011 to understand that the party is nothing but a smokescreen for our own prejudices and racism.

Continue reading “How the Finnish government, institutions and President Sauli Niinistö pander to anti-immigration sentiment and groups”

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