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Tag: Perussuomalaiset

The Perussuomalaiset and hate speech, hypocrisy and red herrings

Posted on March 21, 2016 by Migrant Tales

Why wasn’t a member of a high-ranking government party like the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* sacked after she said on Facebook that she didn’t have condoms to give Muslim children tricker-or-treating?

The PS politician, Terhi Kiemunki, who is the chairperson of the party in Tampere, apologized for what she said.

PS party secretary, Riikka Slunga-Poutsalo, didn’t ask for Kiemunki’s resignation even if what the PS politician said was unacceptable.

All of the above is fine but here’s the million-euro question: Why wasn’t Kiemunki sacked?

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-3-21 kello 10.26.55

Read full story here.

The fact that the PS politician didn’t get ejected from the party reveals what is wrong with Finland today concerning racism and hate speech. Too many politicians, the media, and public officials don’t take racism and hate speech seriously enough. That’s why Kiemunki wasn’t ousted from the party.

By not challenging social ills like racism and hate speech not only puts in question our society’s values but destroys their credibility in the eyes of migrants and minorities.

* The Finnish name for the Finns Party is the Perussuomalaiset (PS). The English names of the party 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.

 

Are we related as a society to vigilante groups, hate forums, xenophobic parties and publications?

Posted on March 18, 2016 by Migrant Tales

Should we be surprised that vigilante groups like the Soldiers of Odin, hate forums like Hommaforum and anti-immigration parties like the Perussuomalaiset (PS)*, racist online publications like MV-lehti have grown and captured our darkest imagination?

Another rude reminder of our links to such social ills fell on semi-deaf ears when YLE exposed how the leadership of the Soldiers of Odin pose with weapons and display Nazi symbols in a private Facebook group.

How is it possible that a vigilante group not only got registered as an association but continues to be one in light of what YLE exposed? Can registered associations in Finland teach their members how to use weapons against migrants?

Should we be surprised by such hostility, racism, and bigotry? Why are we scratching our heads in semi-disbelief by the fact that one out of every journalist received threats, according to a survey by the Union of Journalists in Finland?

How is this possible that a Nordic welfare state like ours, which has one of the highest standards of living and education systems in the world, appears incapable of challenging the rise of xenophobic parties, ever-growing racism, and bigotry?

If we looked in the mirror what would we see staring back at us?

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-3-18 kello 10.00.13

Read full story here.

 

The first blow came in 2011 when the PS, a populist anti-immigration party with links to the far right, won 39 seats in parliament. What happened during that year and the previous decade was a prelude of the things we see today.

Continue reading “Are we related as a society to vigilante groups, hate forums, xenophobic parties and publications?”

Statistics that expose how bigotry and prejudice are alive and kicking in Finland

Posted on March 16, 2016 by Migrant Tales

Facts expose lies, but bigotry and racism help resurrect them. 

It shouldn’t surprise us that during an economic recession that some expose their racist views. Add to the latter weak politicians, a complacent media, and a party like the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* in government, which base their popularity on xenophobia and populist nationalism, and you end up with a perpetuating brew of hate. 

Especially since fall, the narrative coming from the police service, politicians, and the media is that asylum seekers bring crime and rape our women.

Every time they label an asylum seeker “a rapist criminal” a familiar “us” and “them” positioning emerges: We’re good, they’re suspect.

But the bigotry of such Finns got questioned in January when the police administration said that only a small amount of suspected rape cases involved asylum seekers.

The police service of Ostrobothnia reinforced Monday what the police administration stated in January. It said that during March 7-13 only 0.1% of all calls they got to investigate involved asylum seekers, reports Talouselämä.

How long will it take this country to understand that most asylum seekers that came here are traumatized people fleeing the worst kind of war and terror that involves poverty as well?  Why are we then making up urban tales about them?

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-3-15 kello 16.51.43

Read full story (in Finnish) here.

Continue reading “Statistics that expose how bigotry and prejudice are alive and kicking in Finland”

Abuses at Luona’s asylum reception centers continue – two refugees tried to commit suicide

Posted on March 12, 2016 by Migrant Tales

The right-wing Finnish government, and especially the anti-immigration Perussuomalaiset (PS)* party, which shares power with the Center Party and National Coalition Party (NCP), have tried their hardest to find ways to deport some 20,000 of the 32, 476 asylum seekers that came to Finland in 2015.

The reception that these asylum seekers have gotten in Finland is not only shameful but has added to their suffering. Private companies like Luona, which runs eight reception centers in Helsinki, Vantaa, Espoo and Hyvinkää, and as Migrant Tales revealed in numerous stories, treat asylum seekers in a racist and inhumane manner.

Since there is some kind of a pattern, one wonders what type of silent complacency there is between the Finnish Immigration Service (FIS) and the government to turn a blind eye to such abuses.

Such degrading treatment, which is in conflict with our Nordic values, takes its toll on people like two cases that happened Friday.

One Afghani asylum seeker at Luona’s Kutomotie reception center yesterday evening tried to commit suicide by sliting his wrist. (The Kutomotie reception center will be closed in August by the Finnish Migration Service (FIS) due to deficiencies that came to light in February.) Two hours later another asylum seeker from Iraq at the same reception center tried to take his life by jumping out of the window.

According to reliable sources, both men wanted to take their lives because of the inhumane treatment they have suffered in Finland and “in particular by Luona.”

Fortunately, both asylum seekers were stopped in time and are no longer in harm’s away.

Continue reading “Abuses at Luona’s asylum reception centers continue – two refugees tried to commit suicide”

Denying the rise of racism and fascism in Finland

Posted on March 11, 2016 by Migrant Tales

Even if Finland denies that it has a serious racism and fascism problem, the country cannot go forward and the situation for migrants and minorities in Finland will get worse until we get a grip of these social issues. 

In the face of ever-incriminating evidence that Finland has the potential of becoming an Islamophobic country like Denmark or one that is at the alter with fascism like Hungary, it is a sign of cowardice that politicians and other community leaders in this country prefer to remain silent instead of challenge racism and its many poisonous forms.

The only way that Finland will be able to challenge these types of social ills is when parties like the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* are sent back to the mini political leagues. Since they are in government and have power, it’s clear that racism and xenophobia will get worse, not retreat, in Finland.

Even if the PS has risen to become one of the biggest parties, they have done this with the help of mainstream parties that think like them but aren’t too vocal about it.

The rise of xenophobia and parties like the PS is proof why hostility towards migrants and minorities has grown recently.

Kitee is a sleepy city in Eastern Finland that had a number of families who moved to Argentina in the 1920s. Today it is a city where hate crime towards asylum seekers and the Roma happens.

Writes YLE:

Three men were given fines for harassing foreign students in Kitee. Among other things, they painted swastikas on the [students’ home] walls, urinated on their door and threw objects through the students’ window.

How many politicians have come out to condemn what happened?

Continue reading “Denying the rise of racism and fascism in Finland”

Human trafficking – get ready for another onslaught of xenophobia and labeling

Posted on March 9, 2016 by Migrant Tales

Should we be surprised that YLE is planning another one-sided “debate” in April on human trafficking? The problem with this type of “debate,” like the one before that on March 2 on how asylum seekers have fueled uncertainty in Finland, is that it follows a common narrative that white Finland has of Otherness: You are a threat and a problem. 

Certainly we should be concerned about human trafficking but it is hypocritical to overlook the fact that it is our indifference and Fortress Europe mentality that have given human traffickers a good opportunity to exploit asylum seekers fleeing war and poverty.

Blaming asylum seekers, like anti-immigration parties do in Finland and Europe, is disingenuous. Such parties would care less about the plight of asylum seekers and their solutions for such people is frightening.

What is, even more, surprising about the article below is that it is being made by Kirsi Pimiä, the non-discrimination ombudsman. Nowhere in the story does Pimiä challenge that common narrative that migrants are a problem for Finland. 

If I were the journalist writing the story I’d ask her why not one, yes, not one, minority representative is working for the non-discrimination ombudsman.

The YLE article below leads with the following statement:

Marriages of convenience are a new form of human trafficking also in Finland together with forced labor and sexual exploitation. In our country we are treating close to one hundred human trafficking victims.

With provocative leads like the above written in the present xenophobic context of Finland one questions that sincerity of the article and its concern for human trafficking victims.

The most effective way to stop human trafficking is to create humane and easier paths for asylum seekers to come to Europe. Stop labelling ALL asylum seekers and migrants and do something to stop human trafficking, which Europe is guilty of promoting.

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-3-9 kello 8.20.08

Read full story (in Finnish) here.

Continue reading “Human trafficking – get ready for another onslaught of xenophobia and labeling”

Close to 80% of the police service of Finland sees asylum seekers as the greatest threat to security

Posted on March 7, 2016 by Migrant Tales

A poll showed that close to 80% of the police surveyed consider the asylum seeker crisis as the most serious threat to Finnish security, according to YLE News. Another important matter that the poll revealed was that 25.1% of those polled voted for the National Coalition Party (NCP) and 24.4% for the Perussuomalaiset (PS).*

The interesting and worrying question that the poll brings forth is what attitudes does the police service have towards cultural diversity? How do they see migrants and minorities in Finland?

The poll offers us as well an answer why the police, whose authority is rarely questioned in Finland, has fumbled the ball and given mixed statements concerning vigilante patrols, exaggerated alleged sexual harassment crimes by asylum seekers that didn’t pan out as they thought, and even singled out migrant entrepreneurs who sell pizzas for under six euros to name a few.

What does the police really think about migrants and minorities? Does it ethnically profile such minorities?

Doesn’t the police consider hate speech, arson attacks against asylum reception centers, and the rise of the far right in Finland greater threats?

Like Finland, the police too suffer from dear little cultural diversity among its ranks. There is only one black policeman in all of Finland. How many policemen and policewomen speak Arabic?

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-3-7 kello 7.24.57

Read the full story here.

Continue reading “Close to 80% of the police service of Finland sees asylum seekers as the greatest threat to security”

Does the Trump phenomenon in Europe reflect that white Europe is being challenged?

Posted on March 6, 2016 by Migrant Tales

If Donald Trump stands a good chance of being nominated as the Republican party’s presidential candidate this year, surely it says a lot about the moral state of USAmerica. Noam Chomsky, the renowned scholar, was quoted as saying in the Huffington Post that the Trump phenomenon revealed that white USAmerica is dying. 

Are there political Donald Trumps in Europe and do they reveal that white Europe is dying as well?

Taking into account Europe’s colonial legacy and history, white Europe is being challenged by minorities that are demanding their long-overdue rights of being treated with dignity and as equal members of society.

Unfortunately, the Trumps of Europe are springing like mushrooms. They too are using the same political mumbo jumbo with that toxic mix racism, bigotry, bullying, and belligerence.

Some of these European Trumps that come to mind are Marine Le Pen of France, Geert Wilders of Holland, Hungary’s Viktor Orbán, Pia Kjærsgaard of Denmark, Finland’s Timo Soini, Visegrad Four, an anti-EU alliance comprising of the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia, to name a few.

In Finland, about 18% of voters voted in the 2011 and 2015 parliamentary elections voted for a party that sees cultural diversity as a threat and that near-constantly exploits and maintains ethnic suspicion, especially against Muslims and blacks, for political gain.

Even if the track record of the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* party is shamefully linked with racism, bigotry and ties to far-right groups, some Finnish scholars like Heikki Hiilamo, a social policy professor at Helsinki University, believe that the PS has done “a great service to [Finnish] democracy” by letting off (racist?) steam of the “suppressed middle classes, especially working class men.”

Hiilamo continues: “The danger of radicalization is especially high today since support for the PS [in the polls] has plummeted and many still don’t know for which party they’d vote for.”

This argument that if support for the PS nosedives in the polls fuels radicalization was used in a so-called “study” by the Police University College, which cost taxpayers 200,000 euros. The report painted a bleak and threatening picture of Finland’s ever-growing culturally diverse society. In a nutshell, it claimed that migrants and minorities should be treated with suspicion since they are a threat to Finland.

If we look at these two cases and add YLE’s A2-ilta debate on Wednesday about how asylum seekers fuel uncertainty a pattern starts to evolve: white Finnish entitlement.

Certainly for Hiilamo, the authors of the Police University College report and the hosts of the A2-ilta debate have a difficult time seeing how their entitlement blinds them to their ethnocentrism and “diplomatic” bigotry.

Setting the tone of the A2-ilta debate, the first person that the hosts interviewed was Sari Hassinen of Kankaanpää, who has very strong nationalistic views about migrants, asylum seekers and cultural diversity.

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-2-25 kello 21.55.14

Sari Hassinen “likes” on Facebook the following pages: “Ban the burka and niqab,” “Finland first,” “Romany panhandlers out of Finland and close our borders,” “We Finns are against refugee quotas from the EU,” and “We’re against the interior ministry’s 2020 migration program.”

When asked why she’s collected signatures for a petition against asylum seekers in Kankaanpää, where a building that was going to become a refugee reception center was razed to the ground in December, she responded:  “They [asylum seekers] haven’t done anything yet, certainly there have been looks [by them], speaking in a language we don’t understand, laughs, but we still want to make sure that nothing [bad] happens [to us and our children].”

Continue reading “Does the Trump phenomenon in Europe reflect that white Europe is being challenged?”

Tighter family reunification laws spearheaded by the PS with the government’s blessing are an example of the Denmarkization of Finland

Posted on February 16, 2016 by Migrant Tales

It’s a good matter that government plans to tighten family reunification guidelines have met a stormy reception. We all know that the Perussuomalasiet (PS)*, who base their popularity on anti-immigration rhetoric, are spearheading new tighter guidelines based on the Danish model that aims to make family reunification much harder.

Denmark is the most hostile country towards migrants in the Nordic region and where the PS is a close ideological ally of the Islamophobic Danish People’s Party.

New family reunification guidelines will end up hurting Finland more than benefiting it because it will be another sign that we are an unfriendly country for immigrants. Not only will asylum seekers stay clear of Finland but skilled labor and foreign investors.

When speaking of family reunification why hasn’t the media used the Finns, who emigrated to North America before World War II, as a positive example of the latter? When a Finn moved to the New World he not only brought his wife and kids but his relatives, neighbors and friends as well.

Why did they do this?

Because it was important for them to shed roots in their new homeland. It was easier with the help of the family and friends.

It’s clear that parties like the PS, Center Party and NCP don’t want immigrants to shed too strong roots in Finland. The tightening of family reunification guidelines is clear proof of the latter.

 

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-2-15 kello 23.59.39

Read full story (in Finnish) here.

Continue reading “Tighter family reunification laws spearheaded by the PS with the government’s blessing are an example of the Denmarkization of Finland”

How the Finnish Immigration Service’s fast-track scheme will deport thousands of asylum seekers from Finland in 2016

Posted on February 13, 2016 by Migrant Tales

What would a country like Finland, which prefers to be an island in Europe and where too many still see cultural diversity with suspicion, do if a record number of asylum seekers from countries like Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria and Somalia came here in 2015?

Add to that question a government that has a party that is openly hostile to cultural diversity and asylum seekers and two right-wing mainstream parties that need the latter’s support to downsize the welfare state, and a clear picture emerges.BashyQ-5

Asylum seekers are not only victims of the violence in their home countries but the hostility and poor treatment they have face in Finland. Photo by Enrique Tessieri.

In other words, this is what probably happened in the fall behind government closed doors. The anti-immigration Perussuomalaiset (PS)* turned to their partners in government, the Center Party and National Coalition Party (NCP), and asked them for help after their popularity plummeted in the polls.

“Our standings in the polls have gone into a tailspin ever since we joined the government,” a PS minister like Timo Soini would probably say with Juha Sipilä or Alexander Stubb interjecting: “Let’s make a deal. We’ll help you regain your popularity in the polls by supporting your plans to tighten immigration policy and you support our plans to downsize the welfare state.”

It’s a simple and clear-cut deal between the ruling partners.  You scratch my back and we’ll scratch yours.

The Center Party and NCP allow the PS to have a free hand at promoting its xenophobic policies in government and in return the PS supports the Center Party’s and NCP’s plans to downsize the welfare state.

Continue reading “How the Finnish Immigration Service’s fast-track scheme will deport thousands of asylum seekers from Finland in 2016”

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