The recent resignation of former Chief Nnspector Jari Taponen and others from the police reveals the extent to which populist politics has infiltrated the police. In 2023, and with funding from the European Network Against Racism (ENAR), the EU’s largest anti-racism NGO, we published a report showing how parties like the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* use migrant crime to attract voters.
I have interviewed Taponen a few times about street gangs. What he writes in a column in Sunday’s Helsingin Sanomat confirms our conclusions that the issue has a strong political component.
It is sad how slowly, if not yet, the media has reacted to the populist politicking of parties like PS and the National Coalition Party.
You don’t have to be a rocket scientist to realize that the whole street gang news story is a ploy by parties like the PS to further polarize the country and label all racialised youth as potential criminals.
Shame on the PS and the Finnish media.
We wrote in the report: “Moreover, the “youth gang” story has exposed how the media, police, and
politicians collaborate to spread a narrative about marginalized groups. Each of the
three involved has a vested interest in exploiting stories about minorities:
– The media gains viewers and advertising revenues.
– The police can secure more funding for fighting crime.
– Politicians appeal to voters.”
Media like MTV engage in a lot of shameless hypocrisy. Look at the pictures below and how they have labelled all racialised youth as potential criminals.

Has MTV changed its ways? Below is a picture of an interview with the PS Minister of the Interior Mari Rantanen.

This ad was placed on MTV last year to mark an interview with Ivan Puopolo Rantanen. Puopolo is the face of MTV, who frequently interviews and spreads the anti-immigration message of the PS.
In his column, Taponen hits the nail on the head: “This is a worrying trend [in the police], because the functioning of the police and the upholding of security in socleity must be based on respect for inalienable and human rights and the fair and equal treatment of all groups of the population.”

You can read the story in Finnish here.