Discussion:
notoriously liberal Sweden is closing the doors on migrants
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a425couple
2024-10-24 18:51:29 UTC
Permalink
Baxter keeps telling us that the USA should be more like
the Scandinavian countries.

from
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13919879/liberal-Sweden-closing-doors-migrants.html

How notoriously liberal Sweden is closing the doors on migrants: A VERY
generous offer could turn the tide on its population boom as Swedes tire
of bloody gang wars, reveals FRED KELLY
By Fred Kelly

Published: 07:01 EDT, 3 October 2024 | Updated: 08:26 EDT, 3 October 2024

The rooms are as small as prison cells. Each contains a steel-framed
bunk-bed – the paint long since peeled away – a stained and dingy sink
and a small table bolted to the white-washed wall.

New arrivals are given a set of bed sheets, a single roll of toilet
paper and a small tube of toothpaste. Not one of the near-200 residents
has any idea how long he or she will be here.

But this is no prison. This is one of Sweden’s newly appointed ‘migrant
return centres’ designed to house the thousands of foreigners refused
asylum – and whom the government intends to deport in the coming months
and years. Those without the right to remain in Sweden are offered beds
in these facilities before returning to their home country, or via the
Dublin Convention to another EU nation.

In the grounds of this facility, in the southern Stockholm district of
Hägersten, the Mail met Alasan Jaideh, 18, a Gambian asylum seeker who
had arrived in Sweden five days earlier from Calais, where he had spent
two years trying in vain to reach Britain.

‘Now I’m in Sweden I want to stay here, to work and to learn Swedish,’
he told us.

But for Jaideh, as for so many other new arrivals, the hope of settling
in this Scandinavian country is now more remote than ever.

Alasan Jaideh, 18, a Gambian asylum seeker who had arrived in Sweden
five days earlier from Calais, where he had spent two years trying in
vain to reach Britain

View gallery
Alasan Jaideh, 18, a Gambian asylum seeker who had arrived in Sweden
five days earlier from Calais, where he had spent two years trying in
vain to reach Britain

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For after years of horrific gangland violence blamed largely on Sweden’s
soaring migrant population, the centre-Right government has slammed the
border shut, announcing a raft of harsh measures aimed at reducing the
numbers of foreign-born residents, which currently stands at more than
20 per cent of the 10.6 million total.

Among the policy proposals is an offer of just under £26,000 for legal
immigrants willing to return voluntarily to their country of origin; the
tightening of family reunification and asylum regulations; and more than
doubling the income threshold for those seeking work visas – up from
£970 a month to £2,200.

Furthermore, dual citizens who commit crimes face having their Swedish
passports revoked, while public sector workers – including doctors,
teachers and librarians – could be legally obliged to report
undocumented people to the police in what critics have dubbed the
‘Swedish Snitch Law’.

So just what has driven Sweden – once heralded as a ‘humanitarian
superpower’ – to abandon its liberal agenda and implement a ‘hostile
environment’ towards migrants that makes ex-PM Theresa May’s ill-fated
efforts in Britain some years ago look positively hospitable?

First there is the sheer scale of the mass migration Sweden has
experienced – and the difficulties it has brought in terms of
assimilation and cultural differences. Hundreds of thousands of migrants
– Syrians and Iraqis being the most common – have arrived in recent
years in what was for centuries an exceptionally homogenous nation.

Over the past decade in particular, Sweden’s fanciful dream of a
harmonious, pluralist society has turned into a nightmare.

The country that once boasted one of the lowest crime rates in Europe is
now the gun-crime capital of the continent, fuelled by violent gangs
disproportionately made up of first-generation migrants who control the
nation’s illicit drug and prostitution trades.

Fred Kelly inside the return centre, where new arrivals are given a set
of bed sheets, a single roll of toilet paper and a small tube of toothpaste
+
7
View gallery
Fred Kelly inside the return centre, where new arrivals are given a set
of bed sheets, a single roll of toilet paper and a small tube of toothpaste

According to a 2023 police report, there are believed to be 14,000
active gang members in Sweden along with a further 48,000 people with
‘gang affiliation’, many as young as just nine or ten.

Over the first six months of this year alone, Sweden suffered a shocking
148 shootings, resulting in 20 deaths. Last year, 55 people were shot
dead across 363 incidents. In 2022, there were a record 62 fatal
shootings while 73 people aged between just 15-20 were arrested for
suspected or attempted murder with a firearm.

While it is illegal in Sweden to register the ethnic origin of citizens
accused of serious crimes, the Swedish National Council for Crime
Prevention revealed in 2021 that those born to two parents from abroad
were significantly overrepresented as suspects in murder cases.

As the crisis has escalated, so the attacks have become increasingly
indiscriminate. On July 22, a man dressed in black hurled a grenade into
a shop in the southern city of Södertälje, injuring several.

One place where anxiety is running higher than most is Farsta, a small
district in the south of Stockholm, where last year a gunman opened fire
outside the entrance to a subway station, blasting off 21 shots and
killing a 15-year-old boy and a 43-year-old man.

Sanna Boden and Christer Frykholm – an engaged couple in their sixties –
witnessed the shooting last year.

‘We live in fear now,’ Sanna told the Mail, standing just feet from the
where the deadly attack took place. ‘We’ve had to begin a whole new way
of thinking. I’m scared to go out at night now: I call Christer and he
comes to help me walk home. I switch carriages on the train. Nowhere is
safe any more.’

Christer stresses: ‘It’s not recent migrants – it’s the children of
migrants.’

Sanna Boden and Christer Frykholm ¿ an engaged couple in their sixties ¿
witnessed the shooting last year, when a gunman opened fire outside the
entrance to a subway station, killing a 15-year-old boy and a
43-year-old man.
+
7
View gallery
Sanna Boden and Christer Frykholm – an engaged couple in their sixties –
witnessed the shooting last year, when a gunman opened fire outside the
entrance to a subway station, killing a 15-year-old boy and a
43-year-old man.

He believes the government’s tough new policies are long overdue: ‘It’s
too easy to come to Sweden. But people don’t dare to speak out. If you
have an opinion, they throw the racist card in your face.’

This is an observation shared by Peter Bloom, 61, who also lives
locally. ‘Of course we’re afraid,’ he says. ‘The situation is hell. But
if you complain, you get accused of being Right-wing. You’re not allowed
to say anything bad about migrants. Many Swedish people are blind, deaf
and dumb to the problem: it’s a good idea to make it harder to come here.’

As well as toughening up entry restrictions, the government is also
hoping to encourage thousands of migrants who have settled here legally
to leave voluntarily.

New migration minister Johan Forssell recently boasted: ‘We are in the
midst of a paradigm shift in our migration policy.’ He added that from
2026, migrants who voluntarily choose to return to their country of
origin will be eligible for a grant of almost £26,000.

The headline initiative replaces a previous grant of just £740 per adult
and £370 per child which has been in place since 1984. In 2023, just 70
people applied for the miserly sums, with just one person receiving the
payment.

It’s true that £26,000 goes a long way in Syria, where the average wage
is just £17 per month. But just how likely are migrants to take up this
generous offer when so many have been through great tribulations to come
to Sweden in the first place?

To answer this question, I was given rare permission to visit a
municipal school for adult learning in the centre of Stockholm which
largely caters to immigrants studying Swedish and vocational courses.

A babble of languages echoed in the corridors as I was escorted through
a labyrinth of pre-fabricated walls beneath worryingly sagging ceilings.
Eventually I found myself in a classroom full of 40 adult students, the
majority from Africa, Asia and South America, all with legal residency
in Sweden.

Among them was Marina, from Afghanistan, who claimed asylum 11 years
ago. ‘My husband had prostate cancer,’ she told the Mail, tears rolling
down her cheeks. ‘When he died [in Kabul], they tried to sell me to the
man who I had borrowed money from to pay for his medical treatment. “If
you don’t take him then we will kill you,” I was told.’

Marina, from Afghanistan , who claimed asylum 11 years ago. Sweden¿s
tough new restrictions on family visas mean she has failed to meet the
income threshold required to reunite with her daughters, now 16 and 17
+
7
View gallery
Marina, from Afghanistan , who claimed asylum 11 years ago. Sweden’s
tough new restrictions on family visas mean she has failed to meet the
income threshold required to reunite with her daughters, now 16 and 17

Marina has since been trying to bring her two daughters, now 16 and 17,
to live with her. Sadly for her, Sweden’s tough new restrictions on
family visas mean she has failed to meet the income threshold required
to reunite with her daughters.

And for Marina’s youngest daughter, it is already too late. She was sold
to a man for about £19,000 in Kabul earlier this year. ‘I’m going to
appeal the decision now to try to bring my other daughter,’ Marina
continued. ‘Or they will sell her, too.’

Might Marina – who earns a modest living in adult care in her adopted
country – be tempted to return to Kabul and reunite with her daughters
if she can claim the £26,000 grant in two years’ time?

‘What use is money to a single woman in Afghanistan under the Taliban?’
she demanded, meeting my gaze. ‘I know lots of people who have come here
because they weren’t safe in their home country. We don’t want money, we
want safety.’

She added: ‘At night, when I cannot sleep, I sing for my daughters.
Maybe God will hear me.’

One man who is deaf to Marina’s cries is populist Right-wing politician,
Nima Gholam Ali Pour. An Iranian refugee himself, who came to the
country with his parents in 1987, the 42-year-old is one of the leading
anti-immigration voices within the hard-Right Swedish Democrats – on
whose support the ruling centre-Right Moderate Party’s coalition relies.

Populist Right-wing politician, Nima Gholam Ali Pour. An Iranian refugee
himself, who came to the country with his parents in 1987, the
42-year-old is one of the leading anti-immigration voices within the
hard-Right Swedish Democrats
+
7
View gallery
Populist Right-wing politician, Nima Gholam Ali Pour. An Iranian refugee
himself, who came to the country with his parents in 1987, the
42-year-old is one of the leading anti-immigration voices within the
hard-Right Swedish Democrats

Pour made headlines last year when he described mosques as ‘nests of
evil’, while he is the author of books entitled Why Multiculturalism Is
Oppression and Allah Does Not Decide In Sweden.

‘Sweden has had very difficult problems with immigration in recent
years,’ he told me in his office in the Riksdag – the Swedish Parliament
– this week, under a poster emblazoned with his party’s motto: ‘Safety
and Tradition.’

‘We have areas that are 90 per cent immigrants who don’t accept Swedish
values and where ethnic Swedes have had to move out. Most people don’t
want Sweden to become like the Middle East. And why should we receive
more migrants when we can’t integrate those who are already here?’

Integration has undoubtedly proved a major problem, with foreign-born
citizens three times more likely to be unemployed than native Swedes.

And Pour believes the tide of public opinion is turning in Sweden
against mass immigration.

A typical bedroom inside the Hägersten migrant return centre in Sweden
+
7
View gallery
A typical bedroom inside the Hägersten migrant return centre in Sweden

A report released this year by the Swedish Central Bureau of Statistics
(SCB) forecasts that Sweden could finish 2024 with net emigration – a
sure sign that fewer would-be migrants see Sweden as an attractive
proposition.

However, opposition parties and mainstream media outlets have scoffed at
the statistics, describing them as a deliberate fudge.

‘They went back through the statistics over 20 years, found lots of
people who had already left Sweden but were still registered and removed
them,’ claimed Anders Ygeman, a member of parliament for the Left-wing
Social Democrat opposition party. ‘No one except the government and the
Swedish Democrats recognise the net-emigration statistic,’ he told the Mail.

However, even Ygeman’s party recognises the need for stricter controls
on immigration: ‘After 2015 [when his party was in power] we
strengthened the asylum rules ourselves. We shifted Sweden’s immigration
policy. Although people might not have noticed it yet because it takes
time to see the results of political decisions.’

‘We’ve all come to the same conclusion,’ Ygeman says of the cross-party
immigration consensus: ‘Albeit from different angles.’

Afghan asylum seeker Sayed Darab, 25
+
7
View gallery
Afghan asylum seeker Sayed Darab, 25

And it’s not just at home where Sweden’s anti-immigration consensus is
growing. Last week, Austria’s conservative Chancellor, Karl Nehammer,
described Sweden’s new migration policies as ‘inspiring,’ and invited
Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson to Vienna for an exchange of ideas.

Although the trip – set for Wednesday this week – was cancelled due to
the extreme flooding across much of mainland Europe, Chancellor Nehammer
is likely not the only European leader who will soon look to follow
where Sweden has led.

Back at the Hägersten migrant return centre, lunch is called and a
single-file line builds outside of a wooden dining shed beside the main
facility.

Over the roar of the nearby E4 motorway, Afghan asylum seeker Sayed
Darab, 25, jokes with me that whatever is on the menu, it won’t be fresh.

Return centres across Stockholm currently have a total capacity of
1,400, with at least two people crammed into each room. The government
hopes to add 600 beds by the end of the year.

The one thing all return centres have in common is their proximity to
international airports. The Swedish government’s intention is quite
clear. Those who end up here will likely soon find themselves on a plane
home. And their journey to Sweden, which in many cases has taken years,
will be reversed in a matter of hours.

Share or comment on this article: How notoriously liberal Sweden is
closing the doors on migrants: A VERY generous offer could turn the tide
on its population boom as Swedes tire of bloody gang wars, reveals FRED
KELLY
citizen winston smith
2024-10-24 19:09:29 UTC
Permalink
Post by a425couple
Baxter keeps telling us that the USA should be more like
the Scandinavian countries.
from
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13919879/liberal-Sweden-closing-doors-migrants.html
How notoriously liberal Sweden is closing the doors on migrants: A VERY
generous offer could turn the tide on its population boom as Swedes tire
of bloody gang wars, reveals FRED KELLY
By Fred Kelly
Published: 07:01 EDT, 3 October 2024 | Updated: 08:26 EDT, 3 October 2024
The rooms are as small as prison cells. Each contains a steel-framed
bunk-bed – the paint long since peeled away – a stained and dingy sink
and a small table bolted to the white-washed wall.
New arrivals are given a set of bed sheets, a single roll of toilet
paper and a small tube of toothpaste. Not one of the near-200 residents
has any idea how long he or she will be here.
But this is no prison. This is one of Sweden’s newly appointed ‘migrant
return centres’ designed to house the thousands of foreigners refused
asylum – and whom the government intends to deport in the coming months
and years. Those without the right to remain in Sweden are offered beds
in these facilities before returning to their home country, or via the
Dublin Convention to another EU nation.
In the grounds of this facility, in the southern Stockholm district of
Hägersten, the Mail met Alasan Jaideh, 18, a Gambian asylum seeker who
had arrived in Sweden five days earlier from Calais, where he had spent
two years trying in vain to reach Britain.
‘Now I’m in Sweden I want to stay here, to work and to learn Swedish,’
he told us.
But for Jaideh, as for so many other new arrivals, the hope of settling
in this Scandinavian country is now more remote than ever.
Alasan Jaideh, 18, a Gambian asylum seeker who had arrived in Sweden
five days earlier from Calais, where he had spent two years trying in
vain to reach Britain
View gallery
Alasan Jaideh, 18, a Gambian asylum seeker who had arrived in Sweden
five days earlier from Calais, where he had spent two years trying in
vain to reach Britain
TRENDING
MSNBC host stunned after asking black and Hispanic voters about Trump
7.1k viewing now
For after years of horrific gangland violence blamed largely on Sweden’s
soaring migrant population, the centre-Right government has slammed the
border shut, announcing a raft of harsh measures aimed at reducing the
numbers of foreign-born residents, which currently stands at more than
20 per cent of the 10.6 million total.
Among the policy proposals is an offer of just under £26,000 for legal
immigrants willing to return voluntarily to their country of origin; the
tightening of family reunification and asylum regulations; and more than
doubling the income threshold for those seeking work visas – up from
£970 a month to £2,200.
Furthermore, dual citizens who commit crimes face having their Swedish
passports revoked, while public sector workers – including doctors,
teachers and librarians – could be legally obliged to report
undocumented people to the police in what critics have dubbed the
‘Swedish Snitch Law’.
So just what has driven Sweden – once heralded as a ‘humanitarian
superpower’ – to abandon its liberal agenda and implement a ‘hostile
environment’ towards migrants that makes ex-PM Theresa May’s ill-fated
efforts in Britain some years ago look positively hospitable?
First there is the sheer scale of the mass migration Sweden has
experienced – and the difficulties it has brought in terms of
assimilation and cultural differences. Hundreds of thousands of migrants
– Syrians and Iraqis being the most common – have arrived in recent
years in what was for centuries an exceptionally homogenous nation.
Over the past decade in particular, Sweden’s fanciful dream of a
harmonious, pluralist society has turned into a nightmare.
The country that once boasted one of the lowest crime rates in Europe is
now the gun-crime capital of the continent, fuelled by violent gangs
disproportionately made up of first-generation migrants who control the
nation’s illicit drug and prostitution trades.
Fred Kelly inside the return centre, where new arrivals are given a set
of bed sheets, a single roll of toilet paper and a small tube of toothpaste
+
7
View gallery
Fred Kelly inside the return centre, where new arrivals are given a set
of bed sheets, a single roll of toilet paper and a small tube of toothpaste
According to a 2023 police report, there are believed to be 14,000
active gang members in Sweden along with a further 48,000 people with
‘gang affiliation’, many as young as just nine or ten.
Over the first six months of this year alone, Sweden suffered a shocking
148 shootings, resulting in 20 deaths. Last year, 55 people were shot
dead across 363 incidents. In 2022, there were a record 62 fatal
shootings while 73 people aged between just 15-20 were arrested for
suspected or attempted murder with a firearm.
While it is illegal in Sweden to register the ethnic origin of citizens
accused of serious crimes, the Swedish National Council for Crime
Prevention revealed in 2021 that those born to two parents from abroad
were significantly overrepresented as suspects in murder cases.
As the crisis has escalated, so the attacks have become increasingly
indiscriminate. On July 22, a man dressed in black hurled a grenade into
a shop in the southern city of Södertälje, injuring several.
One place where anxiety is running higher than most is Farsta, a small
district in the south of Stockholm, where last year a gunman opened fire
outside the entrance to a subway station, blasting off 21 shots and
killing a 15-year-old boy and a 43-year-old man.
Sanna Boden and Christer Frykholm – an engaged couple in their sixties –
witnessed the shooting last year.
‘We live in fear now,’ Sanna told the Mail, standing just feet from the
where the deadly attack took place. ‘We’ve had to begin a whole new way
of thinking. I’m scared to go out at night now: I call Christer and he
comes to help me walk home. I switch carriages on the train. Nowhere is
safe any more.’
Christer stresses: ‘It’s not recent migrants – it’s the children of
migrants.’
Sanna Boden and Christer Frykholm ¿ an engaged couple in their sixties ¿
witnessed the shooting last year, when a gunman opened fire outside the
entrance to a subway station, killing a 15-year-old boy and a
43-year-old man.
+
7
View gallery
Sanna Boden and Christer Frykholm – an engaged couple in their sixties –
witnessed the shooting last year, when a gunman opened fire outside the
entrance to a subway station, killing a 15-year-old boy and a
43-year-old man.
He believes the government’s tough new policies are long overdue: ‘It’s
too easy to come to Sweden. But people don’t dare to speak out. If you
have an opinion, they throw the racist card in your face.’
This is an observation shared by Peter Bloom, 61, who also lives
locally. ‘Of course we’re afraid,’ he says. ‘The situation is hell. But
if you complain, you get accused of being Right-wing. You’re not allowed
to say anything bad about migrants. Many Swedish people are blind, deaf
and dumb to the problem: it’s a good idea to make it harder to come here.’
As well as toughening up entry restrictions, the government is also
hoping to encourage thousands of migrants who have settled here legally
to leave voluntarily.
New migration minister Johan Forssell recently boasted: ‘We are in the
midst of a paradigm shift in our migration policy.’ He added that from
2026, migrants who voluntarily choose to return to their country of
origin will be eligible for a grant of almost £26,000.
The headline initiative replaces a previous grant of just £740 per adult
and £370 per child which has been in place since 1984. In 2023, just 70
people applied for the miserly sums, with just one person receiving the
payment.
It’s true that £26,000 goes a long way in Syria, where the average wage
is just £17 per month. But just how likely are migrants to take up this
generous offer when so many have been through great tribulations to come
to Sweden in the first place?
To answer this question, I was given rare permission to visit a
municipal school for adult learning in the centre of Stockholm which
largely caters to immigrants studying Swedish and vocational courses.
A babble of languages echoed in the corridors as I was escorted through
a labyrinth of pre-fabricated walls beneath worryingly sagging ceilings.
Eventually I found myself in a classroom full of 40 adult students, the
majority from Africa, Asia and South America, all with legal residency
in Sweden.
Among them was Marina, from Afghanistan, who claimed asylum 11 years
ago. ‘My husband had prostate cancer,’ she told the Mail, tears rolling
down her cheeks. ‘When he died [in Kabul], they tried to sell me to the
man who I had borrowed money from to pay for his medical treatment. “If
you don’t take him then we will kill you,” I was told.’
Marina, from Afghanistan , who claimed asylum 11 years ago. Sweden¿s
tough new restrictions on family visas mean she has failed to meet the
income threshold required to reunite with her daughters, now 16 and 17
+
7
View gallery
Marina, from Afghanistan , who claimed asylum 11 years ago. Sweden’s
tough new restrictions on family visas mean she has failed to meet the
income threshold required to reunite with her daughters, now 16 and 17
Marina has since been trying to bring her two daughters, now 16 and 17,
to live with her. Sadly for her, Sweden’s tough new restrictions on
family visas mean she has failed to meet the income threshold required
to reunite with her daughters.
And for Marina’s youngest daughter, it is already too late. She was sold
to a man for about £19,000 in Kabul earlier this year. ‘I’m going to
appeal the decision now to try to bring my other daughter,’ Marina
continued. ‘Or they will sell her, too.’
Might Marina – who earns a modest living in adult care in her adopted
country – be tempted to return to Kabul and reunite with her daughters
if she can claim the £26,000 grant in two years’ time?
‘What use is money to a single woman in Afghanistan under the Taliban?’
she demanded, meeting my gaze. ‘I know lots of people who have come here
because they weren’t safe in their home country. We don’t want money, we
want safety.’
She added: ‘At night, when I cannot sleep, I sing for my daughters.
Maybe God will hear me.’
One man who is deaf to Marina’s cries is populist Right-wing politician,
Nima Gholam Ali Pour. An Iranian refugee himself, who came to the
country with his parents in 1987, the 42-year-old is one of the leading
anti-immigration voices within the hard-Right Swedish Democrats – on
whose support the ruling centre-Right Moderate Party’s coalition relies.
Populist Right-wing politician, Nima Gholam Ali Pour. An Iranian refugee
himself, who came to the country with his parents in 1987, the
42-year-old is one of the leading anti-immigration voices within the
hard-Right Swedish Democrats
+
7
View gallery
Populist Right-wing politician, Nima Gholam Ali Pour. An Iranian refugee
himself, who came to the country with his parents in 1987, the
42-year-old is one of the leading anti-immigration voices within the
hard-Right Swedish Democrats
Pour made headlines last year when he described mosques as ‘nests of
evil’, while he is the author of books entitled Why Multiculturalism Is
Oppression and Allah Does Not Decide In Sweden.
‘Sweden has had very difficult problems with immigration in recent
years,’ he told me in his office in the Riksdag – the Swedish Parliament
– this week, under a poster emblazoned with his party’s motto: ‘Safety
and Tradition.’
‘We have areas that are 90 per cent immigrants who don’t accept Swedish
values and where ethnic Swedes have had to move out. Most people don’t
want Sweden to become like the Middle East. And why should we receive
more migrants when we can’t integrate those who are already here?’
Integration has undoubtedly proved a major problem, with foreign-born
citizens three times more likely to be unemployed than native Swedes.
And Pour believes the tide of public opinion is turning in Sweden
against mass immigration.
A typical bedroom inside the Hägersten migrant return centre in Sweden
+
7
View gallery
A typical bedroom inside the Hägersten migrant return centre in Sweden
A report released this year by the Swedish Central Bureau of Statistics
(SCB) forecasts that Sweden could finish 2024 with net emigration – a
sure sign that fewer would-be migrants see Sweden as an attractive
proposition.
However, opposition parties and mainstream media outlets have scoffed at
the statistics, describing them as a deliberate fudge.
‘They went back through the statistics over 20 years, found lots of
people who had already left Sweden but were still registered and removed
them,’ claimed Anders Ygeman, a member of parliament for the Left-wing
Social Democrat opposition party. ‘No one except the government and the
Swedish Democrats recognise the net-emigration statistic,’ he told the Mail.
However, even Ygeman’s party recognises the need for stricter controls
on immigration: ‘After 2015 [when his party was in power] we
strengthened the asylum rules ourselves. We shifted Sweden’s immigration
policy. Although people might not have noticed it yet because it takes
time to see the results of political decisions.’
‘We’ve all come to the same conclusion,’ Ygeman says of the cross-party
immigration consensus: ‘Albeit from different angles.’
Afghan asylum seeker Sayed Darab, 25
+
7
View gallery
Afghan asylum seeker Sayed Darab, 25
And it’s not just at home where Sweden’s anti-immigration consensus is
growing. Last week, Austria’s conservative Chancellor, Karl Nehammer,
described Sweden’s new migration policies as ‘inspiring,’ and invited
Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson to Vienna for an exchange of ideas.
Although the trip – set for Wednesday this week – was cancelled due to
the extreme flooding across much of mainland Europe, Chancellor Nehammer
is likely not the only European leader who will soon look to follow
where Sweden has led.
Back at the Hägersten migrant return centre, lunch is called and a
single-file line builds outside of a wooden dining shed beside the main
facility.
Over the roar of the nearby E4 motorway, Afghan asylum seeker Sayed
Darab, 25, jokes with me that whatever is on the menu, it won’t be fresh.
Return centres across Stockholm currently have a total capacity of
1,400, with at least two people crammed into each room. The government
hopes to add 600 beds by the end of the year.
The one thing all return centres have in common is their proximity to
international airports. The Swedish government’s intention is quite
clear. Those who end up here will likely soon find themselves on a plane
home. And their journey to Sweden, which in many cases has taken years,
will be reversed in a matter of hours.
Share or comment on this article: How notoriously liberal Sweden is
closing the doors on migrants: A VERY generous offer could turn the tide
on its population boom as Swedes tire of bloody gang wars, reveals FRED
KELLY
Ooo rah!

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