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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
Norway intensifies persecution of asylum seekers
By Simon Wheelan
24 February 2000
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Following a meeting between the Norwegian Ministry of Justice
and the Aliens Directorate earlier this month, Norway is to withdraw
the right to free legal aid for asylum seekers.
The authorities are ending the right to fair representation
for refugee applicants on the spurious grounds that the latter
do not require free legal aid until after they have been granted
asylum,. Free legal representation by a solicitor, fluent in the
native language of the country where the asylum seeker wishes
to reside in the future, is one of the few means of gaining a
proper hearing. Those who cannot initially afford legal representation
are clearly disadvantaged.
The Norwegian authorities have justified their measures by
pointing to the fact that they are the last country in Europe
where asylum seekers still have a legal right to a lawyer without
incurring any costs. Removing this right will save $2.4 million
per year.
As many as 2,000 asylum seekers might be expelled from Norway
when the Schengen treaty, removing inner-European border controls,
comes into full effect in March 2001. This figure represents roughly
1 in 6 of all asylum seekers currently awaiting a decision on
their future status, housed in Norwegian transit camps. A spokesman
for the Justice Department stated that most of those expelled
would be returned to Sweden, Germany or Denmark under the Schengen
treaty's first country of entry provision, which makes
refugees the responsibility of the country through which they
first entered the EU. He added that Norway would continue to tighten
up its policies concerning aliens, especially regarding
so-called criminal asylum seekers. Future infringement of the
law by a prospective asylum seeker will carry greater penalties,
a euphemism for rapid deportation. Greater co-ordination between
the Nordic nations is expected to materialise in the near future,
making it even more difficult for those fleeing persecution to
reach Europe.
At the end of last year, the Department of Justice announced
fresh efforts to severely restrict the access of asylum seekers
fleeing impoverished Iraq who wish to come to Norway. The Norwegian
authorities are acting in conjunction with the UN High Commissioner
for Refugees to return Kurdish asylum seekers to northern Iraq.
Undersecretary of State Atle Hamar accused all those fleeing Iraq
of abusing the right to asylum.
In October 1999, Norway rejected several hundred applications
for asylum from Serbian refugees. Their applications were turned
down on the grounds that Croatia gave former Serbian soldiers
an amnesty from possible war crimes. A report by the Norwegian
Association for Refugees (NOAS) showed that the Serbs were not
only refused amnesty but may also have been sentenced wrongly
for war crimes on their return.
The persecution of immigrants and asylum seekers has led to
900 of those in transit camps going missing last year. Most have
gone into hiding because they fear that they will be expelled
from Norway. Of those missing, 30 are children. The Norwegian
press carried a story of a Serb family with four children who
are hiding in the forest near to Hedmark, after they fled a camp
in Finnskogen, close to the Swedish border.
Cuts to social services and in the teaching of Norwegian as
a foreign language have contributed to a situation whereby refugees
and immigrants are finding extreme difficulty assimilating into
Norwegian society, according to the Trade Unions Research institute
(FAFO).
The mainstream parties have legitimised draconian measures
against refugees, saying this is a method of stemming support
amongst the public for the extreme right wing. Instead it has
only further emboldened fascist elements. The leader of the Norwegian
Confederation of Trade Unions, Yngve Haagensen, and its Youth
Secretary, Mohammed Ahssain, both received death threats from
fascists earlier this month.
The situation in Norway today is similar to that of Sweden
and Denmark a couple of years ago, where fascists made death threats
against immigrants and asylum seekers, trade unionists and socialists
in the wake of the government's repressive measures against immigrants.
Those threats have since rapidly escalated into bomb attacks,
assaults and even murder.
The Norwegian Prime Minister Kjell Magne Bondevik recently
criticised Austrian Freedom Party leader Joerg Haider, saying
he hoped that Haider would be unable to influence Austrian government
policy. At the same time, Bondevik's government is carrying out
policies that would meet the approval of the Austrian right winger
concerning the treatment of asylum seekers.
See Also:
European Union: restrictive asylum policy
costs lives
[8 February 2000]
"Europeans only"
housing legalised in Norway
[13 October 1999]
Scandinavia
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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