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WSWS : News
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Danish government toughens laws for foreigners
By Helmut Arens
5 February 2002
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Only 50 days after taking office, Denmarks new right-wing
conservative governmenta minority coalition of Venstre (liberals)
and the Conservative Peoples Party, supported by the extreme
xenophobic Danish Peoples Party (DPP)has confirmed
the worst fears about the new governments course.
Following a crassly xenophobic campaign in the run-up to the
electionsabove all, by Venstre and the DPPVenstres
Bertel Haarder, the minister responsible for refugees, immigration
and integration of foreigners, announced the tabling of a bill
on January 17, which will result in a drastic deterioration of
conditions for refugees and immigrants.
The government is making no secret of its intention to
limit the number of refugees entering Denmark and to sharpen demands
that they support themselves without state support once in the
country. Haarder made the economically motivated reasons
for the governments course patently obvious when he said:
These days foreigners are a burden on society. They cost
more than they are worth to the country. That will have to change.
In line with this, the government is also planning an easing
of immigration policy in one respect. Through the introduction
of a Green Card system for hand-picked immigrants, it is intent
on buttressing Denmarks prosperity by bringing qualified
foreign workers into the country. This led the German newspaper
Taz to comment: Anyone who isnt a white, Christian
computer expert with fluent Danish shouldnt bother to show
his face.
In particular, the following regulations are to be adopted:
According to Haarders, a decisive means of reducing the number
of asylum-seekers coming into the country will be the scrapping
of the concept of a de facto refugee. Up until now
many asylum-seekers, having no chance of gaining admittance to
most other EU countries, have been granted entry into Denmark
under this category. The governments 10-page white paper
claims that this will constitute an essential and principled
tightening of the conditions for the granting of asylum, which
the government considers necessary. Measures will also be
adopted to prevent refugees from becoming residents. Unlike previously,
they will no longer receive permanent residency after three years,
but will normally have to return to their own country.
In future, the right to permanent residency will only be granted
after at least seven years. Moreover, refugees will be subject
to travel restrictions. Whoever makes a visit to his former homeland
runs the risk of being deprived of his residency permit.
The government also plans to make the process for acquiring
Danish citizenship more difficult for foreigners. Obtaining citizenship
will only be possible after eight years of uninterrupted residency.
Further prerequisites include learning the Danish language and
attending integration courses. On top of this, claims to social
security will not be permitted.
Rejected asylum-seekers are to be extradited within 24 hours,
regardless of any legal challenge to the rejection order.
Another important measure, viewed by numerous critics as an
offence against international norms, is the proposal to allow
married partners to be reunited in Denmark only when both are
older than 24 years of age. A further condition prohibits any
access to social support for such cases. Parents older than 60
will no longer be allowed to join their families living in the
country.
Welfare aid for refugees and immigrants is to be drastically
reduced. Foreigners will have the right to claim full benefits
only after seven years of residence. Labour Minister Claus Hjort
Frederiksen defended this proposal as follows: Foreigners
coming into Denmark should know from the very beginning that they
are expected to find work. This is not the land of milk and honey
where you can simply lie under a palm tree and enjoy life. These
new proposals should be an incentive for such people to accept
even low-paid jobs.
These remarks are particularly cynical in view of the fact
that there is scarcely any labour market in Europe which is so
thoroughly insulated against foreigners as in Denmark. Non-white
youth with foreign sounding names, even if they have grown up
in Denmark and speak fluent Danish, have virtually no chance of
finding an apprenticeship or a job.
Andreas Kam, general secretary of the Danish council for refugees,
addressed another aspect of the governments policy. He pointed
out that, if more people can be induced to take up jobs by cutting
their social benefits, why should not the same conditions sooner
or later be set for Danes?
The government wants to aid its offensive against the fundamental
democratic rights of immigrants and refugees by blocking its critics
sources of finance. It intends to reduce or cut completely financial
support for numerous refugee and human rights organisations. The
renowned International Centre for Human Rights, which until now
has upheld Denmarks reputation in the struggle for human
rights, will also be affected. United Nations Commissioner for
Human Rights Mary Robinson criticised this policy decision in
a letter to Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen: Presumably
less democratic governments in other parts of the world will take
it as a welcome opportunity to hold back progress in human rights.
The social-democratic opposition denounced the plans as an
ideological campaign and a massacre and is being supported
in its criticism by a number of experts. It is claimed that the
government is concerned less with cutting costs than with being
able to secure complete control over all sections of society.
Currently some of the commissions, experts and lobby groups are
regarded by the government as constituting uncontrollable potential
for the criticism it is seeking to eliminate.
Pia Kjaersgaard, chairperson of the xenophobic DPP whose votes
should help the package of laws achieve a majority in parliament,
greeted the proposals enthusiastically and described their advent
as a milestone and an important day in the history
of Denmark. It is no wonder that she should think so, under
conditions where her own policies are being implemented even without
her party being directly involved in government.
Although the governments plans will greatly please the
right-wing nationalist governments in Vienna and Rome, they have
met with sharp criticism from refugee organisations, opposition
politicians and also from abroad. The talk is of a barbed-wire
fence being set up around Denmark. Mona Sahlin, the Swedish
minister for integration, called the Danish proposals shameful.
Elisabeth Arnold, spokesperson for the Radical Liberals (Radikale
Venstre), characterised the proposals as xenophobic,
while Ritt Bjerregard of the Social Democrats called them quite
repulsive. Her party colleague Britta Christensen, the mayor
of a suburb of Kopenhagen, said, They are utterly outrageous
and based on a shocking view of human nature.
The criticism from the Social Democrats would have been more
convincing had they not themselves expressed the same conception
of human nature during their time in governmental office and up
to the election two months ago. Karen Jespersen, the interior
minister at the time, wanted to intern criminal asylum-seekers
on a remote island and announced that she never wanted to live
in a multicultural society. And Poul Nyrup Rasmussen, the social-democratic
prime minister, had assured his fellow citizens that the Danes
under his government would no longer have to feel like strangers
in their own land and that Denmark would not become a multiethnic
country under any circumstances.
However, the criticism of the Social Democrats has also turned
out to be quite guarded. Some aspects of the proposals were regarded
as inhuman, others as good. After all, the Social Democrats themselves
had already tabled an even more restrictive asylum policy during
the election campaign, which was dominated by the issue of immigration
policy.
See Also:
Social Democrats routed
in Danish parliamentary election
[28 November 2001]
Danish elections overshadowed
by the fight against terrorism
[17 November 2001]
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