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Publish date: Sunday 11 December 2022
view count : 90
create date : Monday, December 12, 2022 | 10:36 AM
publish date : Sunday, December 11, 2022 | 10:34 AM
update date : Monday, December 12, 2022 | 10:36 AM

Danish authorities send letters to Syrian children, threatening forcible expulsion

  • Danish authorities send letters to Syrian children, threatening forcible expulsion
Danish Refugee Council objects to 'shocking' policy after children as young as 9 receive deportation letters addressed to their own name.

Denmark, once renowned as a liberal society with respect for human rights, has taken one of the hardest lines on asylum and migration in recent years by becoming the first country in Europe to revoke residence permits for Syrian refugees.

A 12-year-old Syrian, Ghazal Sbinati, has spent eight years living and studying in Denmark.

She recently received a letter from the Danish Immigration Service telling her that if she did not leave voluntarily, she could be "forcibly sent to Syria.”

"I go to school and have many friends and I hope we stay in Denmark," Sbinati told local broadcaster DR.

The Danish Refugee Council has since objected to the policy, with a senior member branding it as "shocking."

"When you address a letter directly to a child and write that they can be forcibly deported to Syria if they don't go themselves, that's a completely different way for an authority to be talking to a child and threatening them with what they're at risk of. I think that's shocking," the council's head of asylum Eva Singer told Anadolu Agency.

Singer asserted that the letters should not be sent to children under any circumstances as "the children cannot act on them."

"In any case, the letters are also sent to the parents, and that's normal procedure" once a decision is made, she said, underlining that they should only be sent to adult guardians, and "should not be sent directly to children."

Assem Swaif, who founded the human rights group Finjan which advocates for Syrian refugees in Denmark, told Anadolu Agency that his organization had been contacted by many parents who complained that their children received deportation letters.

In one instance, he was contacted by a parent whose nine-year-old son and an 11-year-old daughter both got mail threatening them with forced expulsion from the country.

Swaif's advocacy group is working to raise awareness by informing the UN International Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF) and other organizations such as Save the Children about the issue so "we can protect those children."

Sending letters to little boys and girls is "really, really insane and inhumane," Swaif said.

The Nordic country has no repatriation agreement with Syria, meaning that it cannot force refugees whose immigration status has been revoked to leave.

Authorities instead place them at the so-called "departure centers," dubbed Danish camps, in the hopes that this will intimidate them into leaving voluntarily.

Singer, the refugee council's asylum chief, criticized the policy and language used in the letters forced deportation, arguing that the country's Immigration Service "should not process these cases until they know whether they can forcibly be deported."

Syrian refugees told to go home

Danish law ensures temporary status for refugees fleeing indiscriminate violence, rather than individual persecution.

This means that those with temporary protection risk losing their status as soon as there is any improvement in the conditions of the country from which they fled, even if the situation remains fragile and unpredictable.

Human rights organizations worry that such laws could encourage other European countries to focus on the decline in armed conflict when making their asylum policies.

Swaif told Anadolu Agency that Denmark needed to change its asylum law.

"People who seek asylum, they aren't migrants, they're people seeking protection. They need protection. They're fleeing from dictatorship, from torture. So, we need to consider them as refugees, not as migrants," he said.

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