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Ethnic associations in Sweden to lose state funding

Sweden's government has announced plans to withdraw funding from ethnic associations, arguing that these groups do little to promote integration.

Ethnic associations in Sweden to lose state funding
Sweden's employment and integration minister Johan Pehrson meets Bart Somers, the mayor lauded for his integration efforts in the Belgian city of Mechelen. Photo: Wiktor Nummelin/TT

The government will in the coming budget take 18.9 million kronor which goes in state grants to groups like the Swedish-Kurdish Association, the Gambian Association and the Association of Serbian Orthodox women. 

“Sweden is a country built on people’s movements, but money going towards integration should focus on the activity being carried out, not ethnicity,” Sweden’s employment and integration minister Johan Pehrson said in a press release. “This is about using money in a better way to combat social exclusion and promote integration.” 

The grant to ethnic groups was brought in by the previous centre-right Alliance government in 2008, and replaced a previous “grant to organisations which promote integration”. In the release, the government said that the proposal was “built on an agreement between the government and the Sweden Democrats”. 

In an article in the Dagens Nyheter newspaper, Pehrson said that 10 million kronor of money saved would be used to fund a scheme to survey children’s Swedish skills. 

Lena Nyberg, director-general of the Swedish Agency for Youth and Civil Society, which is responsible for distributing the money, said that it was unclear how ethnic associations would be affected.

“Civil society organisations do an important job and have significant need of economic support to operate,” she said in a press release. “The announcement of the decision to discontinue the ethnic grants obviously raises questions about what the consequences are going to be.”  

Andrea Voyer, an associate professor at Stockholm University, argued in The Local last year that ethnic associations played an important role in integration.  

She said that a 2012 report on why Somali immigrants were so much more successful in Canada, the US and the UK than in Sweden, had argued that they way these governments engagement with Somali community organisations had played an important role. 

“One of the main conclusions was that Somali immigrants, wherever they arrive, generally feel that it’s important to build Somali community organisations and local Somali identity,” she wrote. “In most of the countries studied, the government embraced this. Through their involvement in that organisation, and through the organisation of a Somali community, there was this pathway to more society cohesion at the level of broader community.”

READ ALSO: Six things Sweden’s politicians get wrong about segregation

Henrik Emilsson, a researcher at Malmö University, told The Local that the authorities had been withdrawing funding from dialogue with ethnically based associations since at least the 1990s. 

“Already in 1997, with the new Swedish integration policy, they said, ‘we don’t have groups, we have individual diversity. The whole of society is diverse, because individuals are different. We don’t want to speak about groups’,” he said. 

“You can choose the French way of refusing to acknowledge any ethnic identities, or you can take the Canadian way, where they celebrate ethnic groups and diversity.” 

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IMMIGRATION

‘Shift to the right’: How European nations are tightening migration policies

The success of far-right parties in elections in key European countries is prompting even centrist and left-wing governments to tighten policies on migration, creating cracks in unity and sparking concern among activists.

'Shift to the right': How European nations are tightening migration policies

With the German far right coming out on top in two state elections earlier this month, the socialist-led national Berlin government has reimposed border controls on Western frontiers that are supposed to see freedom of movement in the European Union’s Schengen zone.

The Netherlands government, which includes the party of Dutch far-right leader Geert Wilders, announced on Wednesday that it had requested from Brussels an opt-out from EU rules on asylum, with Prime Minister Dick Schoof declaring that there was an asylum “crisis”.

Meanwhile, new British Prime Minister Keir Starmer of the left-wing Labour Party paid a visit to Rome for talks with Italian counterpart Georgia Meloni, whose party has neo-fascist roots, to discuss the strategies used by Italy in seeking to reduce migration.

Far-right parties performed strongly in June European elections, coming out on top in France, prompting President Emmanuel Macron to call snap elections which resulted in right-winger Michel Barnier, who has previously called for a moratorium on migration, being named prime minister.

We are witnessing the “continuation of a rightward shift in migration policies in the European Union,” said Jerome Vignon, migration advisor at the Jacques Delors Institute think-tank.

It reflected the rise of far-right parties in the European elections in June, and more recently in the two regional elections in Germany, he said, referring to a “quite clearly protectionist and conservative trend”.

Strong message

“Anti-immigration positions that were previously the preserve of the extreme right are now contaminating centre-right parties, even centre-left parties like the Social Democrats” in Germany, added Florian Trauner, a migration specialist at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, the Dutch-speaking university in Brussels.

While the Labour government in London has ditched its right-wing Conservative predecessor administration’s plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda, there is clearly interest in a deal Italy has struck with Albania to detain and process migrants there.

Within the European Union, Cyprus has suspended the processing of asylum applications from Syrian applicants, while laws have appeared authorising pushbacks at the border in Finland and Lithuania.

Under the pretext of dealing with “emergency” or “crisis” situations, the list of exemptions and deviations from the common rules defined by the European Union continues to grow.

All this flies in the face of the new EU migration pact, agreed only in May and coming into force in 2026.

In the wake of deadly attacks in Mannheim and most recently Solingen blamed on radical Islamists, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government also expelled 28 Afghans back to their home country for the first time since the Taliban takeover of Kabul.

Such gestures from Germany are all the more symbolic given how the country since World War II has tried to turn itself into a model of integration, taking in a million refugees, mainly Syrians in 2015-2016 and then more than a million Ukrainian exiles since the Russian invasion.

Germany is sending a “strong message” to its own public as well as to its European partners, said Trauner.

The migratory pressure “remains significant” with more than 500,000 asylum applications registered in the European Union for the first six months of the year, he said.

‘Climate on impunity’

Germany, which received about a quarter of them alone, criticises the countries of southern Europe for allowing migrants to circulate without processing their asylum applications, but southern states denounce a lack of solidarity of the rest of Europe.

The moves by Germany were condemned by EU allies including Greece and Poland, but Scholz received the perhaps unwelcome accolade of praise from Hungarian right-wing Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Moscow’s closest friend in the European Union, when he declared “welcome to the club”.

The EU Commission’s failure to hold countries to account “only fosters a climate of impunity where unilateral migration policies and practices can proliferate,” said Adriana Tidona, Amnesty International’s Migration Researcher.

But behind the rhetoric, all European states are also aware of the crucial role played by migrants in keeping sectors going including transport and healthcare, as well as the importance of attracting skilled labour.

“Behind the symbolic speeches, European leaders, particularly German ones, remain pragmatic: border controls are targeted,” said Sophie Meiners, a migration researcher with the German Council on Foreign Relations.

Even Meloni’s government has allowed the entry into Italy of 452,000 foreign workers for the period 2023-2025.

“In parallel to this kind of new restrictive measures, they know they need to address skilled labour needs,” she said.

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