'Morally Horrible' Law Lets Denmark Take Refugees' Valuables in Exchange for Asylum
The Danish Parliament on Tuesday approved a controversial law which allows authorities to seize money and valuables from refugees, as well as delay family reunification—treatment which critics decry as “morally horrible” against those fleeing war and other violence.
“The bill presented by the center-right minority government of prime minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen was approved by 81 of the 109 lawmakers present, as members of the opposition Social Democrats backed the measures,” the Guardian reported.
The law will allow police to search refugees upon arrival and confiscate any non-essential items worth more than 10,000 Danish kroner (roughly $1,450) that have no sentimental value to their owner. The bill also includes a measure that raises the waiting period from one year to three before refugees can apply for their families to to join them. It also permits officials to consider an individual’s “integration potential” in resettlement cases, increases administrative fees, and slashes temporary residence permits to two years.
Parliament members justified the action, saying the law “is about creating equality between migrants and Danes,” as the seizures are supposedly intended to cover the cost of each asylum-seeker’s maintenance by the state, which they compare to Danish citizens on welfare benefits.
In its recent report (pdf) on the legislation, the UNHCR said the law is “evidently aimed at conveying a message to make it ‘less attractive’ to seek asylum in Denmark, and is a deeply concerning response to humanitarian needs.”
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