The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Under Denmark plan, ‘unwanted’ foreigners would be sent to island

- Martin Selsoe Sorensen

COPENHAGEN, DENMARK — Denmark plans to house the country’s most unwelcome foreigners in a most unwelcomin­g place: a tiny, hard-toreach island that now holds the laboratori­es, stables and crematory of a center for researchin­g contagious animal diseases.

As if to make the message clearer, one of the two ferries that serve the island is called the Virus.

“They are unwanted in Denmark, and they will feel th at,” Inger Stojberg, the country’s immigratio­n minister, wrote on Facebook.

On Friday, the center-right government and the rightwing Danish People’s Party announced an agreement to house as many as 100 people on Lindholm Island — foreigners who have been convicted of crimes and rejected asylum-seekers who cannot be returned to their home countries.

The 17-acre island, in an inlet of the Baltic Sea, lies about 2 miles from the nearest shore, and ferry service is infrequent. Foreigners will be required to report at the island center daily and face imprisonme­nt if they do not.

“We’re going to minimize the number of ferry departures as much as at all possible,” Martin Henriksen, a spokesman for the Danish People’s Party on immigratio­n, told TV 2. “We’re going to make it as cumbersome and expensive as possible.”

The deal allocates about $115 million over four years for immigrant facilities on the island, which are scheduled to open in 2021.

Finance Minister Kristian Jensen, who led the negotiatio­ns, said the island was not a prison, but added that anyone placed there would have to sleep there.

Louise Holck, deputy exec- utive director of The Danish Institute for Human Rights, said her organizati­on would watch the situation “very closely” for possible violations of Denmark’s internatio­nal obligation­s.

The agreement was reached as part of annu al budget negotiatio­ns. Each year, the Danish People’s Party demands restrictio­ns on immigrants or refugees in return for its votes on a budget.

In Denmark, as in much of Europe, the surge in migration from the Middle East and Africa in 2015 and 2016 prompted a populist, nativist backlash.

The government has vowed to push immigratio­n law to the limits of internatio­nal convention­s on human rights.

Legal experts said it was too early to tell whether the Lindholm Island project would cross those boundaries, constituti­ng illegal confinemen­t. They said it resembled an Italian government project that was struck down in 1980 by the European Court of Human Rights.

The Lindholm Island plan furthers the government’s policy of motivating failed asylum-seekers to leave the country by making their lives intolerabl­e.

Asylum-seekers with criminal records are not allowed to work in Denmark. Rejected asylum-seekers who cannot be deported are given accommodat­ions where they cannot prepare their own food and get an allowance of about $1.20 per day, which is withheld if they fail to cooperate with the authoritie­s.

Former Immigratio­n Minister Birthe Ronn Hornbech called the island project “a joke” and a blunder comparable to a soccer player scoring a goal for the opposing team.

“Nothing will become of this proposal,” she wrote in her newspaper column.

Many foreigners who have been denied asylum cannot be deported to their home countries for fear of abuse or persecutio­n or simply because th ose countries refuse to take them back.

Hundreds lingering in two deportatio­n centers refuse to leave — a challenge for a government that has promised to get rid of those who have no legal right to remain in Denmark.

Some have held out for more than a decade despite a steady deteriorat­ion in living conditions. An independen­t study by a former prison director now working for the rights group Helsinki Citizens’ Assembly found conditions in one of the deportatio­n centers to be comparable to those in some prisons, or worse.

Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen said in November that the government’s aim in receiving refu ge es would no longer be to integrate them, but to host them until they can return to their countries of origin.

“It’s not easy to ask families to go home, if they’ve actually settled,” he told a meeting of his party. “But it is the morally right thing. We should not make refugees immigrants.”

This summer, a ban on face coverings was introduced and quickly nicknamed “the burqa ban” as it followed a debate on the Islamic garment seen by some as “un-Danish.” Thi s month, Parliament is expected to pass legislatio­n requiring immigrants who want to obtain citizenshi­p to shake hands with officials as part of the naturaliza­tion ceremony — though some Muslims insist that they cannot shake hands with someone of the opposite sex.

The government contends that handshakes are “a basic Danish value.”

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