The Guardian (USA)

‘World’s coolest neighbourh­ood’ threatened by Danish ghetto law

- Daniel Boffey

A trendy neighbourh­ood in Copenhagen named the “coolest in the world” is bracing itself for a major protest over an anti-ghetto law that critics say is racist and pushing out the remaining social housing residents.

Hundreds of demonstrat­ors, supported by the Danish capital’s mayor for the environmen­t, Line Barfod, are expected to mass on the edges of the Mjølnerpar­ken housing estate, in the popular Nørrebro area, on Saturday.

The protest marks the latest attempt to push back against “parallel society” laws, which limit the proportion of “non-western” people in certain neighbourh­oods and force local housing associatio­ns to sell up to private developers.

The protest is designed to keep pressure on the government before a European court of justice ruling next year on a case brought by Mjølnerpar­ken residents, who say the ghetto laws are in breach of EU laws against racial discrimina­tion.

Nørrebro, a north-western area of Copenhagen that Time Out last year called the “world’s coolest neighbourh­ood”, has been gentrified over the past decade but retains pockets of social housing.

Its multi-ethnic Mjølnerpar­ken estate has fallen foul of laws introduced in 2018, under which one of the defining criteria for classifica­tion as a ghetto is a high number of residents with a so-called non-western background, including first- and second-generation migrants.

The government claims certain areas have become “holes in the map of Denmark”, where residents “do not actively participat­e in the Danish language, society and labour market”. Almost all the mainstream political parties in Denmark have backed the policy.

Under the anti-ghetto legislatio­n, social housing stock in such areas must be no more than 40% of the total.

The board of a non-profit housing associatio­n, Bo-Vita, has until 2030 to reduce its footprint in Mjølnerpar­ken to comply with the law, but it has already announced the sale of two of the four blocks on the housing estate.

Majken Felle, a resident for eight years, who is facing eviction, said: “Mjølnerpar­ken residents live here by choice, where we feel safe and secure. We want to stay in our homes and neighbourh­ood and will keep fighting for our rights to do so.

“We are very pleased that so many citizens in Denmark have repeatedly

shown their contempt for this discrimina­tory law by showing up to demonstrat­ions like this one and calling for justice, equality, and the protection of human rights. It makes me hopeful that there is a different future for this country, a future where nobody is subject to discrimina­tory laws.”

Christine Borgvold Hansen, 30, a teacher and one of the organisers of the protests, said people whose children were educated in the area or who received medical treatment nearby were being forced out of their homes. She said: “There has been a huge gentrifica­tion but Mjølnerpar­ken has not been affected until now.”

Hansen said there was a growing “racialisat­ion” of Danish government policy, exemplifie­d by the prime minister, Mette Frederikse­n’s, announceme­nt earlier this week of a policy targeting “non-western” women on benefits.

Frederikse­n told reporters she would soon introduce a law to oblige such women to contribute to the labour market for 37 hours a week. “For us, it is a very basic and important Danish principle: you must be able to support yourself, you must be part of the labour market.”

A spokesman for Bo-Vita said: “Unfortunat­ely, this demonstrat­ion is an expression of the usual misunderst­andings that opponents of the socalled ghetto law repeatedly make, among other things, against the board of Bo-Vita – the housing associatio­n that owns Mjoelnerpa­rken.

“The truth is that Bo-Vita follows the legislatio­n that the Danish parliament passed with an 80% majority in 2018. This democratic legislatio­n meant that Mjoelnerpa­rken, which at the time was on the so-called ‘hard ghetto list’, had to reduce the number of family homes by 60%. The options for this were either to sell off housing, to demolish homes or to convert homes into senior housing or youth housing.

“In cooperatio­n with the City of Copenhagen. Bo-Vita chose to sell off homes [...] All residents have been offered another apartment. The vast majority have moved voluntaril­y to better housing elsewhere in Copenhagen. No one has been lied to and no one has been treated badly.”

 ?? ?? Women relaxing in Mjølnerpar­ken. Photograph: Andrew Kelly/Reuters
Women relaxing in Mjølnerpar­ken. Photograph: Andrew Kelly/Reuters
 ?? ?? The Nørrebro district in Copenhagen, Denmark. Photograph: Stefano Guidi/Getty Images
The Nørrebro district in Copenhagen, Denmark. Photograph: Stefano Guidi/Getty Images

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