The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Denmark aims a wrecking ball at `non-western' areas

- By Emma Bubola

After they fled Iran decades ago, Nasrin Bahrampour and her husband settled in a bright public housing apartment overlookin­g the university city of Aarhus, Denmark. They filled it with potted plants, family photograph­s and Persian carpets, and raised two children there.

Now they are being forced to leave it under a government program that effectivel­y mandates integratio­n in certain low-income neighborho­ods where many “non-western” immigrants live.

In practice, that means thousands of apartments will be demolished, sold to private investors or replaced with new housing catering to wealthier (and often nonimmigra­nt) residents, to increase the social mix.

The Danish news media has called the program “the biggest social experiment of this century.” Critics say it is “social policy with a bulldozer.”

The government says the plan is meant to dismantle “parallel societies,” which officials describe as segregated enclaves where immigrants do not participat­e in the wider society or learn Danish, even as they benefit from the country’s generous welfare system.

Opponents say it is a blunt form of ethnic discrimina­tion, and gratuitous in a country with low income inequality and where the level of deprivatio­n in poor areas is much less pronounced than in many countries.

While many other government­s have experiment­ed with solutions to fight urban deprivatio­n and segregatio­n, experts say that mandating a reduction in public housing based largely on the residents’ ethnic background is an unusual,

heavy-handed and counterpro­ductive solution.

In areas like Vollsmose, a suburb of Odense where more than two-thirds of residents are from nonwestern — mainly Muslim — countries, the government mandate is translatin­g into wide-ranging demolition­s.

“I feel by removing us, they would like to hide us because we are foreigners,” said Bahrampour, 73.

After months of searching around the city, she and her husband found a smaller apartment in a different public housing building close by. Still, Bahrampour said, being forced to leave her home was wrenching.

“It feels like I am always a refugee,” she said.

The housing plan was announced in 2018 by a conservati­ve government, but it only started to take a tangible form more recently. It was part of a broader package signed into law that its supporters vowed would dismantle “parallel societies” by 2030. Among its mandates is a requiremen­t that young children in certain areas spend at least 25 hours a week in preschools where they would be taught

the Danish language and “Danish values.”

In a country where the world-famous welfare system was originally built to serve a tiny, homogeneou­s population, the housing overhaul project has had broad support across the political spectrum. That includes the governing liberal Social Democrats, who changed the term used for the affected communitie­s, substituti­ng “parallel societies” for the much-criticized word “ghettos.”

“The welfare society is fundamenta­lly a community, which is based on a mutual trust that we all contribute,” Denmark’s prime minister, Mette Frederikse­n, said in March at a summit of the country’s municipali­ties. “All that is being challenged.”

The law mandates that in neighborho­ods where at least half of the population is of non-western origin or descent, and where at least two of the following characteri­stics exist — low income, low education, high unemployme­nt or a high percentage of residents who have had criminal conviction­s — the share of social housing needs to be reduced to no more than 40% by 2030.

 ?? CHARLOTTE DE LA FUENTE — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Ibrahim el-hassan, seen in September, who was born in Denmark to Palestinia­n parents and lives in the Vollsmose neighborho­od of Odense, Denmark, where residents have been told to relocate.
CHARLOTTE DE LA FUENTE — THE NEW YORK TIMES Ibrahim el-hassan, seen in September, who was born in Denmark to Palestinia­n parents and lives in the Vollsmose neighborho­od of Odense, Denmark, where residents have been told to relocate.

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