Inger Stojberg, who incarnated from 2015 to 2019 the cure of the Copenhagen migration policy, until the outrage, was sentenced to sixty days of incarceration for illegally ordered the separation of couples of applicants. Asylum.
by
When she was Minister of Immigration, the liberal Inger Stojberg celebrated the new screw towers in Danish migration policy – already very restrictive – by sharing a cake with his collaborators. With his taste assumed for provocation and politically incorrect, she had become the “favorite minister” of the Danes. On Monday, December 13, she was sentenced by the country’s special court of justice at sixty days in prison, for illegally being separated, in 2016, couples of asylum seekers, whose woman was minor.
“These are the Danish values that have lost today,” reacted me Stojberg, once the verdict fell. A little later, on his Facebook account, the former Minister, became a member of Parliament in June 2019, and adept of social networks, thanked his supports. If she said she “respected judgment and accepted [her] condemnation without lowering her head,” she said to have “been punished for trying to protect girls”.
Dissuraging candidates. at exile
The red hair tight in an eternal bun, the moving party, Inger Stojberg, 48, has incarnate from 2015 to 2019, an extremely hard line on asylum and immigration issues, not afraid to be accused of doing “symbol policy”. Its objective, taken over from the Social Democrats, revenue in power in 2019: to limit the arrivals to Denmark as much as possible.
It is on its initiative, for example, that the Ministry of Immigration had bought a full pages of pub in the Lebanese newspapers, in the summer of 2015, to dissuade the candidates for exile to join the country Scandinavian. It was also who had made an amendment amended, a few months later, allowing the police to seize the money and jewelry of asylum seekers exceeding a value of 10,000 crowns (€ 1,345), at their entry into the territory.
Another proposal for its signature: the isolation of offenders of foreign origin on an island, where the Veterinary Institute conducted work on canine rabies and pork plague. On February 10, 2016, she had ordered to separate couples from asylum seekers, at least one of the members was a minor: a decision for which she will soon be sent to prison.
At the time, the subject of “married children” raged in Denmark. In total, thirty-four couples were separated during the spring of 2016. Among them: two Syrians, Rimaz Alkayal, 17, and his husband, Alnour Alwan, 26 years old. Until then, only girls under 15 were isolated from their husbands. For older minors, separation is only envisaged in cases of forced marriage, after investigation. Rimaz was pregnant. The couple had asked to be heard, but his request had been rejected. The two Syrians then contacted the rights defender, who had opened an investigation.
You have 38.05% of this article to read. The rest is reserved for subscribers.