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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Welcome to the Neno's Place!

Neno's Place Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality


Neno

I can be reached by phone or text 8am-7pm cst 972-768-9772 or, once joining the board I can be reached by a (PM) Private Message.

Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Many Topics Including The Oldest Dinar Community. Copyright © 2006-2020


    Denmark plans to send illegal refugees to the island of "animals"

    Rocky
    Rocky
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    plans - Denmark plans to send illegal refugees to the island of "animals" Empty Denmark plans to send illegal refugees to the island of "animals"

    Post by Rocky Fri 07 Jun 2019, 3:22 am

    [size=30]Denmark plans to send illegal refugees to the island of "animals"[/size]
    By AhadNA1 View 07/06/2019 01:08 AM | Number of readings:
    plans - Denmark plans to send illegal refugees to the island of "animals" Thumbnail.php?file=_104615598_8d870ac5_9dd0_44e3_b456_5469d07e10df_845539915

    Al Ahd News - Follow-up
      The right-wing government and the right-wing Danish People's Party announced on 30 November an agreement to transfer about 100 illegal refugees to Lindholm Island, including those convicted of crimes and refugees whose asylum applications were rejected and can not be returned to their countries of origin.
    The 17-acre island is located in the Gulf of the Baltic Sea, about three kilometers from the nearest beach, and ferry service is rarely used. Refugees or convicts on the island will also be required to prove their presence at the Al Jazeera Center on a daily basis, otherwise they will face imprisonment.
    "We are going to make trips to the island as difficult as possible by raising the cost of flights and reducing their number," said Martin Henriksen, spokesman for the Danish People's Party on Migration. The cost of constructing facilities on this remote island is about $ 115 million over four years, due to open in 2021.
    "The island is not a prison, but everyone who is sent there will have to sleep there," said Christian Jensen, the country's finance minister, who led the negotiations on those refugees and convicts. Louise Holk, deputy executive director of the Danish Institute for Human Rights, said her organization would monitor the situation "closely" because of possible violations of Denmark's international obligations.
    Lindholm Island's plan reinforces the government's policy of paying asylum seekers who have not received residency permits to leave the country by making life unbearable.Those with criminal records are not allowed to work in Denmark. Disqualified and undeliverable asylum-seekers are given meals and allowances, which cost about $ 1.20 per person per day. They will be denied this if they fail to cooperate with the authorities. In Denmark, as in many European countries, the situation in the Middle East and Africa has driven many people from their countries to European countries between 2015 and 2016.
    human rights
      Former Minister of Immigration Perth Ron Hornbache described the project as "a joke and a mistake like the mistake of a player who scored a goal against his team." "Nothing will be achieved," she wrote in her column. Under the International Convention on Refugees, rejected refugees can not be deported to their countries if there is a risk to their lives, or if the Governments of those States refuse to return them. An independent study conducted by a former prison director who now works with the Helsinki Human Rights group of a deportation center concluded that the conditions experienced by detainees there were more like prisons and sometimes worse. Prime Minister Lars Loki Rasmussen said in November that his government's goal would not be to integrate refugees anymore but to host them until they returned home.
     Danish Immigration and Integration Minister Inger Stoiberg discussed in 2016 the controversial immigration bill, which includes allowing police to seize valuables for migrants. But the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has strongly criticized the law for fear of spreading fear among refugees and fostering xenophobia in Denmark.



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