Danish MPs discuss plans to seize assets of asylum seekers

Danish MPs discuss plans to seize assets of asylum seekers

PanARMENIAN.Net - Plans to seize the assets of asylum seekers are among controversial new measures on immigration being debated by MPs in Demark, BBC News reports.

The proposals have been condemned by the UN refugee agency and other rights groups, who say they go against international rules on refugees.

Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen has called the plan the "most misunderstood bill in Denmark's history". The bill is expected to be voted on later in the month.

The government on Tuesday, Jan 12, secured a parliamentary majority to alter the proposed legislation to allow the Danish authorities to seize migrants' cash and other individual items worth more than 10,000 kroner (1,340 euros, $1,450).

Wedding rings and other items of sentimental value will not be included.

The move has been likened by some commentators to the treatment of Jews by Nazi Germany during the Holocaust.

The ruling center-right Venstre party - backed by its right-wing allies, the anti-immigration Danish People's Party, the Liberal Alliance and the Conservative People's Party - has promised to get tough on immigration since its election in June, according to the BBC.

Integration Minister Inger Stojberg said the measures simply put migrants on an equal footing with jobless Danes, who must sell assets above a certain level to claim benefits.

She said the assets would help pay for housing, healthcare and some education.

Another heavily criticised part of the bill would delay the reunification of families for up to three years, up from the current one year.

The UN High Commission for Refugees, in its report on the proposed legislation, said the swift reunification of families was enshrined in a number of international conventions it called on Denmark to observe.

The bill also includes measures making it harder to obtain permanent residency and shortening temporary resident permits.

Responding to the plan to seize valuables, UNHCR spokesman William Spindler told the BBC: "Refugees have lost their homes and almost everything they possess. It beggars belief that somebody would want to strip them away from the little they have managed to salvage from their lives. Refugees need and deserve compassion, understanding, respect and solidarity."

Sofie Carsten Nielsen, an MP with the opposition Social Liberal party, said the bill was designed to "send a signal to refugees... that here in Denmark it's very difficult to come in...

"You will be investigated and you will be ransacked and they will search your bags for every sort of belongings that you have."

Denmark is thought to have taken in around 20,000 refugees in 2015 and it expects a similar number this year. Neighboring Sweden took in 163,000 and Germany has taken more than one million.

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