by Judith Bergman • September 28,
2018 at 5:00 am
- Feras, an illegal
alien to begin with, and a convicted felon, was allowed
to stay in Sweden for the sole reason that he committed a
violent hate crime against Swedish Jews. This despite the fact
that Sweden had rejected his asylum request, and he therefore
lacked any legal right to stay in the country.
- The precedent that
this case establishes is highly disturbing: If you commit
crimes against Jews that can "be perceived as a serious
political crime directed against other Jews," then you
might be eligible for asylum in Sweden. The rights of Sweden's
vulnerable Jews have apparently ceased to matter.
- In Sweden, and
perhaps other places as well, it appears that that the
"human rights" of foreign aspiring murderers are
more important than the human rights of law-abiding citizens.
The
synagogue in Gothenburg, Sweden, which was firebombed on December
9, 2017. (Image source: Lintoncat/Wikimedia Commons)
Are you in a European country illegally, flouting
your deportation order and committing arson? No problem. If the
country to which you are to be returned might conceivably harm you,
instead you are welcome to stay in Sweden, commit more crimes and
harm Swedes.
A Swedish Court of Appeal recently overturned the
deportation ruling against one of three convicted perpetrators of
an arson attack against the synagogue of Gothenburg in December
2017, on the grounds that it would be in contravention of his
"fundamental human rights".
The 22-year old Arab man from Gaza, known as Feras,
was in Sweden illegally when he committed the attack. His asylum
request had been rejected by the Swedish Migration Agency (Migrationsverket);
he had apparently been told to leave the country, but he did not.
For reasons that are unclear, he was not held for deportation, but
still walking around freely in Sweden.
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