Sunday, 19 February 2017

Danish government intensify measures to check the excesses of foreigners and stop terrorists from invading their country

Denmark immigration

Due to influx of some refugees and sometimes terrorists on the European soil, the Danish parliament has approved resolution which protects the full rights of Danes, so that they do not become minorities in their own land.

The resolution was reached after the government discovered via an official data that the city of Brøndby Strand and Odense are now being occupied by foreigners, and have become more than the natives of those cities numerically.

According to the resolution: “The Parliament notes with concern that today there are areas in Denmark, where the proportion of immigrants and descendants from non-Western countries is over 50 per cent.

“The Folketing believes that Danes should not be in minority neighbourhoods in Denmark.”

Though the legislation was only scarcely approved after parliamentarians in the Folketing voted 55 to 54 in favour of the proposal. No-one abstained from the vote.

The government also expresses worries over several attacks against the Danish people by some immigrants, who are oftentimes suspected to the terrorists.

According to Rafi Ibrahim, a Syrian national who has lived several years in Denmark, explained how foreigners did not understand European lifestyle and culture.


He said last year: “If they see a girl, they go nuts. They simply can't handle it. In Syria and many other countries, it is not normal for a strange woman to smile at you.

“Those girls who are harassed aren't necessarily scantily-dressed or drunk. Sometimes it is enough just to be a girl.”

Denmark has previously offered cash incentives to migrants who cannot assimilate to the country’s way of life.

The Danish government’s 2025 Plan outlined proposals to make it more difficult for foreigners living in the country to obtain permanent residence.

Among the plans would mean foreigners would have to live in Denmark for eight years as opposed to the current six. Migrants would also have to pass a citizenship test, be employed for four of the past four and a half years and complete Danish language courses.


A whopping 21,000 asylum seekers arrived in the Scandinavian nation in 2015.

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