Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Anundsen lets not Shaimaa come back now – Aftenposten

Along with two siblings and his pregnant mother was Shaimaa Yusuf deported to Yemen in November last year after seven years in Norway. Tuesday in Easter week was their house razed by bombs.

After the government signed a new agreement on asylum children with the support portions KrF and Left, meet family requirements for assessment of their case again with a good margin. But since the new regulations are not yet in place, the family must continue their lives as refugees in the war-torn country where over 1,000 people have been killed in recent weeks, newspaper Bergens Tidende.



– Can not instruct

Shaimaa support here at home think the situation is totally unacceptable and has sent a letter to Justice and Emergency Minister Anders Anundsen (FRP). But the desire to let Shaimaa and her family get back to Norway while they wait to get cases reconsidered, are rejected.

Anundsen writes in its reply that there is little he can do, apart from assure that efforts to put in place the new regulations “have a very high priority in Ministry of Justice.”

He says that he as minister can not instruct Immigration in individual cases. He also points out that he can not give instructions regarding visa in individual cases, except in cases involving “fundamental national interests or foreign policy considerations.”



Instructions

Terje Einarsen professor jurisprudence and expert on asylum law at the University of Bergen (UiB), believes Anundsen had the opportunity to use the same steps to help Shaimaa Yusuf, who seized the coalition government spent to help Russian Maria Amelie returning to Norway in 2011.

– The Government could make a general instruction, which was not about this family in particular. The instructions could ensure that those families will be entitled to get tried their cases after it announced new regulations and that can demonstrate that they are in an acute emergency today, get right of entry visas, says Einarsen.

The criteria for determining who is entitled to a reassessment is already clear and applies families with children who have been in Norway for more than four years and who were returned to their home country between July 1 last year and March 18 this year.

The government and cooperation parties have agreed that the new regulations will be in place by the Parliament taking a summer in June.

Published: 28.apr. 2015 7:54

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