Iraqi 'refugees' who left Finland because they didn't like the weather kiss the ground as they return to their home country, by Corey Charlton for mailonline, 2/19/16
Thousands of Iraqi refugees have decided to leave Finland to
return home. They have cancelled
asylum applications and are being flown to Baghdad. Many cited family issues
and disappointment with the country's weather. Today they were pictured kissing the
ground after landing back in Iraq. Others, overcome with emotion at seeing relatives, broke down in tears
Iraqi refugees who left Finland voluntarily due to chilly weather conditions have
been pictured kissing the ground in joyous scenes upon their return to Baghdad. Thousands of the
migrants who left Finland arrived back in the Iraqi capital today and were
pictured greeting loved ones and celebrating their return home. They had originally fled
to Finland only to become disappointed with life in the frosty Scandinavian
country.
Photographs taken of
their arrival in Baghdad showed some crying with relief at being reunited with
loved ones, while others kissed the floor of the airport after touching
down.
Europe is in the grip of
its worst migrant crisis since the Second World War, with more than a million people
arriving last year having fled wars and poverty in the Middle East and
Africa.
Although Germany and
Sweden have taken in many of the migrants, Finland too saw its number of asylum
seekers increase nearly tenfold in 2015 to 32,500 from 3,600 in 2014.
Almost two thirds of
these were young Iraqi men, but some changed their mind and returned after
Finland chartered flights to Baghdad.
Officials said about
4,100 asylum seekers had so far cancelled their applications and that number
was likely to reach 5,000 in the coming months. A majority of the
home-bound migrants have told immigration services they want to return to their
families, but some expressed disappointment with life in Finland.
Tobias van Treeck,
programme officer at the International Organization for Migration (IOM), said:
'Some say the conditions in Finland and the lengthy asylum process did not meet
their expectations, or what they had been told by the people they paid for
their travel.'
Nearly 80 percent of the
migrants returning home are Iraqis. Only 22 of 877 Syrians -
whose country is engulfed in civil war - and 35 of the 5,214 Afghans who sought
asylum in Finland last year have asked to return to their home country. Alsaedi Hussein, buying
a flight back to Baghdad at a small travel agency in Helsinki, said last week:
'My baby boy is sick, I need to get back home.
Somalia-born Muhiadin
Hassan, who runs a travel agency, said he was selling 15 to 20 flights to
Baghdad every day. 'It's been busy here for
the past few months,' he said.
Finland had been
preparing to reject up to 20,000 asylum seekers from 2015, but the number of
voluntary returnees could significantly reduce that figure. Paivi Nerg, an official
for the Finnish interior ministry, said: 'The number of returnees is increasing
steadily.
'All asylum seekers are
informed about the options for voluntary return and about the available
financial assistance. However, most Iraqi
returnees pay for their own flight home or seek help from Iraq's embassy in
Helsinki, she added. Last year the Finnish
government and the IOM provided financial help to 631 returnees and a similar
number is expected this year.
The charter flights will
carry up to 100 passengers back to Baghdad from Helsinki every week for as long
as demand lasts, officials said. Along with other Nordic
states, Finland has recently tightened its immigration policies, for example
requiring working-age asylum seekers to do some unpaid work.
Hostility to migrants
has also increased in Finland, a country with little experience of mass
immigration and which now has economic problems. Germany too, which took
in 1.1 million people in 2015, has seen small numbers of Iraqi refugees
choosing to go home. For more of the latest Iraq news visit www.dailymail.co.uk/iraq
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3452770/Iraqi-refugees-left-Finland-didn-t-like-weather-kiss-ground-return-home-country.html?ito=social-twitter_mailonline
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