Parliament During Question Time, basic Finns said: “Why do you want to make illegal residence legal?”

The opposition was able to challenge the government in the first question time of the year.

Of the year During the first parliamentary questioning session, the people of Basic Finland wanted to turn the political debate to its most important topic, immigration.

This time, it raised a bill submitted by the government before Christmas, the purpose of which is to make it easier for international students to stay in Finland.

“The show scraps the asylum system, costs Finns malt and is immoral. Why do you want to make illegal stay legal? ” accused the party’s MP Olli Immonen.

The concern of basic Finns was that a person who had a negative asylum decision could apply for a student residence permit in the future if the conditions were right.

Minister of Labor Tuula Haatainen (sd) replied that the main emphasis of the presentation is that those who come to study in Finland can stay in Finland to work more flexibly than before. He emphasized that there was no point in Finland training people, after which they could not stay in Finland due to the complexity of the system.

“As for this question of a person who has been deported, the question is that the person in question may have lost his or her work permit, but when he or she is able to study, he or she will still be able to obtain a residence permit as a student without having to go back and apply again. for, ”Haatainen said.

For basic Finns the answer was invalid.

Former party chairman Jussi Halla-aho said that the government’s proposal attracts to use study mainly as a pretext for easy and permanent access to Finland and the EU.

According to Halla-aho, the government attracts newcomers with “virtually free, tax-free education, a generous residence permit policy and social security that covers anyone, even those who are illegally in the country.”

Haatainen replied, Halla-aho could see the government’s presentation.

“That presentation specifically states that the livelihood condition must be met,” Haatainen said.

He continued that the fulfillment of the subsistence condition must be presented in the first year and will be monitored. In addition, universities will ensure that studies also progress.

“Just like here, it is monitored for domestic students that their studies progress when they receive a study grant. “

#Parliament #Question #Time #basic #Finns #illegal #residence #legal

Related Posts

Next Post

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended