COPENHAGEN,
February 18 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - The Danish
government announced Tuesday, February 18, changes to the immigration
laws, in a measure specifically targeting Muslim scholars.
Danish
Prime Minister Anders Rasmussen said after a cabinet meeting that
access to a Danish residence permit for foreign religious scholars has
been too easy up until now.
"That
is why we now put forward new requirements for residing in the
country, like the demand that imams and others have an education and
that they be financially self-sufficient," Rasmussen was quoted
as saying by Agence France-Presse (AFP).
The
proposed changes, which parliament is expected to rapidly pass into
law, are part of a deal reached last September between the
Liberal-Conservative government, its far-right ally the Danish
People's Party (DPP), and the opposition Social Democrats.
They
are designed, in part, to prevent Muslim scholars from staying in the
country and clip the wings of those already living in the tiny
European country.
"In
theory, these rules concern all clerics from all religions. But in
practice, they target the imams," DPP spokesman Peter Skaarup
told journalists in September.
The
DPP confirmed the immigration changes were aimed to curb the
activities of imams.
‘Propagandist’
Muslims
- estimated at 170,000 (around 3 per cent of population) - sounded the
alarms that much more restrictive steps would be taken by the
government in future.
"The
government seeks to target Muslim scholars only for propaganda means -
they want to curry favor with the right-wing DPP," Ahmed Abu
Labn, the head of the Islamic endowment office in Copenhagen, told
IslamOnline.net Wednesday, February 18.
Labn
denied the government’s claims that Muslim imams are delaying the
integration process of Muslims in the country.
He
said government officials were had concerns as to the growing number
of Danish people embracing Islam in the European country.
Islam
is Denmark's second largest religion after the Lutheran Protestant
Church, which is actively followed by four-fifths of the country's
population of 5.3 million.
Another
Islamic scholar admitted that some imams cause problems in some
European countries because of their scant knowledge of the situation
on the ground, where Muslims are a minority and face laws different
from those enforced in their home countries.
"Some
imams have already tarnished the image of Islam by their ignorance of
the situation on the ground," Adli Abu Hajjar, the secretary
general of the European Islamic Council, told IOL.
The
council groups most of the Islamic groups and bodies in the European
continent.
Refugee
Restrictions
The
government also announced intentions to step up measures against
people who helped hide rejected asylum seekers so they would not be
expelled from the country.
"The
fines inflicted on those who break the law by hiding refugees have
been insufficient. We therefore propose more severe sanctions against
the offenders," Rasmussen said.
The
new restrictive laws could also affect refugees who have been given
asylum in Denmark - allowing the loss of residence permits for those
who decide to return to their home countries on holidays.
The
government also proposed a 10-year "quarantine period" for
any refugees convicted of violence against a former wife or
girlfriend, before they can bring their current spouse to Denmark as
part of the country's family reunification program.
Dutch
Expulsion
Moving
to The Netherlands, MPs passed a controversial law Tuesday allowing
for the mass expulsion of 26,000 failed asylum seekers from the
country.
The
unprecedented move was a blow to the country’s reputation of
tolerance and set a tough benchmark for Europe's asylum policies, New
York Times reported.
The
potential deportees are mostly from Muslim countries, including
Somalis, Afghans, and Chechens who may be sent back to countries
without a functioning government and still affected by violence.
But
the government has insisted that those genuinely at risk would not be
forced to leave, said the Times.
The
law will affect people who arrived in the country before April 2001.
The
coalition government defended its stance by saying the measure was
outlined in its election manifesto and by pointing out that Dutch
voters gave it a large majority last year, said the American paper.
The
Netherlands has already opened a number of deportation centers where
entire families are detained before being forced onto flights home.
Those who fail to leave may be imprisoned and deprived of benefits, it
added.
An
opinion poll at the weekend showed that two-thirds of the population
were in favor of an amnesty for asylum seekers who have been living in
the Netherlands for more than five years.