Top EU
court adviser finds Denmark’s ‘ghetto law’ is direct discrimination
This article
is more than 1 month old
If European
court of justice agrees, ‘parallel societies’ policy could violate EU law,
putting onus on Copenhagen to change it
Miranda
Bryant Nordic correspondent
Thu 13 Feb
2025 15.09 GMT
Denmark’s
“ghetto law”, which allows the state to demolish apartment blocks in areas
where at least half of residents have a “non-western” background, constitutes
direct discrimination on the basis of ethnic origin, a senior adviser to the
EU’s top court has found.
Danish
social housing law categorises neighbourhoods on the basis of unemployment,
crime, education, income and immigrant population. Those where more than 50% of
residents are from a “non-western” backgrounds are labelled a “parallel
society”, formerly referred to as a “ghetto”.
If, in
addition to unfavourable socioeconomic conditions, a neighbourhood has also had
an immigrant population of more than 50% for the last five years, it is
labelled a “transformation area”, formerly known as a “hard ghetto”.
This
requires the public housing association to propose a plan to cut social housing
by 40% – including by selling properties, demolition or conversion and
terminating the lease of the former tenants – by 2030.
The European
court of justice (ECJ) said in a statement on Thursday that Tamara Ćapeta, an
advocate general, had found in a non-binding legal opinion that “the division
between ‘western’ and ‘non-western’ immigrants and their descendants is based
on ethnic origin.”
The
statement added: “She considers that, although ‘non-westerners’ are an
ethnically diverse group, what unites that group is not a commonality of
factors that form ‘ethnicity’ within that group, but rather the perception by
the Danish legislature that this group does not possess the characteristics of
the other group, the ‘westerners’.”
The ECJ
follows the advice of its advocates general most of the time.
Although
tenants whose leases were terminated were not selected on the basis of their
non-western origin, “they nevertheless suffer direct discrimination on the
basis of the ethnic criterion,” Ćapeta found, according to the statement.
She said the
legislation put tenants in a vulnerable position in terms of housing that led
to worse treatment than those in neighbourhoods where the majority of the
population was of “western” origin.
“The ethnic
criterion used by Danish legislation stigmatises the ethnic group whose
structural disadvantage in their ability to integrate into Danish society was
recognised, thus curtailing rather than enhancing their chances to integrate
into that society,” the statement said.
The case was
referred to the ECJ by Denmark’s eastern high court after tenants on the
Mjølnerparken estate in Copenhagen and Schackenborgvænge estate in Slagelse
challenged the legality of development plans based on Danish social housing
law.
Louise
Holck, the director of the Danish Institute for Human Rights, which was
involved in the case, welcomed the ruling, which she said could have broad
implications if it is agreed upon by the ECJ.
“Her
interpretation of the directive ensures effective protection against
discrimination based on ethnicity. If the court reaches the same conclusion as
the advocate general, the Parallel Societies Act could be in violation of EU
law,” she said.
“In that
case, the state must correct the situation to ensure that citizens are not
discriminated against and amend the law to comply with EU regulations. This
case is both important and a matter of principle, as it could have implications
for everyone who has been subjected to the same treatment.”
The
“parallel societies” law, formerly known as the ghetto law, came into force in
July 2018, but Denmark has had regulations targeting so-called “ghetto areas”
since 2010.
The Danish
minister of social affairs and housing, Sophie Hæstorp Andersen, said she had
noted the advocate general’s proposal, but would not take action until the ECJ
made a final decision, which is expected in the spring.
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