Denmark
to push for stricter EU migration policies
Copenhagen
(AFP) – Denmark's strict migration policies have slowly spread across Europe
and the country will now push for harsher EU-wide regulations during its
upcoming EU presidency, including on asylum handling and legal appeals.
Issued on:
26/06/2025 - 07:27
Modified:
26/06/2025 - 07:22
https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20250626-denmark-to-push-for-stricter-eu-migration-policies
Migration
policy "is linked to security, that is to say that we need a Europe that
is safer, more stable and robust, and that isn't really the case if we don't
control the flows to Europe," Denmark's European Affairs Minister Marie
Bjerre said as she presented the country's priorities for its EU presidency,
which it takes over from Poland on July 1.
Danish Prime
Minister Mette Frederiksen hopes to build EU consensus on externalising asylum
procedures outside Europe, and restricting the scope of rulings from the
European Court of Human Rights.
She set the
tone during a recent visit to Berlin.
"We
need new solutions to reduce the influx to Europe and to effectively send back
those who don't have the right to stay in our countries," she said at a
press conference with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who applauded the
Danish "model".
Denmark,
where the number of inhabitants of foreign origin has soared from 3.3 percent
in 1985 to 16.3 percent in 2025, says it needs to limit the number of
immigrants in order to safeguard its generous cradle-to-grave welfare system.
At the same
time, the need for foreign labour has surged, with the number of work permits
doubling in less than a decade, though these can be swiftly revoked.
'Schizophrenic'
situation
Refugees in
Denmark are entitled to a one-year renewable residency permit, and they are
encouraged to return home as soon as authorities deem there is no longer a need
for a safe haven.
"Refugees
are expected to integrate while also being prepared to leave at anytime... a
kind of contradictory or schizophrenic situation," researcher Marie
Sandberg, the head of the Centre for Advanced Migration Studies at the
University of Copenhagen, told AFP.
"As
recent research shows, the increased focus on return policies and temporary
protection, along with high demands for getting permanent residency, create a
very, very difficult integration landscape for newcomers into Danish
society," she added.
Denmark made
headlines in 2020 when it revoked residency permits for 200 Syrians, deeming
the situation in Damascus no longer justified a Danish residence permit.
Since her
election to the head of the centre-left Social Democrats 10 years ago, Mette
Frederiksen has shifted her party's migration policy far to the right, in line
with that of preceding right-wing governments backed by the far right.
She has
repeatedly called non-Western immigration Denmark's "biggest
challenge".
In 2024, she
expressed support for an MP who alleged that some well-integrated immigrants
were "undermining" Danish society.
"We are
a sociable and relaxed country culturally, but for some reason Muslims have
been seen as a kind of threat to this liberal culture," lamented Michala
Bendixen, head of the Refugees Welcome organisation.
Externalising
asylum
Championing
a "zero refugee" policy, Denmark is keen to externalise the asylum
process to a country outside Europe.
In 2024, the
country accepted 860 refugees, 13 times fewer than in 2015.
Two years
ago, the government halted its plans to process asylum requests abroad --
possibly in Rwanda -- and keep refugees there if their applications were
approved, in order to try to find a joint solution with the European Union.
While all
similar efforts in European countries have so far failed, "there will be a
European attempt to do something on the subject" during the Danish EU
presidency, Bendixen said.
Denmark also
recently joined Italy and seven other countries to seek a reinterpretation of
the European Convention on Human Rights to allow for changes to migration
policy, arguing that the text sometimes protects "the wrong people."
"We
used to be proud of being one of the first countries to sign the 1951 UN
Refugee Convention, and we've also been part of the UNHCR resettlement scheme
since the late 1980s. However ... Denmark seems to be ready to test the (limits
of the) conventions," Sandberg said.
Bendixen
said those efforts were now "undermining the whole mindset of
Europe".
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