Copenhagen’s
‘ghetto law’ may be unlawful, EU court rules
ECJ
ruling brings hope to area of city targeted over high percentage of residents
with ‘non-western’ backgrounds
Miranda
Bryant Nordic correspondent
Thu 18
Dec 2025 17.19 GMT
Residents
of a Copenhagen neighbourhood that became an international symbol of a law in
Denmark known as the “ghetto law” have said they are confident they can
overturn the legislation in the Danish courts after the top EU court ruled that
it may be unlawful.
The
controversial law, dating from 2018, allows the state to demolish apartment
blocks in areas labelled “parallel societies” by the government, where at least
half of residents have a “non-western” background. Formerly, the government
referred to these neighbourhoods as “ghettoes”.
The law
states that if these areas also have unfavourable socioeconomic conditions –
for example high levels of unemployment or crime – authorities must cut social
housing by 40%, including by selling or demolishing properties or terminating
the lease of tenants by 2030.
In a
long-awaited judgment on Thursday on whether the laws targeting these
“transformation areas” are racially discriminatory, the European court of
justice (ECJ) said the legislation may be unlawful under the EU’s race equality
directive.
In a
preliminary ruling, the ECJ said the law could lead to an increased risk of
early lease termination and eviction for residents of these areas compared with
those in neighbourhoods with similar socioeconomic conditions but lower levels
of immigration.
It would
be for Danish courts to decide if there was “a difference in treatment based on
the ethnic origin of the majority of the inhabitants of those areas, thus
resulting in the inhabitants of these areas being treated less favourably”, it
said.
They
would also have to determine whether the law, although worded in a “neutral
manner”, actually leads to “persons belonging to certain ethnic groups being
placed at a particular disadvantage”, it added.
The
decision is less emphatic than a previous statement by Tamara Ćapeta, a
European court of justice advocate general, who said in February that tenants
whose leases were terminated “suffer direct discrimination on the basis of the
ethnic criterion”.
Despite
this, lawyers, human rights organisations and residents said the EU decision
marked a legal victory for the campaign, which they said they were confident
they could win in the domestic courts next year.
Residents
in the Mjølnerparken housing estate in central Copenhagen had filed a suit
against the law in Denmark in 2020, arguing that using their ethnicity to
decide where they can live was discriminatory and illegal.
Because
of the “parallel society” law, more than 1,000 people were forced to move out,
and rental costs soared.
Muhammad
Aslam, chair of the Mjølnerparken residents association, said he was pleased
with the ECJ’s decision and he believes his group are now well-placed to win in
the high court.
For more
than a decade, he said, minority communities in Denmark have been subjected to
“a competition between politicians and political parties of who can say the
worst things against foreigners, refugees, Muslims. Whoever does that gets more
seats in parliament.”
Aslam,
who has lived in Denmark since he was seven and has four children born in
Mjølnerparken, who are now successful professionals, said this rhetoric had a
big impact on daily life.
“We try
to say to ourselves we are part of Denmark and part of Danish society,” he
said. “But when politicians are talking about us and have these kinds of
competitions and trying to move us from society all the time, it affects you
and your heart and your mind.”
The
Danish Institute for Human Rights said the ECJ judgment “provides several
grounds” for the law to constitute discrimination on the basis of ethnic
origin, but that it did not bring the case to a “definitive close”.
Susheela
Math, head of legal at Systemic Justice, a Netherlands-based NGO, said the
ruling marked “a day of reckoning for the Danish state”, adding that
“discrimination is not integration”.
“This
ghetto package can be really seen as one stage in a long history of political
rhetoric and laws and practices that are targeting minorities,” she said.
“What
today’s judgment makes clear is that the political rhetoric and legislative
context problematising and stereotyping those of ‘non-western background’ can
be taken into account in terms of whether this amounts to racial
discrimination.”
The
Danish ministry of social affairs and housing said the case would now return to
Denmark’s eastern high court, and that the ministry would read the European
court’s verdict carefully.

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