Youths face deportation on their 18th birthday

Children who moved to Sweden as dependents of parents with residence permits lose the right to stay on their 18th birthday. They must then meet residence permit requirements independently, or face deportation. This stems from tightened migration rules affecting well-integrated youths.

Tightened migration policies in Sweden mean that youths who arrived as children must leave the country upon turning 18. Since 2021, residence permits are generally temporary, and obtaining them based on family ties has become harder. Opportunities to stay due to compassionate reasons, such as long-term life in Sweden, have significantly decreased.

Maintenance requirements have been sharpened, and parental support no longer suffices. Applying for a work permit requires leaving the country first, and the minimum income threshold for such permits has been raised to an unrealistic level for 18-year-olds. These changes, initiated under Social Democrat governments and continued under the Tidö government, apply retroactively, splitting families who complied with prior rules.

One case is 21-year-old Nadja Vasiljevic, as reported by Sydsvenskan. She arrived in Sweden at age 13 and was studying nursing at Malmö University when forced to leave after becoming an adult. Another is 21-year-old Ayla, who according to Aftonbladet faces deportation to Iran. The Swedish Migration Agency has temporarily halted such deportations due to ongoing protests, as it is not possible to assess protection needs prospectively.

The rules affect youths who speak fluent Swedish, work, or study, despite their integration. Critics view this as a cruel policy rooted in the slogan 'Sweden for the Swedes'.

مقالات ذات صلة

Illustration of worried young immigrants outside Swedish Migration Agency amid deportation pause announcement, symbolizing hope and uncertainty.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Swedish government pauses teenage deportations but uncertainties remain

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

On Friday, the Tidö parties announced a pause on teenage deportations pending law changes. The Migration Agency immediately halts reviews for individuals up to 21 years old, but many young people wonder if it applies to them. Lawyers highlight uncertainties in the proposals.

Sweden's Migration Minister Johan Forssell (M) states that a legislative council referral on so-called teenage deportations will be presented by May at the latest. The proposal will allow affected youth to complete high school and apply for other residence permits. Migrationsverket has paused certain deportations since the Tidö parties' agreement in early March.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Migration Minister Johan Forssell (M) proposes that youths facing deportation at age 18 should be allowed to complete high school. Protests against teen deportations are growing in Sweden following the abolition of the 'spårbytet', despite warnings about impacts on children and youth. Politicians from various parties express concern over the effects on well-behaved young people.

Nadia Veselova, a 21-year-old Center Party candidate, has received a deportation order to Belarus after four years in Eskilstuna. She studies at Stockholm University and is politically engaged, but now lives in uncertainty as she appeals the decision. She may soon have to leave her studies, commitments, and friends.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

An opposition motion by the Green and Left Parties for an immediate moratorium on all teenage deportations—including legally binding decisions—was narrowly defeated in parliament, 148-147. This follows the government's announcement last week of a limited pause pending new laws. Critics call it a betrayal, while ministers eye a solution soon.

In its review of the Swedish government's January proposal to toughen youth criminal justice—including lowering the age of criminal responsibility to 13 and extending child detention—the Council on Legislation strongly criticizes the detention extension from three to five months as incompatible with the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. It also flags procedural flaws in the bill's preparation.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Starting in 2026, several new laws will impact household finances in Sweden. Reduced VAT on food and dance events, a strengthened job tax deduction, and changes to dental care and mortgages are among the examples. These rules aim to ease economic burdens for many.

 

 

 

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