Forssell on teenage deportations: Must be reasonable

Migration Minister Johan Forssell (M) expresses eagerness to find a solution to the deportations of teenagers who grew up in Sweden. He stresses that legislation must be restrictive yet reasonable. The opposition is united in opposing the deportation of young people alone at age 18.

Migration Minister Johan Forssell (M) commented in SVT's Agenda on the ongoing debate about deportations of teenagers who arrived in Sweden as children with their families. These young people risk being deported alone when they turn 18, despite growing up in the country.

Forssell emphasized the importance of a restrictive migration policy that sets requirements, but he acknowledged issues with its reasonableness in current application. "It is important that the legislation is restrictive and sets requirements, but it should also be reasonable. There I see that there is a problem. I am eager to find a solution to it," he said.

The opposition, including the Social Democrats who shifted their stance on Saturday, demands a freeze on deportations until the legal situation is clarified. Forssell dismissed this as special solutions and abrupt changes that the government wants to avoid. He stressed that changes must be done properly to prevent ad hoc decisions.

The debate highlights the tension between strict migration policy and humanitarian considerations, focusing on youth integrated into Swedish society.

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Swedish Migration Minister Johan Forssell at press conference announcing teenage deportation proposal allowing high school completion.
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Migration minister Forssell: Teenage deportation proposal by May at latest

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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.

The Tidö parties are opening up to letting teenagers with final expulsion decisions stay in Sweden. Migration Minister Johan Forssell and SD leader Jimmie Åkesson have signaled support for a temporary pause.

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The government wants to make it mandatory for prosecutors to seek deportation of foreigners who commit crimes with penalties stricter than fines. The proposal faces criticism from the opposition and the Prosecutors' Authority, but Migration Minister Johan Forssell defends it as necessary to protect crime victims.

The Riksdag decided on Monday to tighten conduct requirements for residence permits. The new rules take effect on July 13.

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Jimmie Åkesson (SD) and Magdalena Andersson (S) debated migration policy and green investments in SVT's Aktuellt. Åkesson argued that the Social Democrats lack credibility in promises of stricter migration.

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