Parliament decides on easier deportation for crimes

Parliament decided on Tuesday that foreigners who commit crimes can be deported more easily. The stricter rules take effect from September 1.

The main rule will be that crimes carrying stricter penalties than fines can lead to deportation. Prosecutors will be required to demand deportation in such cases and re-entry bans will become longer.

Courts should not refrain from ordering deportation due to enforcement obstacles at the time. Ties to Sweden can still be grounds against deportation but the requirements for that will be raised.

An inquiry estimates that the number of deportations due to crime will rise from about 500 to 3 000 per year. The Left Party and the Green Party reserved against most of the proposal.

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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 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.

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The Swedish parliament approved legislation on Monday allowing authorities to revoke residency permits for immigrants deemed to exhibit poor conduct, part of broader efforts to address crime and immigration concerns.

On Thursday, 40 foreign nationals were deported from Iquique to Bolivia, Ecuador, and Colombia in the first flight under President José Antonio Kast's administration. Interior Undersecretary Máximo Pavez and National Migration Director Frank Sauerbaum outlined the Migration Control Plan, featuring increased flights and inspections. They stressed the operation was planned by the current government.

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The Inter-Ministerial Committee on Migration held a briefing on 14 June detailing enforcement actions following President Cyril Ramaphosa’s five-point plan on illegal immigration. Over 2,745 foreign nationals have been repatriated so far. The government warned against vigilantism as anti-migrant groups set a 30 June deadline for undocumented migrants to leave.

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