Denmark will send deportation convicts to prisons in Kosovo: – Excellent that we can get them thrown out as soon as possible
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Denmark has entered into an agreement which involves that they can send up to 300 prisoners to prisons in Kosovo. FRP thinks it is a good idea for Norway as well.
These are offenders who have been sentenced to deportation.
Denmark’s Social Democratic Minister of Justice Nick Hækkerup considers the agreement to be groundbreaking.
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– I think it is absolutely excellent that we can get them thrown out as quickly as possible and start with them zoning abroad so we see their heel instead of the toe, says Hækkerup.
According to the Minister of Justice, it is expected that the practical preparations will be made in the first half of 2023. The goal is for the prison to be upgraded so that it maintains Danish standards, the prisoners are not entitled to, writes NTB.
Nevertheless, the agreement must be approved by both the Folketing and the National Assembly in Kosovo. Hækkerup does not think it will be voted down in the Folketing, but it is somewhat uncertain when it comes to Kosovo.
The agreement is tentatively signed by Kosovo’s Minister of Justice Albulena Haxhiu.
One of the criteria for the agreement is that the prisoners must be able to be sent directly to their home countries outside the EU after the sentence has been served.
At an earlier stage in the process, there has been talk that prisoners should pay health expenses in prison even by being required to take out private health insurance. This is not currently part of the agreement.
Hækkerup says, however, that he would like to state that it was the prisoners who got the bill.
FrP’s Erlend Wiborg believes Norway must be able to follow suit
– Denmark is in many ways a pioneering country when it comes to tightening up immigration and integration policy. Both that they now want to send foreign prisoners with deportation decisions for imprisonment to Kosovo, but also that they have decided to establish asylum reception centers in third countries is political groundbreaking work, says Wiborg who is the party’s immigration and integration spokesman.
The Progress Party put in place a penance agreement with the Netherlands when we were put in government, something that worked excellently. But the agreement Denmark has reached with Kosovo is far from unique as Kosovo is not part of the EU, claims Wiborg-
– If Norwegian prisons were reserved for prisoners who have to return to Norwegian society, we could have had far more resources and focus on rehabilitation. It is poor resource utilization to spend a lot of time and effort on criminals who do not have to live in Norway anyway, says Wiborg.
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Wiborg is not worried that sentencing agreements with other countries violate human rights.
– It is not a human right to serve time in Norwegian modern prisons where the degree of welfare and comfort is relatively high. Denmark has excellent lawyers who have come to the conclusion that this is within the law. In addition, prison costs are likely to be significantly reduced if we can also outsource services to low-cost countries. It is a win-win situation for absolutely everyone, except the criminals, says Wiborg.
If she claims to be punished by the GP and is denied health care: – We unvaccinated are also human (+)
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