Asylum and Immigration

Norway deports Iranian refugees who travel to Iran

Qasedan Azadi News Agency: The Norwegian High Commission for Immigration Affairs, which had previously announced that the country would be more strict in granting asylum to citizens of other countries, has supported a plan to require the deportation of undocumented refugees from Norway.

According to the plan of the High Migration Board in Norway, which includes some high-ranking members of the country's government, headed by the Norwegian Minister of Justice, asylum seekers who have lied in their asylum applications in Norway or who are found to have applied for asylum in other European countries before arriving in Norway will be immediately deported from Norway.

According to this law, refugees who travel to their country of origin after receiving asylum and settling in Norway will also be identified as examples of lying about the lack of security in their homeland.

The Norwegian High Commission for Migration's statement did not name any specific country, but two Norwegian newspapers, citing the Norwegian Police Security Service's (PST) focus on visa applications for Iranian nationals, especially Iranian students, claimed that the highest rate of fraud in asylum applications was reported among Iranian and Afghan asylum seekers.

The Norwegian Immigration Service (UDI) has drawn criticism from some refugee rights organizations and international organizations. These organizations believe that the process of expelling asylum seekers can have serious consequences for many of these people, and in some cases, failure to verify the authenticity of the required information and documents may lead to the expulsion of a person who is truly facing a life-threatening danger in his or her country of origin. However, what has been announced as the final decision of the Norwegian government shows that, despite warnings from human rights organizations, the Norwegian Immigration Service is trying to follow the process of fact-finding the authenticity of refugee claims through strict methods of continuous monitoring.

Before Norway, the Canadian government announced in March 2015 that it would treat refugees who return to their country of origin under Canada’s supplementary immigration rules. These rules allow the Canadian government to revoke the residency of former refugees who “re-enjoy their homeland.”

Source: freedom messenger

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  1. Please don't write fake news. I live in Norway. There is never such a thing. Someone who gets Norwegian citizenship, even though they were refugees, can travel to Iran. There will be no problem for them. If you mean refugees who get residency but don't yet have Norwegian citizenship, yes, that's the case. But the whole world is like that. When you have a refugee passport, you can't travel to Iran. It's nothing new. It's been like that for 30 years. But once you get a Norwegian passport, they don't care about you anymore...

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