According to Chief Superintendent Jarmo Heinonen, "international criminal organizations operate in Finland, responsible for moving drugs from one country to another. We now have increasingly multicultural environments where people have connections, for example, to their former homelands. The number of such networks is growing rapidly."
A man named Jouni from Helsinki's Kallio, on the other hand, says that some drug users walk "as if in a zombie-like state, in a strange hunched posture." The reason for this is the synthetic drug alpha-PVP, which can cause anxiety, paranoia, and in the worst cases, psychosis.
Jouni has also noticed that "there are very young girls among the users. Some are of high school age."
Meanwhile, in a café-restaurant in Helsinki's Puhos, an area known for its Muslim population, organized crime activity has been uncovered. Tens of kilograms of cocaine were imported and sold to addicts. Police estimate that the group has distributed nearly 30 kilograms of cocaine over several years. The suspects in the crime are mostly Turkish and Syrian nationals.
According to the Finnish Broadcasting company Yle, a 44-year-old man who received a suspended sentence had been in debt to the apartment owner and attacked him, only to realize that another man in the apartment was bleeding. This was because Billah El Mouatez Zegadin, a 36-year-old man sentenced to ten years in prison for manslaughter, had slashed the victim with a knife that had a 20 cm long blade.
But every cloud has a silver lining. Sweden, which has served as a model for Finland’s previous governments, has reportedly started deporting criminal immigrants back to their home countries, according to social media.
In the first batch, a plane full of Iraqi criminals was sent back. Hopefully, Finland will follow Sweden's example in this matter before we too have neighborhoods where the reach of the national law no longer extends.
Previous thoughts on the same topic:
Immigration-Specific Violent Crime Increases as Humanitarian Immigration Continues
Sweden's Rapid Demographic Shift Causes Challenges
Will an ongoing trial open the eyes of politicians?
It seems that both Finland and many European countries have let in the Trojan horse.
ReplyDeleteAnd the consequences can be seen, for example, in the form of drug dealing.
Sure. The problem is more serious in Sweden, and their future remains uncertain. In Finland, however, there is still time to respond and address the problem.
DeleteThere was news today that Finland demands tougher measures for the return of asylum seekers.
ReplyDeleteA total of 17 EU countries are asking the Commission to issue a bill to speed up returns.
See https://www.hs.fi/politika/art-2000010757902.html
However, this will take time before the bill is ready.
In the meantime, the EU can start by banning sea taxi traffic in the Mediterranean.
And finally, we have to ask why it hasn't been stopped yet?
Who benefits from this taxi traffic in Europe?
I refer to my comment in the Jaska Brown blog. Good night.
ReplyDelete