Sunday, May 15, 2016

The terrible history behind Jamala's Eurovision triumph

Euro vision 2016
"When strangers are coming, they come to your house, they kill you all and say, 'we're not guilty, not guilty'."
Those are the harrowing opening words of war-scarred Ukraine's winning entry for the Eurovision song contest -- a flamboyant and festive occasion more normally associated with laughs than tears.

The lament entitled "1944" was sung in Saturday's Eurovision grand final in Stockholm by 32-year-old Jamala, a member of the Muslim Tatar minority of Crimea, a Black Sea peninsula annexed by Russia in 2014.

Jamala's words refer to the tragedy that befell her great-grandmother near the end of World War II, when Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin deported 240,000 Tatars -- almost the entire community -- to barren Central Asia and other far-flung lands.

But the song also has deep resonance for contemporary Ukraine, where memories of that horror were revived by Russia's seizure of Crimea and Jamala's poignant lyrics tell the story of a people with a history of persecution that continues to this day.

The song beat bookies' favourite Russia, bringing unavoidable political and diplomatic undertones to the competition between two nations whose relations have been effectively frozen for two years.

Originally an opera singer who became a jazz star in Ukraine, the svelte brunette said that she wanted to make her song "about my great-grandmother Nazalkhan and thousands of Crimean Tatars who never had a chance to return to Crimea again".

"That year changed their lives forever," she told AFP in an interview ahead of the contest.

Over a span of three days in May 1944, Stalin accused the Turkic ethnic group of collaborating with the Nazis and deported them thousands of kilometres (miles) to the east, where nearly half them died in the harsh conditions.

Jamala's great-grandmother was in her mid-20s when she, her four sons and daughter were expelled, while her husband fought against the Nazis in the Soviet Army's ranks.

In a journey that took several weeks, about 8,000 people -- mostly the elderly and children -- died of thirst and typhoid.

Nazalkhan's daughter did not survive the tortuous trek and "her body was thrown from the car like garbage", Jamala recalled.

"I needed that song to free myself, to release the memory of my great-grandmother, the memory of that girl who has no grave, the memory of thousands of Crimean Tatars", who have nothing left, not "even photographs", Jamala said, tears flowing down her cheeks.

Jamala said she chose to compete in Eurovision because she wanted more people to hear a song written "in a state of helplessness" after Russia seized her land in 2014.

The United Nations, United States and the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) have repeatedly condemned widespread human rights violations against the Tatar community that began to occur after Russia's takeover.

The West has also sanctioned Russia for taking Crimea, which is still viewed by the United Nations as part of Ukraine.

The singer herself said she had not visited the peninsula in two years because she was "in the risk zone" for supporting Ukraine.

Her parents and some other relatives remained in Crimea and she misses them greatly, but understands their refusal to leave.

"This is our home. We returned there and nobody has the right to kick us out," Jamala said with a sigh.

source: the local

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Guards 'reject' migrants from Eurovision fan zone

Revellers are flocking to Stockholm to take part in the 2016 edition of the Eurovision Song Contest, but it seems not everyone is welcome at the city’s specially designated fan zone.

Eurovision 2016 Come together

Held with the tagline 'Come Together', the Swedish capital has invested around 95 million kronor in a swish fan area at the city’s Kungsträdgården park. Yet a report from national broadcaster SVT suggests the seemingly inclusive motto isn’t true for all.
The state broadcaster has posted a video on its website that purportedly shows one of the guards from the fan area asking an EU migrant to leave the premises and await the arrival of the police. When a Swedish speaker is seen with the migrant asked why his counterpart must wait outside, the guard replies that they “don’t want people who take things”.
The speaker in question was Hans Caldaras from HEM, an association that works with homeless EU migrants in Sweden. He told SVT that the guard went on to show him and his counterpart a piece of paper containing rules for access to the Kungsträdgården fan area, the details of which were also captured on camera.
The paper states that it is forbidden to beg, pick up cans (which can be exchanged for money as part of Sweden’s national recycling scheme) or even “dress up like Micky Mouse” in the fan zone. Written in Romanian as well as Swedish, the document also states that “ni” (Swedish for the collective “you”) should “keep away from the area to avoid coming into contact with the police”.
Though the paper was not signed, the City of Stockholm later confirmed that they produced it in conjunction with the police.
“The written information was an attempt to efficiently communicate the rules of conduct that we have come up with together with the police in order to have a pleasant arrangement," explained Jesper Ackinger, the City of Stockholm’s Eurovision Song Contest Project Leader, before later elaborating that the note has now been taken out of use as it was “unfortunately worded”.
Stockholm Mayor Karin Manngård has subsequently moved to clarify the city's stance on access to the fan zone, saying that it is "unacceptable" to wrongfully reject entry to the park.
“Our events will be open to all, but that also means that everyone must follow the rules in place in the area," she wrote. "It is not acceptable if someone is wrongfully turned away and that should not occur. All staff that work at the event will do so in line with the city’s values”.

source:The local

A song of peace!

A beautiful Afghan song for peace and brotherhood

Hardcore porn shown on hacked billboard in Malmö

A woman was left in shock after hardcore porn footage appeared on a digital information board in central Malmö. 

The hacked billboard in Malmo

The graphic footage appeared on a street sign near the bus stop at Malmö's central station on Sunday afternoon.
"It was seriously hardcore porn," witness Maria Escalante told the Aftonbladet newspaper. 
 
"There was a group of guys standing there watching and I asked them if it had been going on for a while. They said it had."
 
She added that she missed her bus, meaning she was left at the bus stop for 15 minutes as the pornography continued. 

Footage of the sign posted on Aftonbladet shows passersby walking past as the porn plays at the bus stop. 
 
Global Agencies, the company that runs the sign on behalf of Malmö Stad, said they'd launched an investigation.
 
"The system should be secure and right now we can't answer how someone managed to hack it," Roger Starck told the paper. 
 
"I'm incredibly angry about this all, it should never have been able to happen."
 
"Someone has decided to mess around, and they've succeeded."
 In May last year, Sweden's public broadcaster SVT also had an unfortunate gaffe concerning hardcore footage after it accidentally sent an SMS to 60 children which included a link to a pornographic site.

source: The Local 

Sunday, May 8, 2016

Happy mothers day!

I want to congratulate this day for all kind mothers around the world!

Happy mothers day!

Why this fearless woman is the talk of Sweden

A brave woman who stood in front of Neo Nazi march
A woman who blocked the path of a group of neo-Nazis marching through a town in central Sweden has earned huge praise on social media after a picture of the incident went viral. 

Tess Asplund, an anti-racism activist from Stockholm, was in Borlänge to protest against a march by hundreds of neo-Nazis through the centre of the town on May 1st.
Traditionally a left-wing stronghold, where big Labour Day rallies are the norm, Borlänge has recently seen many voters lurch to the far-right.
The uniformed neo-Nazis were however far outnumbered by counter demonstrators like Asplund, who described the moment captured on camera to local radio station P4 Dalarna.
“I don’t think I even thought about it really, I just jumped out,” she said.
“I just thought: you shouldn’t be here. Then one of them stared at me and I stared back. He didn’t say anything and neither did I. Then the police came fairly quickly and took me away.”
Asplund said she often raised her fist at anti-fascist rallies in a gesture borrowed from Nelson Mandela.
The picture spread rapidly on social media on Tuesday as Swedes hailed the iconography of a lone woman bravely standing up to dark forces.
The picture was taken by David Lagerlöf, a photographer for Expo, an anti-racism group co-founded in 1995 by Millennium author Stieg Larsson.
Lagerlöf explained what he saw:
“These are the [Nordic Resistance Movement’s] leadership figures slowly walking towards her, and it looks like hers and the leader’s eyes meet, that they are staring at each other,” he told the TT newswire.
"When they are quite close to each other the police come along and push her away."
Social media users are already calling the shot the photo of the year, with many comparing it to an image often referred to as ‘The old lady with the bag’.
Hans Runesson’s classic photo from 1985 depicts a woman in Växjö, southern Sweden, wielding  a handbag as a weapon against a neo-Nazi demonstrator.
“I really don’t want to go that far, that picture is really iconic,” said Lagerlöf.
Source: The Local

Saturday, May 7, 2016

Democracy in practice

Elections: Labour's Sadiq Khan elected London mayor

This how the democracy be practiced in some part of the world. I hope in every country which claims they have a democrat government this should be proved in practice not just a motto.

well done UK!

Real Madrid and Barcelona fans!

Real Madrid and Barcelona fans.

Thursday, May 5, 2016

Weary asylum seekers choose to leave Sweden

Increasing numbers of asylum seekers are leaving Sweden and returning to their home countries, with many tiring of long waits for their applications to be processed. 

asylum seekers

Migration agency figures show a sharp drop in new asylum applications since the start of the year, when Sweden introduced ID checks at its borders.
New statistics also indicate that more and more asylum seekers are electing to withdraw their applications, newspaper Sydsvenskan reports. After an influx of 160,000 asylum seekers last year, many applicants now face year-long waits before the migration agency gets to the paperwork.
Kristina Ränner, a migration agency expert on asylum seekers who return home, told the newspaper:
“We are getting signals that asylum seekers are tiring of long processing times and that things have not turned out as they expected in Sweden.”
Among asylum seekers from Iraq the tide has now turned so far that the number of people who have cancelled their applications this year (1,366) outnumbers the number of new asylum seekers from that country (1,243).
A similar trend can be seen among Afghans. With statistics showing that only 18 percent of Afghans are likely to have their asylum applications approved, many are choosing to leave of their own accord. In all, 500 people from Afghanistan have withdrawn their applications this year.
“The climate here in Sweden has toughened considerably. That leads to a new kind of decision,” said Kristina Ränner.
Iraqi and Afghan citizens are entitled to apply for grants of 75,000 kronor ($9,300) per family to help them settle back into life in their home countries. Sweden only disburses the money once they have returned home.

The Local



Journey a film about immigrants.

#Musaferat is a film which is about those who leave their houses and countries and the problems they encountering during their trips.

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

Stockholm taxi drivers 'help clients find prostitutes'

Drivers from Stockholm’s biggest taxi firm are suspected of helping fuel the sex trade despite the purchase of sex being illegal in Sweden, a TV4 report shows.
Taxi Companies


Ten out of 14 drivers were happy to help a reporter with a hidden camera who claimed to want to find a prostitute. 
The drivers gave the reporter tips on how to find prostitutes, how much to pay, and how to avoid detection by the police. 
“This is pure illegal activity, and they are consciously engaging in it,” said Simon Häggström, the head of a police unit that combats prostitution in the Swedish capital. 
The report also shows a taxi driver picking up a prostitute and taking her to a secluded car park. When the driver notices the camera he and the woman both exit the car through the rear doors. 
The driver denied paying for sex when confronted by the reporter, but police say they have arrested several taxi drivers in the area around Malmskillnadsgatan, the street in Stockholm most closely associated with the sex trade. 
“What you have found shows that there may be individuals who are facilitating this. It is unacceptable and deeply unfortunate,” Taxi Stockholm’s CEO Johan Lagerhäl told TV4. 
It is not illegal to sell sexual services in Sweden, but in 1999 the country became the first place in the world to criminalize buying sex, in a move designed to punish clients rather than those working in the industry. 
The law helped halve the number of streetwalkers in Sweden's cities by 2010, but the country is still facing a growing problem of sex sold over the internet and via mobile apps. 
The Local

The asylum seekers deportation will be quicken!

Refugee
The asylum seekers whose case were denied, should return to their own countries. This news was declared by the ministers of migration affairs and minister of homeland during a press conference on Monday afternoon. Anders Begaman minister of homeland said " To prevent the denied asylum seekers underground life, the number immigration detention centers will be increased".

Sunday, May 1, 2016

Swedish premier pledges 5,000 'emergency' jobs


Under the government proposal, 5,000 emergency jobs will be created by government bodies by 2020.
Contingency jobs will be paid the going rate under collective agreements. The jobs will extend over a maximum of two years.
"This is obviously not the whole solution, but it is part of the solution," Löfven concluded.
Sweden took in a record 160,000 asylum seekers in 2015 before introducing ID checks to stem the flow. 
The influx put the country’s finances and housing under strain and Prime Minister Stefan Löfven faced a hearing at the parliamentary constitutional committee on Friday morning to answer questions about Sweden’s handling of the crisis.

Roaming charges decreased in all over EU

Roaming charges

According to the agreement between the EU members,from 30th of April the roaming charges will decreased dramatically.
 The roaming charges will be decreased for data users and it will be 66 percent for calling and sms.
 From 15 January 2017 their will be no roaming charges in EU members and all EU will be come like a single digital market. For example if person have a contracted mobile plan will be able to talk or use the data the same he/she would do it in his/her home country.
The roaming charge decreasing apply only for those who have a contracted mobile plan.  

The Beauty of Swedish nature

Sweden have one of the most beautiful nature in Europe specially during the summer. Summer in Sweden starts from the 1st of may. The last day of April the people in Sweden make a big fire and by this fire they from one side say goodby to spring and from the other side they welcome the beautiful summer to Sweden.
 
Härnösand in mid north of Sweden

Summer