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IMMIGRATION

Norwegian court orders asylum seeker to leave 19 years after he arrived

An asylum seeker who has lived in Norway for 19 years has been ordered to leave after the Oslo District Court upheld a decision to deport him after he confirmed his identity and country of origin.

Pictured is a gavel and hammer.
Oslo District Court has said that an asylum seeker will need to leave Norway 19 years after arriving into the country. Photo by Tingey Injury Law Firm on Unsplash

Suel Kassembo, from Burundi, faces deportation from Norway after the Oslo District Court rejected his appeal to have the deportation decision from Norway’s immigration authorities overturned.

The authorities decided to deport him after he clarified his identity years after his initial asylum application was denied. The application had been rejected as authorities could not verify his details at the time.

The court ruled that he would likely not be in danger if he was returned to Burundi.

“The court has … concluded that Kassembo is not exposed to a real risk of persecution if he returns to Burundi,” the judgement stated.

Kassembo claimed he travelled to Norway at the age of 16 as a stowaway aboard a ship after his family were killed in an attack on his childhood home during the civil war in Burundi in 2004.

At the time of his initial asylum application, most applications from those fleeing Burundi were granted due to the “general unsafe security situation” in the country.

The authorities doubted whether Kassembo came from Burundi as he spoke Swahili and not Kirundi, which is the dominant language in Burundi.

His lawyers argued that he would have probably been granted political asylum and residency in 2007 if the authorities had believed his story, which he had only been able to back up with evidence earlier this year.

However, this was rejected by the district court in Oslo.

“Even if UNE’s (the Immigration Appeals Board) refusal of asylum in 2007 was invalid, it will not mean that Kassembo will at any time be treated as if he had had legal residence in Norway,” the judgement read.

The Immigration Appeals Board also believed that the documentation provided was not reliable enough to establish that he is from Burundi. Nevertheless, the authorities want to deport him to Burundi as the evidence provided established a country of origin for him to be returned to.

Kassembo and those involved in his fight to stay in Norway have decided to take the case to the Court of Appeal to try to overturn the ruling.

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IMMIGRATION

Norway’s immigration authority closes 1,000 cases into suspected cheating

Norway’s Directorate of Immigration (UDI) has dismissed more than 1,000 cases where applicants were suspected of providing false information, its director confirmed to public broadcaster NRK.

Norway's immigration authority closes 1,000 cases into suspected cheating

The Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) has dismissed more than 1,000 asylum and immigration cases after it had been told to reduce the queue of cases by the Ministry of Justice, public broadcaster NRK reports.

Frode Forfang, director of UDI, told NRK that the UDI chose to close cases where there were suspicions that false information had been provided to prioritise what it considered to be the most pressing and serious cases .

“We were in a situation where a large number of cases were created, but our capacity was not proportionate to the number of cases. This meant that we did not get a good enough grip on the matters that we believe are the most serious. At the same time, it led to a good number of these cases becoming very old,” he said.

“Many people lived in uncertainty for a long time because we did not have the capacity,” he added.

The UDI also decided last year that cases older than three years old would not be reopened, according to the report from NRK.

Figures from the UDI provided to the broadcaster show that 78 people have been deported from Norway due to false information submitted with their asylum cases over the past six years.

In recent years, the rules for deporting those who have provided false information in asylum applications have been softened.

Over the last six years, nearly 900 people in Norway have received a new residence permit after their original one was withdrawn after the UDI had uncovered falsehoods in the original applications.

Forfang said it was important for the UDI to focus on cases where the applicant would likely be deported.

“We think that it is more important to work on those cases where we believe that the person in question may end up having to leave Norway, rather than those cases where the person in question will anyway be allowed to stay in Norway through a new permit,” Forfang said.

The UDI has previously told The Local that it had its budget cut. The directorate warned that this could mean longer waiting times for residence, asylum and citizenship in Norway.

“These budget cuts will reduce the UDI’s ability to process cases and respond to inquiries efficiently. A decrease in capacity to process cases may lead to extended waiting times for residency and citizenship applications, although this will also depend on the volume of cases received,” Beate Sveen, the UDI’s Director of Finance, told The Local last month.

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