“Sweden is not the country” for immigrants who won’t adapt to liberal values, the country’s migration minister has sad
Immigrants hoping to become Swedish citizens must demonstrate that they have lived an “honest life” and commit to respecting the Nordic nation’s liberal values, under new rules announced by Migration Minister Johan Forssell
The new regulations were proposed by a government-appointed commission and adopted by the government this week, Forssell said at a press conference on Tuesday. They will come into force next year
Under the new system, immigrants applying for citizenship will have to prove that they have resided in Sweden for eight years, and that they have lived an “honest life” – with no criminal convictions or outstanding debts – both before and after arriving in Sweden
Currently, Swedish authorities only examine applicants’ conduct after arrival, and immigrants may apply for citizenship after five years
”This is particularly important at a time when Sweden has welcomed hundreds of thousands of people from many parts of the world in recent years,” Forssell told reporters. “You should feel proud to be a Swedish citizen, and you only feel proud once you’ve made an effort.”
Forssell said that immigrants will have to prove that they accept Swedish values, including the equality of women and the LGBT community.
”If you don’t accept that, Sweden is not the country for you,” he stated.
Forssell’s press conference came four months after he announced that Sweden would begin paying immigrants to return to their home countries, in what he called “a paradigm shift in our migration policy.”
Back in 2015, then-Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom declared Sweden a “humanitarian superpower” and opened its borders to over 160,000 asylum seekers, more per capita than any other European country. Just under a million people, mostly from the Middle East and North Africa, have immigrated to Sweden in the years since.
Along with these arrivals came an increase in violent crime, with cases of murder and manslaughter almost doubling between 2012 and 2023, and sexual offenses increasing by 56% between 2013 and 2021. According to a 2017 investigation by the Dagens Nyheter newspaper, 90% of the perpetrators of shootings in Sweden are either first- or second-generation immigrants.
Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson vowed to take action against the growing problem of migrant crime in late 2023 after three people were murdered within the span of 12 hours amid a feud between rival Middle-Eastern drug gangs.
Last August, the Swedish government announced that more people were leaving the country than arriving “for the first time in a century.”
The government commission has also recommended that Sweden strip citizenship from dual-citizens who commit crimes that threaten national security. Justice Minister Gunnar Strommer said on Tuesday that parliament will vote on the matter next year.