Archive for 'Københavns Kommune'

Københavns Kommune forudser, at der hvert år kommer 700 nye, unge indvandrere til, som står på spring til at blive optaget i bander og leve af kriminalitet.

For første gang vil Københavns Kommune sætte massivt ind over for 18-25 årige indvandrere, der er på vej ud i kriminalitet eller allerede har begået kriminalitet.

Det sker i erkendelse af, at kommunens indsats over for unge under 18 år ikke har kunnet hindre en stigning i antallet af utilpassede unge indvandrere.”

Kilde: JP, d. 13. september 2009 “Tusinder af unge kan ende i bander

Mit eget gæt er, at det primært er i områder med mange muslimer.

Antallet af påsatte brander ligger tilsyneladende på knap 10:

“I den seneste uge har der været 20 containerbrande i København, det er mere end dobbelt så mange som ugen forinden. Forældrene skal tage ansvar, lyder det fra politi og far til børn.”

Kilde: Berlingske Tidende, d. 27. august 2009 “Påsatte brande er dagligdag i København

Det voldsomt stigende indvandrerkriminalitet og bandekrigen påvirker københavnerne.

“Københavns Politi har i samarbejde med kommunen netop offentliggjort et nyt tryghedsbarometer, der baserer sig på kriminalstatistik og spørgsmål blandt 7.000 af byens borgere. Kortlægningen viser, at 92 procent føler sig trygge ved at færdes i deres nabolag om dagen. Til gengæld svarer hver tredje, at de ikke er meget for at bevæge sig ud om aftenen eller i nattelivet. “

Kilde: Politiken. d. 22. august 2009 “Der er ikke flere tilfælde af grov vold

Hvis udviklingen fortsætter i år, vil det endelige tal for behandlede skud og stik ende på 84 sager mod 95 sidste år. “

Baseret på årtiers erfaring synes han dog, at der er sket en brutalisering i visse miljøer, og at tærsklen for at bruge våben og grov vold er blevet sænket:

»Man kan sige, at de virkelig alvorlige sager er blevet alvorligere, end dengang jeg begyndte som betjent. Der er mindre respekt for menneskeliv og kommet for meget knald på skydevåbnene, hvilket bandekrigen illustrerer«, siger han.”

Kilde: Politiken, d. 22. august 2009 “Der er ikke flere tilfælde af grov vold

Der er mange data om den ekstreme indvandrerkriminalitet på denne blog. Desværre viser det sig nu, at problemet er meget større. F.eks. bliver 70 % af volden på Nørrebro slet ikke anmeldt… Puha.

Her er tallene for, hvor stor en andel af forbrydelser som aldrig bliver anmeldt:

  • Vold: 70 procent
  • Trusler: 86 procent
  • Indbrud: 40 procent
  • Tyveri: 47 procent
  • Narkotika: 97 procent
  • Hærværk: 90 procent
  • Chikane: 95 procent.

Kilde: Politiken, d. 15. august 2009 “Borgerne fortier grov kriminalitet

F’ørst et udpluk:

“The numbers are startling. Only 3.2 per cent of Spain’s population was foreign-born in 1998. In 2007 it was 13.4 per cent. Europe’s Muslim population has more than doubled in the past 30 years and will have doubled again by 2015. In Brussels, the top seven baby boys’ names recently were Mohamed, Adam, Rayan, Ayoub, Mehdi, Amine and Hamza.”

Og så hele den fantastisk vigtige artikel (send den meget gerne videre til venner, bekendte, kolleger osv.):

Britain and the rest of the European Union are ignoring a demographic time bomb: a recent rush into the EU by migrants, including millions of Muslims, will change the continent beyond recognition over the next two decades, and almost no policy-makers are talking about it.

The numbers are startling. Only 3.2 per cent of Spain’s population was foreign-born in 1998. In 2007 it was 13.4 per cent. Europe’s Muslim population has more than doubled in the past 30 years and will have doubled again by 2015. In Brussels, the top seven baby boys’ names recently were Mohamed, Adam, Rayan, Ayoub, Mehdi, Amine and Hamza.

Europe’s low white birth rate, coupled with faster multiplying migrants, will change fundamentally what we take to mean by European culture and society. The altered population mix has far-reaching implications for education, housing, welfare, labour, the arts and everything in between. It could have a critical impact on foreign policy: a study was submitted to the US Air Force on how America’s relationship with Europe might evolve. Yet EU officials admit that these issues are not receiving the attention they deserve.

Jerome Vignon, the director for employment and social affairs at the European Commission, said that the focus of those running the EU had been on asylum seekers and the control of migration rather than the integration of those already in the bloc. “It has certainly been underestimatede_SLps there is a general rhetoric that social integration of migrants should be given as much importance as monitoring the inflow of migrants.” But, he said, the rhetoric had rarely led to policy.

The countries of the EU have long histories of welcoming migrants, but in recent years two significant trends have emerged. Migrants have come increasingly from outside developed economies, and they have come in accelerating numbers.

The growing Muslim population is of particular interest. This is not because Muslims are the only immigrants coming into the EU in large numbers; there are plenty of entrants from all points of the compass. But Muslims represent a particular set of issues beyond the fact that atrocities have been committed in the West in the name of Islam.

America’s Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life, part of the non-partisan Pew Research Center, said in a report: “These [EU] countries possess deep historical, cultural, religious and linguistic traditions. Injecting hundreds of thousands, and in some cases millions, of people who look, speak and act differently into these settings often makes for a difficult social fit.”

How dramatic are the population changes? Everyone is aware that certain neighbourhoods of certain cities in Europe are becoming more Muslim, and that the change is gathering pace. But raw details are hard to come by as the data is sensitive: many countries in the EU do not collect population statistics by religion.

EU numbers on general immigration tell a story on their own. In the latter years of the 20th century, the 27 countries of the EU attracted half a million more people a year than left. “Since 2002, however,” the latest EU report says, “net migration into the EU has roughly tripled to between 1.6 million and two million people per year.”

The increased pace has made a nonsense of previous forecasts. In 2004 the EU thought its population would decline by 16 million by 2050. Now it thinks it will increase by 10 million by 2060. Britain is expected to become the most populous EU country by 2060, with 77 million inhabitants. Right now it has 20 million fewer people than Germany. Italy’s population was expected to fall precipitously; now it is predicted to stay flat.

The study for the US Air Force by Leon Perkowski in 2006 found that there were at least 15 million Muslims in the EU, and possibly as many as 23 million. They are not uniformly distributed, of course. According to the US’s Migration Policy Institute, residents of Muslim faith will account for more than 20 per cent of the EU population by 2050 but already do so in a number of cities. Whites will be in a minority in Birmingham by 2026, says Christopher Caldwell, an American journalist, and even sooner in Leicester. Another forecast holds that Muslims could outnumber non-Muslims in France and perhaps in all of western Europe by mid-century. Austria was 90 per cent Catholic in the 20th century but Islam could be the majority religion among Austrians aged under 15 by 2050, says Mr Caldwell.

Projected growth rates are a disputed area. Birth rates can be difficult to predict and migrant numbers can ebb and flow. But Karoly Lorant, a Hungarian economist who wrote a paper for the European Parliament, calculates that Muslims already make up 25 per cent of the population in Marseilles and Rotterdam, 20 per cent in Malmo, 15 per cent in Brussels and Birmingham and 10 per cent in London, Paris and Copenhagen.

Recent polls have tended to show that the feared radicalisation of Europe’s Muslims has not occurred. That gives hope that the newcomers will integrate successfully. Nonetheless, second and third generations of Muslims show signs of being harder to integrate than their parents. Policy Exchange, a British study group, found that more than 70 per cent of Muslims over 55 felt that they had as much in common with non-Muslims as Muslims. But this fell to 62 per cent of 16-24 year-olds.

The population changes are stirring unease on the ground. Europeans often tell pollsters that they have had enough immigration, but politicians largely avoid debate.

France banned the wearing of the hijab veil in schools and stopped the wearing of large crosses and the yarmulke too, so making it harder to argue that the law was aimed solely at Muslims. Britain has strengthened its laws on religious hatred. But these are generally isolated pieces of legislation.

Into the void has stepped a resurgent group of extreme-Right political parties, among them the British National Party, which gained two seats at recent elections to the European Parliament. Geert Wilders, the Dutch politician who speaks against Islam and was banned this year from entering Britain, has led opinion polls in Holland.

The Pew Forum identified the mainstream silence in 2005: “The fact that [extreme parties] have risen to prominence at all speaks poorlye_SLps about the state and quality of the immigration debate. [Scholars] have argued that European elites have yet to fully grapple with the broader issues of race and identity surrounding Muslims and other groups for fear of being seen as politically incorrect.”

The starting point should be greater discussion of integration. Does it matter at all? Yes, claims Mr Vignon at the European Commission. Without it, polarisation and ghettoes can result. “It’s bad because it creates antagonism. It antagonises poor people against other poor people: people with low educational attainment feel threatened,” he says.

The EU says employment rates for non-EU nationals are lower than for nationals, which holds back economic advancement and integration. One important reason for this is a lack of language skills. The Migration Policy Institute says that, in 2007, 28 per cent of children born in England and Wales had at least one foreign-born parent. That rose to 54 per cent in London. Overall in 2008, 14.4 per cent of children in primary schools had a language other than English as their first language.

Muslims, who are a hugely diverse group, have so far shown little inclination to organise politically on lines of race or religion. But that does not mean their voices are being ignored. Germany started to reform its voting laws 10 years ago, granting certain franchise rights to the large Turkish population. It would be odd if that did not alter the country’s stance on Turkey’s application to join the EU. Mr Perkowski’s study says: “Faced with rapidly growing, disenfranchised and increasingly politically empowered Muslim populations within the borders of some of its oldest and strongest allies, the US could be faced with ever stronger challenges to its Middle East foreign policies.”

Demography will force politicians to confront these issues sooner rather than later. Recently, some have started to nudge the debate along. Angel Gurría, the OECD secretary-general, said in June: “Migration is not a tap that can be turned on and off at will. We need fair and effective migration and integration policies; policies that work and adjust to both good economic times and bad ones.”

Kilde og link: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/5994047/Muslim-Europe-the-demographic-time-bomb-transforming-our-continent.html

“Bøsser og lesbiske i København bliver flere gange om ugen banket eller hånet på grund af deres seksuelle orientering.

Det fremgår af en analyse fra Københavns Kommune, der viser, at homoseksuelle i løbet af det seneste år har registreret sig udsat for et overgreb hver tredje dag.

De fleste overgreb sker på gader eller offentlige pladser og knap halvdelen er voldelige. Det viser tallene, som de homoseksuelle selv har indrapporteret på hjemmesiden www.registrerdiskrimination.kk.dk. (eksternt link)

Ni ud af ti melder ikke overfaldet
»Det viser, at vi har et kæmpe problem. Vi er nødt til at kigge på den intolerance, der er over for homoseksuelle i visse miljøer, og vi er også nødt til at få en øget politiindsats i de områder, hvor der er et homoseksuelt miljø i København, siger næstformand for kommunens socialudvalg, Lars Aslan Rasmussen (S).

Han er blandt initiativtagerne til den elektroniske registrering på kommunens hjemmeside, der nu har fungeret et år og bl.a. viser, at ni ud af ti ikke tidligere har anmeldt det, når de blev udsat for et overgreb.

»Så man kan frygte, at der er en del mørketal på området med overgreb, der aldrig bliver registreret«, siger Lars Aslan Rasmussen.

Efterkommere efter indvandrere får skylden
Ifølge Landsforeningen for Bøsser og Lesbiske har hovedparten af overfaldsmændene anden bagrund end dansk.

»Der er et problem i nogle indvandrermiljøer, og derfor er vi nødt til at lave en kampagne rettet mod de her miljøer om, at det er i orden at være homoseksuel. I den forbindelse spiller skolen selvfølgelig en rolle, men det gør så sandelig også politikere med indvandrerbaggrund og imamer«, siger Lars Aslan Rasmussen.

Af de i alt 179 overgreb, som bøsser og lesbiske har rapporteret siden slutningen af juni sidste år, er 133 sket inden for det seneste år.

100 af dem er sket i den indre by.”

Kilde: Politiken, d. 24. juni 2009 “Mange overgreb mod bøsser i København

Den 1. januar 2009 boede der 518.574 personer i København. I løbet af 2008 steg folketallet med 8.713 personer.

I 2008 steg antallet af indvandrere med 5.260 personer til 82.374, og antallet af efterkommere steg med 698 til 27.491 personer.
Den 1. januar 2009 udgør indvandrere og efterkommere i alt 21,2 pct. af den københavnske befolkning.
Den 1. januar 2009 boede der 67.548 udenlandske statsborgere i København, hvilket svarer til 13 pct. af Københavns befolkning.

Kilde: Københavns Kommunes Statistikkontor.

“Praktiserende læger i Vollsmose og på den københavnske vestegn kan ikke sælge deres praksisser. Samtidig er nyoprettede praksis-numre ledige, fordi ingen ønsker at arbejde i områder med mange indvandrere og sociale problemer.”

“Når de 10.000 beboere i Odense-forstaden Vollsmose skal til lægen, må de tage ind til byen, for der er ikke længere en praktiserende læge i området. For halvandet år siden gik bydelens sidste praktiserende læge på pension efter forgæves at have forsøgt at sælge sin praksis.”

“Lise Dyhr er praktiserende læge i Brøndby Strand, hvor hun har 80 procent nydanskere blandt sine patienter. Desuden forsker hun på Københavns Universitet i indvandrernes møde med det danske sundhedsvæsen.Hun mener, at arbejdet i lægeklinikken er tungt, men det skyldes ikke patienternes etniske baggrund eller sprogvanskeligheder, men i højere grad sociale problemer, idet en stor del af patienterne er på overførselsindkomster.

- Vi bruger rigtig lang tid på at udfylde attester til kommunen. Alle skal jo aktiveres, men der er ikke noget arbejde til disse mennesker. De er pressede og frustrerede, og jeg føler, at jeg sidder som læge med nogle problemer, der slet ikke kan løses af en læge, siger Lise Dyhr, der understreger, at hun er glad for arbejdet.

- Det er spændende, men krævende. Det tager meget tid, når vi har patienter, der ikke kan læse og skrive, og som har svært ved at forstå reglerne i Danmark omkring for eksempel medicin. Sådan nogle ting tager altså længere tid end en almindelig konsultation for halsbetændelse, og når vi samtidig er for få om arbejdet, bliver vi trætte, siger hun.”

Den danske folkeskoles økonomi lider under stadigt stigende udgifter til specialundervisning. Dette betyder dårligere fysiske rammer og flere børn i klasserne. Hvad der indtil nu ikke har været fremme er, at meget af denne dyre specialundervisning gives til indvandrerbørn.

Indvandrerbørn er i klar overvægt på de københavnske skoler for udviklingshæmmede og elever med fysiske handicap. Det viser en opgørelse, som Lars Aslan Rasmussen (S), der er næstformand i børne- og ungdomsudvalget i Københavns borgerrepræsentation, har fået kommunen til at lave. 51 procent af børnene på de tre kommunale specialskoler for børn med fysiske og psykiske handicap har indvandrerbaggrund og på en enkelt af skolerne er tallet 70 procent.

Tallene ligger dermed væsentlige højere end den generelle andel af indvandrerbørn i kommunen, som er på 33 procent. De mange handicappede børn er et klart bevis på, at der er fætter-kusine ægteskaber i indvandrerfamilierne, siger Lars Aslan Rasmussen.”

Kilde: Jydske Vestkysten, d. 4. april 2009 “Tosprogede i overtal på handicapskoler

« Previous posts Back to top