Why is Denmark trying to send abuse survivors back to Syria?
Impact Newsletter
Your guide to the feminist revolution — delivered straight to your inbox, every Monday.
Welcome to the Impact newsletter, your guide to global feminism. This week, I am very proud to share an investigation into the plight of Syrian domestic violence survivors in Denmark. This article is a product of more than two years of reporting from my colleagues and I as we sought to understand how some of the most vulnerable refugees found themselves on the wrong end of Denmark’s hardline asylum seeker policy.?
If you’re pressed for time, here are the main points in brief:?
In the video, Faten’s ex-husband Wael plays with an unloaded gun. He spins it around his finger. He snaps the magazine in and out of place. All the while he talks to her, speaking directly into the camera.?
“You are lucky because you are in Europe,” he says. “But you will be back for sure.”
“I am in Syria, waiting for you,” he continues.?
“Europe will indeed send you back.”
He places the gun against his temple and pulls the trigger: “I am going to shoot you in the head like this.”
Faten and her children live in the suburbs of a Danish city. (We are not using the real names of her or her husband, or naming the city, because of his threats against her.) Her body is still scarred from Wael’s abuse. She says that in Syria he would burn her arms with cigarettes, beat her and cut her with a knife. He tried to force her to sell sex to his friends.?
Faten left him in 2011, the year the Syrian civil war began. She went to Damascus and married another man, moving with him to Iraq in 2013. “I didn't love him,” she says of her second husband. “But I wanted to escape and be far away.”
When Faten’s second husband left her, she fled to Europe with her mother and the children she had with Wael. They arrived in Denmark in 2015, along with tens of thousands of other Syrians.
领英推荐
But in 2019 the Danish government announced that Damascus was now considered safe enough for asylum-seekers to return to, stripping hundreds of Syrians of their right to live and work in Denmark. The decision was widely condemned by the U.N. refugee agency, the European Commission, and international human rights groups, who documented the risk of torture and forced disappearance under the government of Bashar al-Assad. This year, Danish authorities expanded the areas of Syria they designated as safe, including the western province of Latakia.?
More than 1,000 Syrian refugees have since had their permits reassessed and more than 100 have lost their final appeals since 2019. Denmark does not have diplomatic relations with Syria, so the government cannot actually return asylum-seekers there yet. Instead, those who have lost their right to stay are sent to one of three remote “return centers” in Denmark, where they cannot work or study, for an indefinite period.
When Faten heard about the policy, she was terrified. She knew what it could mean for her — that she could be returned to a country where Wael could find her and kill her. He had been surveilling her since she left him. “He was always following my news, asking friends and relatives about me and the girls.”
When Wael heard the news, he saw an opportunity. He found his ex-wife on Facebook and began to send the threatening videos, which have been viewed by New Lines for this story in partnership with investigative newsroom Lighthouse Reports.
“You are coming back from Denmark,” he says in one, while dressed in military fatigues (Faten thinks he might be fighting for the Syrian regime, or as part of a militia). “I will slaughter you.”
In March 2021, Faten received the letter she had been fearing: the Danish Immigration Service was revoking her residence permit.
When Faten heard about the policy, she was terrified. She knew what it could mean for her — that she could be returned to a country where Wael could find her and kill her. He had been surveilling her since she left him. “He was always following my news, asking friends and relatives about me and the girls.”
When Wael heard the news, he saw an opportunity. He found his ex-wife on Facebook and began to send the threatening videos, which have been viewed by New Lines for this story in partnership with investigative newsroom Lighthouse Reports.
“You are coming back from Denmark,” he says in one, while dressed in military fatigues (Faten thinks he might be fighting for the Syrian regime, or as part of a militia). “I will slaughter you.”
In March 2021, Faten received the letter she had been fearing: the Danish Immigration Service was revoking her residence permit.