Hossen Sohel of DOT
Denmark plans to house the country’s most unwelcome foreigners in a most unwelcoming place: a tiny, hard-to-reach island that now holds the laboratories, stables and crematory of a centre for researching contagious animal diseases, reports New York Times.
As if to make the message clearer, one of the two ferries that serve the island is called the Virus.
“They are unwanted in Denmark, and they will feel that,” Inger Stojberg, the country’s immigration minister, wrote on Facebook.
On Friday, the centre-right government and the right-wing Danish People’s Party announced an agreement to house as many as 100 people on Lindholm Island — foreigners who have been convicted of crimes and rejected asylum-seekers who cannot be returned to their home countries.
The 17-acre island, in an inlet of the Baltic Sea, lies about 2 miles from the nearest shore, and ferry service is infrequent. Foreigners will be required to report at the island centre daily, and face imprisonment if they do not.
“We’re going to minimise the number of ferry departures as much as at all possible,” Martin Henriksen, a spokesman for the Danish People’s Party on immigration, told TV 2. “We’re going to make it as cumbersome and expensive as possible.”
The deal allocates about $115 million over four years for immigrant facilities on the island, which are scheduled to open in 2021.
Finance Minister Kristian Jensen, who led the negotiations, said the island was not a prison, but added that anyone placed there would have to sleep there.
Louise Holck, deputy executive director of The Danish Institute for Human Rights, said her organisation would watch the situation “very closely” for possible violations of Denmark’s international obligations.