Citat:
Jag misstänker att denna historia inte är riktigt sann. 1. "Hayat" hade knappast hunnit få något uppehållstillstånd om han kom till Sverige under sommaren 2015. 2. Om "Hayat" behandlades som ensamkommande barn så blev han inte hänvisad till jobb som snickare eller liknande, utan till en skola där han rekordsnabbt kunde ha tagit studenten som bästa eleven och därefter hade han även kunnat fortsätta sina universitetstudier här. Men fästmön hade fått vänta några år i Kabul.
Jag förstår inte poängen med att sprida lögner som detta. Kan inte journalisterna kolla fakta innan?
Jag förstår inte poängen med att sprida lögner som detta. Kan inte journalisterna kolla fakta innan?
Lite mer om fallet;
" Everything was “cool” he said, at least, at first.
“I saw that the camp for minors was better,” he says with a grin. “They had better food, there were doctors for the kids, and sports. They gave us bus cards and sent us to school.”
So this enterprising 23-year-old college graduate told the immigration authorities that he was 17, and had not finished high school.
Once his Swedish was up to speed, Hooman found himself in the 9th grade.
“I learned lots of things,” he laughed.
But reality soon sank in.
“I wanted to get a job,” he sighed. “It was taking lots of time.”
Once Hooman celebrated his “18th” birthday, he was transferred to the men’s camp, where, he says, conditions were not as comfortable.
“They just gave you 1,000 krona (about $124) per month for soap, shampoo, etc.” he said. “The food was not good. if you were sick, it could take a month or more to get to a doctor. In a month you could be dead.”
He also learned that his dreams of a quick residency permit were likely to be dashed.
“They told me that it would take me two years for a residency letter,” he said. “And after that it could take another four or five years to get a job. I didn’t want to waste my time.”
Hooman called his parents for advice.
“They told me, if you can find a way to stay and get a Master’s degree, then do it,” he recalls. “But if I was going to have to repeat school, then I should come home.”
He finally came clean with the migration authorities — he said he was actually looking for a graduate program in history. They offered to help, he said, but by that time he was ready to call a halt to his experiment in international living."
http://paiwandgah.af/a-returning-migrant-tells-his-tale-of-struggle-and-disillusion/