Denmark Strips 94 Syrian Refugees of Residency Permits

Denmark has stripped 94 Syrian refugees of their residency permits after deciding Damascus and its surrounding regions are safe for people to return to.
"We have made it clear to the Syrian refugees that
their residence permit is temporary. It can be withdrawn if protection is no
longer needed," Immigration minister Mattias Tesfaye said as his ministry
extended the parts of Syria considered safe to include the southern Rif Dimashq
Governorate.
The decision on the Rif Dimashq area of Syria will
mean a further 350 Syrian residents in Denmark will have their temporary
protection permits reassessed, on top of the roughly 900 from around Damascus
who had their cases reopened last year.
“That the Danish government is seeking to force people
back into the hands of this brutal regime is an appalling affront to refugee
law and people’s right to be safe from persecution,” Steve Valdez-Symonds,
refugee and migrant rights director at Amnesty International UK, told the Daily
Mail.
“This reckless violation of Denmark’s duty to provide
asylum also risks increasing incentives for other countries to abandon their
own obligations to Syrian refugees.
Not only will this put the lives of even more women,
men, and children at risk. It will add to reasons that cause people to travel
ever further afield in search of safety and security for themselves and their
family," he added.
According to the UN, Denmark receives more than 19,000
Syrians and sets tough conditions for granting permanent residence, including
residing in the country for eight years and having an uninterrupted job in the
last three years, in addition to volunteering for a minimum of one year.