Sweden’s parliament passed a law on Monday allowing authorities to revoke immigrants’ residency permits based on bad behaviour, ​such as having unpaid debts, doing undeclared work or ‌links to extremist organisations.

The law, which covers pending permits but also retroactively already granted permits, is part of a wider tightening of immigration ​rules by the right-wing government and its support party, ​the nationalist Sweden Democrats, ahead of a parliamentary election ⁠in September.

The law has been criticised by the opposition and ​human rights advocacy groups as arbitrary because decisions would be taken ​on behaviour that has not been deemed criminal.

    • OccamsTeapot@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      13 hours ago

      The law does ​not specify what ​types of behaviours ⁠are deemed unacceptable but the government has mentioned unpaid debts, not paying taxes, criminality and ​links to extremist organisations.

      • frongt@lemmy.zip
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        12 hours ago

        Ah, then it’s definitely a bad law. (I’m on a limited connection and loading pages is very slow, so I hadn’t read the article.)

        I’d really appreciate it if articles made a point of actually linking to the damn law, but in this case I guess it would be in Swedish.

        • OccamsTeapot@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          12 hours ago

          Yeah they should link to it anyway!

          And yes, this is a bad law. Rushed in a few months before an election by a right-wing coalition including the fascist SD. Things went badly so now they’re throwing scraps to the frothing racists in their base in a desperate attempt to maintain power. They don’t care if it’s a good law, it’s chum for dumbasses.

      • Maeve@kbin.earth
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        13 hours ago

        According to my state’s written down rules, there’s a void for vagueness doctrine that’s written down. In practice, though…ay yi yi