Published 12 November 2024 at 08.23
Domestic. In a motion in the Riksdag, member Josef Fransson (SD) proposes that deportation in the event of a crime should be regulated by a regulation instead of being left to the discretion of the courts.
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Josef Fransson emphasizes in his motion, which is now being prepared in the social security committee, that it is difficult for many Swedish citizens to understand why foreign citizens can sometimes be convicted of serious crimes without is deported.
He criticizes that it is currently up to the prosecutor to request deportation, which according to him happens with great variation.
The Sweden Democrats have previously suggested that requesting deportation should be mandatory in certain crimes. But Fransson questions whether the question of deportation should be on the court's table at all or whether it should be decided by predetermined rules.
“Based on the above reasoning, I mean asking whether deportation could be determined relatively easily in a regulation, based on the crime category and penalty. In this way, arbitrariness is avoided, while the criteria are democratized,” he writes.
Josef Fransson comments on X the high-profile incident with the prosecutor who allowed two rapists to stay in Sweden.
“Lazy/forgetful/cowardly/activist prosecutors and judges allow serious criminals to stay in Sweden,” he writes.
Lazy/forgetful/cowardly/activist prosecutors and judges allow serious criminals to stay in Sweden. Here is my proposal how we solve the problem:
“As a citizen, it is difficult to accept how foreign citizens can many times commit and be convicted of serious crimes without being deported. It… https://t.co/35qmUg4UXS pic.twitter.com/buCPwyywHZ
— Josef Fransson (@FranssonJosef) November 11, 2024
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