Somalis in Norway

Somalis in Norway are citizens and residents of Norway who are of Somali descent. They are the biggest African migration group in Norway. 36.5% of Somalis in Norway live in the capital Oslo.[3] Almost all Somali in Norway have come to Norway as refugees from the Somali Civil War. In 2016, Somalis were the largest non-Western migrant group in Norway.[4]

Somalis in Norway
Total population
43,273 (2020 Official Norway estimate)[1] 0.80% of the Norwegian population
Regions with significant populations
Oslo
Languages
Somali, Norwegian
Religion
Islam

The first Somalis in Norway were sailors and arrived in the country during the 1970s. After a failed coup in Somalia in 1978 the first refugees came to Norway which were followed by more during 1980s. During this period most Somalis who came to Norway belonged to the Issaq-clan. After the Somali Civil War broke out in 1991 the number of asylum seekers increased. During the 1990s and up to about 2001, most asylum seekers said they belonged to the Hawiye clan which resides in the southern part of Somalia.[5]

Demographics

According to Statistics Norway, as of 2020, there were 28,554 immigrants from Somalia living in Norway and 14,719 people who were born in Norway to two Somali-born parents.[1] The number of Somalis in Norway has more than doubled since the mid-2000s. According to social researcher Anders Næss, "This rapid population growth is attributable to high birth rates, family reunification, and a continuing stream of asylum seekers, and creates a highly diverse population in terms of residency duration, migration experiences, education, and acquired familiarity with a Norwegian cultural and institutional context".[6]

According to the Oslo Municipality, as of 2014, a total of 8,758 Somalia-born immigrants reside in Oslo. Of those individuals, many arrived during the 2000-2004 period (2,811 persons).[7]

In 2004, Somali women had the highest nativity rate in Norway with 4.4 children per female, in contrast to 1.73 for Norwegian women.[8]

Culture

Sociologist Katrine Fangen conducted interviews with 50 Somalis living in Norway. According to her interviews, both men and women were positive towards gender equality in terms of both men and women working outside the home. There was a significant difference for sexuality, where boys had much greater sexual freedom than girls and they could engage in behaviour that would be strongly sanctioned in a female. It was also shown that Norwegian-born women of Somali heritage felt they had greater freedom than they would have had in Somalia.[9]

Islamic veil usage

The honor of a woman is a very important subject for most of the interviewees and young women are preoccupied with protecting their reputation against accusations of dishonor. The widespread use of the both the hijab and less revealing types of Islamic veil arise from the need to conform to Muslim norms of how a young woman should behave. Wearing the hijab also causes older Somalis to respect them more.[9] Other reasons to wear the Islamic veils are religiosity and protesting against Western culture.[9]

Socioeconomics

According to Statistics Norway, as of 2012-2014, the percentage of Somalia-born immigrants in Norway with a persistently low income averaged out at 70.7%. This was a higher proportion than the native population and other immigrant groups, largely because most Somali individuals arrived as asylum immigrants, who tend to have lower incomes. The percentage of Somalia-born immigrants with a persistently low income declined the longer the individuals resided in Norway. As of 2014, around 72% of Somalia-born immigrants have a persistently low income, with individuals born in Norway to Somali immigrants having a smaller low income percentage of approximately 65%.[10] In 2016, four out of ten Somalis were living on social benefits.[11]

In 2011, the Norwegian Labour and Welfare Administration highlighted 100 Somali women who had divorced their husbands and claimed extra income support as the sole provider for the family, then had more children by their former husbands. Each of the families involved had obtained an average of 80 thousand euros from state agencies as a result of doing this.[12]

According to Oslo municipality, about 50-70% of Somali males in Oslo are habitual users of khat, a narcotic banned in Norway. The narcotic is expensive on the black market which is a contributing factor to destroying household economics.[13]

In a 2018 National Police Directorate report, it was found that some Somali parents who lost custody of their children had sent them children to Quranic schools in Somalia.[14] As a response, Norwegian authorities suggested cancelling the passports of children who risked being sent to Quranic schools as a way to stop them being taken abroad by their relatives against their will.[15]

Crime

According to Statistics Norway, in the 2001 to 2010-2013 period, the estimated proportion of Somalia-born perpetrators of criminal offences aged 15 and older in Norway decreased from 227 to 124 per 1000 residents.[16] This was compared to averages of 44.9 among native Norwegians and 112.9 among Norway-born residents with parents of foreign origin.[17]

According to a Statistics Norway report in 2017 investigating crime among immigrants in the 2010-2013 period, Somalis, together with Iraqis, Iranians and Afghans were the groups most overrepresented as perpetrators of crime.[18] With 125 perpetrators out of 1000, Somalis were overrepresented when compared to the Norwegian population (45 out of 1000).[19]

Education

Generally, many with Somali background in Norway has low or no education and little work experience.[5]

Many refugees who arrived early from Somalia were in the process of getting an education which was disrupted when they fled. Those who lived in Somalia during and after the civil war, when schools were not operating, have not completed any education.[5]

According to Statistics Norway, as of 2016, among a total 24,651 Somalia-born immigrants aged 16 and older, 15,944 individuals had attained a below upper secondary education level, 3,709 had attained an upper secondary education level, 122 had attained a tertiary vocational education level, 1,793 had attained a higher education level of up to four years in duration, 378 had attained a higher education level of more than four years in duration, and 2,705 had no education.[20]

Somali youth are often sent to schools abroad by their families, according to a 2019 Fafo Foundation report. According to state secretary of Ministry of Education and Research this can endanger the children's chances of becoming integrated into Norwegian society when they return. In the 2010s public broadcaster NRK published items on Somali-Norwegian youth who had been locked up and chained in Quranic schools in Somalia but, according to their parents, they are sent to Quranic schools to be culturally rehabilitated or to improve discipline.[21]

Employment

According to Statistics Norway, as of 2016, Somalia-born immigrants aged 15–74 in Norway have an employment rate of approximately 32.4%.[22] As of 2017, their unemployment rate was also about 7.5%.[23]

Statistics Norway has been criticized for misrepresenting employment levels for African migrants by counting anything upwards of an hour a week of work as employment. Counting full-time employment as 30 hours of work per week, 11% of women from Somalia were in full-time employment, with another 10% having 1–19 hours of work.[24] According to Nettavisen, Somali females differ strongly in employment patterns to Polish women, where the latter are joining the workforce more rapidly, have twice as high an employment level and they stay in the workforce much longer.[24]

Family reunification and citizenship issues

In 1999, the Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (Norwegian: Udlendingsdirektoratet, UDI) started to use blood testing on Somalis who applied for family reunification; the process was later changed to use DNA tests to verify family ties; these new tests suggested that as many as a quarter of the applicants were not telling the truth.[25] The leader of a Somali community organization in Norway and the Norwegian Medical Association protested against the tests and wanted them to be discontinued.[25] In 2010, UDI introduced DNA tests on Somali childless couples who applied for family reunification where one spouse already resided in Norway. The results showed that 40% of such pairs were actually siblings, not married couples. When news of these results became known, the ratio dropped to 25% and the tests were widened to migrants from other regions.[26]

In 2015, investigations by authorities showed that some Somalis who had claimed to be refugees from the civil wars in Somalia, although ethnic Somalis, were residents of countries neighbouring Somalia. Several of those along with their offspring lost their Norwegian citizenships.[27] In the same year, Norwegian authorities started a program to repatriate Somalis with no right to reside in Norway to Somalia, primarily individuals from Mogadishu.[28]

Notable people

gollark: Why would you want 12 hour?
gollark: Why?
gollark: What if all the staff and also active users claim to be the leaker? We could totally coordinate that.
gollark: What if we ALL claim to be the leaker?
gollark: You do not HAVE to find them and you can't confirm it.

See also

References

  1. "09817: Immigrants and Norwegian-born to immigrant parents, by immigration category, country background, contents and year". Statistics Norway. Retrieved 25 April 2020.
  2. "09817: Innvandrere og norskfødte med innvandrerforeldre, etter innvandringskategori, landbakgrunn og andel av befolkningen (K) 2010 - 2020". PX-Web SSB. Retrieved 2020-07-22.
  3. https://www.kommuneprofilen.no/Profil/Befolkning/Bench/bef_innvandrere_land_bench.aspx
  4. "Nei, somaliere er ikke mye bedre integrert i USA enn i Norge". dagbladet.no (in Norwegian). 2016-05-28. Retrieved 2020-08-14.
  5. "Somaliere i Norge - En arbeidsgrupperapport" (PDF). Arbeids- og Inkluderingsdepartementet. August 2009. p. 2, 8, 10. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  6. Næss, Anders (2019). "Migration, Gender Roles, and Mental Illness: The Case of Somali Immigrants in Norway". International Migration Review. doi:10.1177/0197918319867381. hdl:10642/7465.
  7. "Statistisk årbok for Oslo 2014 - Kapittel 1 Folkemengdens størrelse og sammensetning". Oslo Municipality. Retrieved 7 December 2017.
  8. "Fakta om fruktbarhet, fødealder og helse". Folkehelseinstituttet (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2018-09-15.
  9. "Hva er det med somalierne?". kjonnsforskning.no (in Norwegian Bokmål). Retrieved 2019-02-24.
  10. "Økonomi og levekår for ulike lavinntektsgrupper 2016". Statistics Norway. pp. 57, 117, 118. Retrieved 7 December 2017.
  11. "SSB: Fire av ti somaliere i Norge på sosialhjelp". www.abcnyheter.no (in Norwegian). 2016-02-14. Retrieved 2019-04-19.
  12. Solvang, Fredrik (2011-03-09). "100 fikk barn med eksmannen". NRK (in Norwegian Bokmål). Retrieved 2019-06-06.
  13. "Annenhver somalier tygger khat". Aftenposten (in Norwegian Bokmål). Retrieved 2017-12-03.
  14. "Rapport: Barnevernet utløser utsending av somaliske barn". www.vg.no (in Norwegian Bokmål). Retrieved 2019-10-05.
  15. Gjellan, Marit (2019-06-14). "Vil endre passregler for å hindre at norske barn blir sendt til koranskoler". NRK (in Norwegian Bokmål). Retrieved 2019-10-05.
  16. Synøve N. Andersen, Bjart Holtsmark & Sigmund B. Mohn (2017). Kriminalitet blant innvandrere og norskfødte med innvandrerforeldre En analyse av registerdata for perioden 1992-2015. Statistics Norway. pp. 27 (Tabell 3.3), 28. ISBN 978-82-537-9643-7. Det er verdt å merke seg at de fleste tallene er betydelig lavereher enn i analysen fra 2001, og særlig blant landgruppene som den gang var mestoverrepresentert. For eksempel har andelen gjerningspersoner fra Irak sunket fra249 til 125 per 1000 og for innvandrere fra Somalia fra 227 til 124 per 1000
  17. Synøve N. Andersen, Bjart Holtsmark & Sigmund B. Mohn. Kriminalitet blant innvandrere og norskfødte med innvandrerforeldre En analyse av registerdata for perioden 1992-2015. p. 38 (Tabell 3.6). Tabell 3.6 viser oss det totale antallet gjerningspersoner blant norskfødte med innvandrerforeldre, brutt ned etter foreldrenes landbakgrunn og innvandringsgrunn. Tallet i den øverste raden i tabellen kjenner vi igjen fra tidligere; det er 44,9 gjerningspersoner per 1000 bosatt i den øvrige befolkningen. Blant norskfødte med innvandrerforeldre er tallet 112,9.
  18. Synøve N. Andersen, Bjart Holtsmark & Sigmund B. Mohn (2017). Kriminalitet blant innvandrere og norskfødte med innvandrerforeldre En analyse av registerdata for perioden 1992-2015. Statistics Norway. pp. 42, Figure 3.2. ISBN 978-82-537-9643-7.
  19. Synøve N. Andersen, Bjart Holtsmark & Sigmund B. Mohn (2017). Kriminalitet blant innvandrere og norskfødte med innvandrerforeldre En analyse av registerdata for perioden 1992-2015. Statistics Norway. pp. 29–30, Figure 3.2. ISBN 978-82-537-9643-7.
  20. "Level of education for immigrants 16 years and older. Country background. Numbers". Statistics Norway. Retrieved 17 November 2017.
  21. Præsttun, Christine (2019-01-17). "Ny rapport: Fire av ti norsksomaliske ungdommer sendt på skole i utlandet". NRK (in Norwegian Bokmål). Retrieved 2019-10-05.
  22. "Employed immigrants (15-74 years) by country of birth and sex. 4th quarter". Statistics Norway. Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  23. "Registered unemployed immigrants and persons participating in labour market schemes 15-74 years, by country background, years of residence, sex, contents and time". Statistics Norway. Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  24. Stavrum, Gunnar. "Nye innvandrertall: Under halvparten er i full jobb". Nettavisen (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2018-10-27.
  25. "UDI fortsetter med omstridt DNA-test". Dagbladet.no (in Norwegian). 2001-10-02. Retrieved 2018-08-27.
  26. "DNA-tester avdekket juks med familiegjenforening". Aftenposten (in Norwegian Bokmål). Retrieved 2018-08-27.
  27. "Flere somaliere mister norsk statsborgerskap". www.abcnyheter.no (in Norwegian). 2016-05-18. Retrieved 2019-04-19.
  28. "UDI har brukt tre millioner på retur av åtte somaliere". www.abcnyheter.no (in Norwegian). 2015-12-23. Retrieved 2019-04-19.

Further reading

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