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Denmark leads 9 European nations in criticism of the human rights court of deportations

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Denmark and eight other countries have limited the European Human Rights Court on Sunday due to the deportation of illegal immigrants.

Denmark, which is scheduled to take over the Presidency of the European Union in July, published a letter in which more scope for the crimes of immigrants is to be identified. Guide of Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Italy and Poland signed the letter with Denmark.

“Many have come here. They learned our languages, believe in democracy, contribute to our societies and decided to integrate into our culture. Others have come and have decided not to areolate themselves into parallel societies and to distinguish themselves from our basic values ​​of equality, democracy and freedom,” was the letter. “In particular, some have not contributed positively to the companies that greet them and chose crimes.”

“It is beyond our understanding of how some people come to our countries and receive a share of our freedom and our large spectrum of opportunities and can indeed decide to commit crimes,” the letter continues.

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The Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen speaks to the media in front of an informal EU leader in the Egmont Palace, the EU Council, the EU Council headquarters. (Thierry Monasse/Getty Images)

The letter argues that the interpretation of European human rights by the Court of Human in our own democracies “the ability to make political decisions”, and examples in which the court blocked the deportation of illegal immigrants.

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Denmark and the signatories demand that the court create more space for European countries to deport illegal immigrants that commit violent or drug -related crimes, and enable European governments to pursue illegal immigrants more precisely.

“We have to be able to take effective steps to counteract enemy states that try to use our values ​​and rights against us. For example, by instrumentalizing migrants to our limits,” added the letter.

The Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni welcomes Denmark's Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen in Palazzo Chigi before her meeting in Rome, Italy, on May 22, 2025.

The Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni welcomes May 22, 2025 before her meeting in Rome, Italy, Palazzo Chigi, Mette Frederiksen, the Denmark Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen in Palazzo Chigi. (Photo by Massimo Valicchia/Nurphoto about Getty Images)

The letter comes two weeks after the British Prime Minister Keir Starer plans to tighten the immigration rules when the voters were annoyed by a high level of immigration.

The British voters are always frustrated by high immigration numbers, which many claim, have intensified public services and ethnic tensions in some parts of the country.

British Prime Minister Keir Starrer (left) and President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen,

The British Prime Minister Keir Starrer (left) and the President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, react after a joint press conference during the British EU summit in the Lancaster House in London.

As part of the new plans, qualified visas are limited to people in graduates, while visas for low -qualified roles are only spent in areas that are decisive for the country's industrial strategy, and companies must increase the training of British employees. Companies in the nursing sector cannot apply for visas for employees who have hired abroad.

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“Every area of ​​the immigration system, including work, family and studies, is tightened so that we have more control,” said Starrer in the excerpts of a speech that he wants to keep on Monday. “The enforcement becomes harder than ever and the migration numbers will fall. We will create a system that is controlled, selectively and fair.”

Landon Mion of Fox News contributed to this report.

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