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Minorities in Sweden to be examined

National News | 2008-09-07 | 1 comment

The Swedish government wants to examine whether there are some specific health problems among the minorities in Sweden. This writes the Swedish Public Radio today.

In Sweden it is not allowed to register people according the their ethnic belonging.

This law might have a good reason but is makes it difficult for the Swedish authorities to know whether or not there are some heath problems that are specific for the minorities in Sweden.

Therefore, the government has now proposed that the five regognized minorities in Sweden will be mapped so to detect whether some problems are more common among these groups than the majority population.

For example in the Roma population, it is widely recognized that abuse of drugs are common.

The recognized minorities in Sweden are the Sami People, the Sweden-Finnish population, the so called Tornedalingar, the Roma population and the Jews.

It has been taboo in Sweden to map ethnic groups for integrity reasons. But the Swedish Public Radio called around to the different minorities´ orgnizations and they were mainly positive.

The project will first of all map out how many people there are in each group. Than, it will initiate the health investigation.

Mats Öhlén

mats.ohlen@stockholmnews.com

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Readers' comments

2008-09-08 14:25 C.M wrote:
I think this is just sick. This is were hitler started out aswell. Im not a romani but i´ve got lapish blood and im married to a rom and got a baby together. the comment that you made: "For example in the Roma population, it is widely recognized that abuse of drugs are common." does not aply to all roma people. If a few people dose something bad then all the romas are bad?! ehm... All people shoud be accepted. leave the lapish, romas, jews etc alone!


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