Iceland review - 2004, Side 40

Iceland review - 2004, Side 40
38 ICELAND REVIEW “You need an AIDS test,“ the doctor told me, as he prepared a needle to draw blood from my arm. This was five years ago, and I was at the doctor’s office for a physical examination, a precursor to receiving a resident permit that would, af- ter the proper signatures from the appropriate union, enable me to write for this very magazine. My blood would again be tested for hepatitis. Before it was all over, the nurse would also prick my arm to test for TB. Poked and prodded, the nurse then gave me a small plastic cup with a set of instructions to take home. The guys in white lab coats needed a stool sample to boot. I left the office, filed through the waiting room past a slew of patients speaking languages my ears couldn’t recognize. They were just like me, waiting to be sampled so they too could receive a residence permit to live and work in Iceland. Based on the fact that I’m living in Iceland and writing this article I was obviously successful in jumping over all the hurdles. But this spring, Iceland followed the lead of so many other European countries by pass- ing a new law restricting immigration. Because of the legislation, for- eigners seeking to immigrate to Iceland now have higher hurdles to jump, and there are many more of them. Cracking Down There are numerous aspects to the new immigration law, but the pri- mary focus is on two areas of concern: fraudulent marriages, both fake and forced marriages, and bogus residence permits. A fake marriage is one conducted for the sole purpose of a residence permit while a forced marriage is when a woman is sold or “forced“ into marriage with an Icelander. To safeguard against these types of marriages, the new law stipulates that a foreigner aged 18-24 is not able to obtain a residence permit ba- sed on marriage to an Icelander. (Why these ages were singled out cannot be easily explained by anyone associated with the bill.) In addi- tion, the burden to prove whether a marriage is legitimate is placed on the couple rather than the State. Finally, the police, with a warrant, may search a couple’s house if the police feel that couple is engaged in a false marriage. (These laws only apply to “foreigners“ from non-EEA nations.) While Iceland’s a pretty hip place for a writer like myself to live, are there really scores of immigrants knocking on the door trying to get in by falsifying marriages? Are women really being sold into marriages with Icelandic men? FOREIGNERS NEED NOT APPLY Iceland’s parliament recently passed controversial legislation to curb so called “phony“ marriages and “bogus“ residence permits. Is the new immigration bill an example of Draconian legislation or a necessary safeguard? By Edward Weinman Photos by Páll Stefánsson IR_Immigration 11.6.2004 11:27 Page 38

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