The investigation is closed

A few years ago, in her home country of Thailand, Mali met a Finnish man who asked Mali and her daughter to move to Finland and live with him. 

Mali says that she thought they would live a normal family life. She says that she agreed to the move on the condition that her daughter, who was under 10 years old at the time, could attend school in Finland.

When Mali and her daughter moved to northern Finland to live with the man, he immediately informed them that they were not allowed to eat the same food or use the same bathroom as him.

The man owned several businesses in different industries, including a store and a hotel. After only a couple of days, he ordered Mali to work: to clean as well as shelve, price and carry products. 

Mali’s workday started at six in the morning and ended at seven o’clock in the evening. After only the first few days, the man would already often tell Mali to go back to work in the evening. There were no days off. The man wouldn’t even give Mali any pocket money.

Mali says that her child would also have to get up early and work. Around noon, the child could rest for a while and use her phone. Then, she would have to keep working until the evening.

According to Mali, the man said that the girl would have to work for at least a year before she could go to school. The man gave Mali and the child permission to eat once a day, in the evening, when the work was finished. Mali says that they were hungry every day.

After a couple of weeks, Mali understood that this wasn’t a romantic relationship. Instead, the man had only brought her to Finland to act as unpaid labor for his businesses.

Mali couldn’t speak the language, knew no one in Finland, and didn’t have any money. But she knew people from Thailand who knew people living in Finland. They sent her a bus ticket and a little money. 

The escape began around noon when the man wasn’t around. The only thing Mali and her daughter took with them were clothes. 

Mali and her daughter spent the first night in a hotel. The next day they got on a bus that would take them hundreds of kilometers away to a person who had promised to help.

Mali was able to get in contact with the Assistance System for Victims of Human Trafficking that operates within the Finnish Immigration Service. The Assistance System’s statement says the following.

You had no money of your own, which made you dependent on your spouse, and he has taken advantage of the situation by keeping you under his control and bringing you to conditions that indicate forced labor. In addition, he has threatened you with deportation and even killing you after you escaped from him.

The Eastern Finland Police Department received a criminal complaint regarding human trafficking. However, the police never questioned Mali, her daughter, any witnesses, or the man. It seems that the police didn’t investigate the events in almost any other fashion either. 

Despite this, the police decided that there was no reason to suspect a crime in the matter. The investigation was closed.

The Assistance System for Victims of Human Trafficking made a criminal complaint regarding the case of Mali and her daughter, immigrants from Thailand, to the police. No one was ever questioned by the police in the matter, and the police don’t seem to have investigated the case in almost any other way either. Despite this, the police still decided that there was no reason to suspect a crime had been committed. (JUKKA GRÖNDAHL / HS)

The Assistance System for Victims of Human Trafficking made a criminal complaint regarding the case of Mali and her daughter, immigrants from Thailand, to the police. No one was ever questioned by the police in the matter, and the police don’t seem to have investigated the case in almost any other way either. Despite this, the police still decided that there was no reason to suspect a crime had been committed.

For several years now, Helsingin Sanomat (HS) has been investigating human trafficking and similar exploitation in Finland, a rich welfare state. 

The articles have exposed widespread and systematic abuse in, for example, Nepalese restaurants, the cleaning industry, and the agricultural industry, and a case of sex trafficking was also investigated.  

For this article, HS interviewed more than ten people who had told the police about the abuse they faced. The cases include labor exploitation, sexual abuse, and forced marriages. The stories of the interviewees have been confirmed from official documents and other source material. 

HS has also reviewed almost one hundred police decisions in cases that have shown signs of human trafficking or similar exploitation. The cases are located in different police departments all over Finland and span a number of years, including recent ones. 

HS discovered that cases are rarely investigated by the police or are inadequately investigated and then closed. Some of the cases remain technically open but are left untouched for years. Acquiring evidence after such a long period of time is challenging if not impossible.

This article does not take a stance on whether the described incidents are crimes. It is the task of authorities to assess criminal liability, with the final judgment made by a court of law. 

Instead, this article looks at whether the police investigate suspected crimes as the law requires. 

One of the arguments the police gave was that Mali had previously applied for a Schengen visa.

Mali’s lawyer filed a complaint regarding the police’s decision not to open an investigation. 

The complaint states that only by investigating the matter one can find out if a crime has been committed or not. The complaint also draws attention to the inadequate arguments given by the police. For example, one argument was that a few years prior, Mali had unsuccessfully applied for a Schengen visa. The police believed that this diminished the credibility of her claims.

The police’s decision rested especially on the fact that Mali and her daughter had only stayed with the man for a couple of weeks before escaping. 

The amount of time the complainant has spent with [the man] cannot be relevant to whether or not a criminal investigation should be conducted to find out if a crime has been committed, i.e. how has [the man] acted in the matter, states the complaint.

Helsingin Sanomat has seen messages exchanged between Mali and her friend. The messages are in Thai. In them, Mali plans her and her daughter’s escape from the man. The messages reference the man keeping Mali and her daughter hungry, forbidding them from using social media, demanding work in exchange for food, not paying them for their labor, threatening them with violence, withdrawing their residence permit, and not letting the child go to school.

You’ll get help, you don’t have to be afraid, Mali’s friend encourages her in one of the messages.

Just get out of the apartment first.

Don’t worry about your stuff.

If you can’t get out, then it’s going to be very difficult afterward.

He’ll probably lock you up.

Even the police won’t be able to help you.

HS has also seen an email that the man sent Mali, which references the child also being forced to work for the man.

Mali took the police’s decision hard.

“It didn’t feel just. I wish they’d asked what I had gone through. Even if they wouldn’t have believed me, I wish they’d even asked.”

The interview at Mali’s apartment is interrupted for a moment as the front door opens. 

Her daughter is back from school.

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TURKU POLICE STATION, 2019. 

A male immigrant arrived at the police station with an interpreter. He wanted to make a criminal complaint. The man said that he had been working twelve-hour days every day for six months in a local restaurant, in the hopes of getting a residence permit. He had only been paid small amounts as compensation. The man said that other employees in the restaurant were in a similar situation. 

When the man had finally demanded to get paid decently, his employer claimed not to know him.

According to the case documents, nothing was done for eight months. Then the police declared that the matter was a contractual dispute between the employee and the employer, and resolving the dispute is not the responsibility of the police, and the police have no jurisdiction over the matter. No reason to suspect a crime, no investigation will be conducted. 

The investigation was closed. 

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ESPOO POLICE STATION, 2019. 

A lawyer informed the police that his client, an immigrant man, had been working in a restaurant with no days off or even breaks and that he had worked nearly seven hundred hours without pay. 

The man, who had arrived in Finland as an asylum seeker, had asked for his wages multiple times, but the employer had refused to pay and told the man not to be in touch again. The employer knew that the man needed to get a residence permit. 

In a statement to the police, the Labor Protection Authority stated that the case could amount to human trafficking. They listed a total of forty questions the police needed to investigate. 

According to the case documents, the police did not investigate these issues. Instead, the police considered that when the facts of the case are taken into account, the case is a private civil law dispute over wages. In addition, the police stated that the unpaid period of time was relatively short and when the case is considered in its entirety, the matter is fairly minor.

The police never questioned the employer or the victim of the suspected crime. The victim’s lawyer says they are under the impression that next to nothing was done to investigate the potential crime. The investigation was closed.

Sakari Melander works as a Professor of Criminal Law at the University of Helsinki. (JUSSI NUKARI / PRESS PHOTOGRAPH)

Professor of Criminal Law at the University of Helsinki, Sakari Melander, stares at the large screen intently. 

“It really does make you wonder,” he says.

Melander has arrived at the offices of Helsingin Sanomat to look at the newspaper’s materials, which consist of the cases mentioned above as well as many others, such as:

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HELSINKI, 2018

According to the criminal complaint, the immigrant man had been working at a restaurant for nine months without pay, hoping to get a residence permit. The man had worked from morning till night and slept at the restaurant. The criminal complaint also names a witness who was working under the same conditions.  

For nine months, nothing was done in the investigation. Then the police called the victim’s lawyer. 

It turned out that the victim wanted to withdraw his complaint. The police documented that the lawyer had told them that his client had gotten all the wages he was due. 

When contacted by Helsingin Sanomat, the lawyer says that he had said nothing about wages. His client had just told him about wanting to withdraw the claims.

Based on the explanation given, this is a private dispute that has since been settled, stated the police. Nothing else was done. The named witness, also described to be a victim of exploitation, was not heard. The investigation was closed.

INVESTIGATION 5530/R/XXXX/19

ESPOO, 2019. 

The criminal complaint stated that the cook had had to work without pay. When the man had asked for wages, the employer announced that he would not be paying anything. The employer also told the cook that if he asked for wages again, the employer would make sure that any restaurant he had connections to wouldn’t give the man a job.   

The cook could not speak Finnish and knew nothing of his rights. According to the Labor Protection Authority, the case had indications of being labor exploitation, a crime. They stated that the police should at least question the victim of the suspected crime, the employer, and witnesses if needed, as well as investigate other issues. 

A couple of months went by. Then, the police stated that there was no reason to open a criminal investigation. According to the police what has and has not been agreed upon is a contractual dispute, not a criminal matter

It appears that practically the only thing the police had done was confirm that the company the cook worked for had not paid any money to his account. This fact was mentioned in the decision on closing the case, even though it supports the cook’s claims. Not a single person was questioned by the police about the matter.

Professor Sakari Melander considers it very strange that serious criminal cases are closed without even questioning the victim of the suspected crime. When cases are closed like this, Melander believes it’s reasonable to ask whether they have been adequately investigated.

“Human trafficking and exploitation closely related to it are such serious crimes that there should be a heightened interest in solving them.”

The professor points out that the threshold for opening a criminal investigation is low on purpose.

Professor Melander says that if the employer has taken advantage of an employee’s vulnerable position and refuses to pay wages, it is a criminal matter, not a civil dispute. Being in a vulnerable position can mean a number of different things, such as needing to stay employed in order to get a residence permit.

The law allows the police to exercise judgment on when the threshold for opening a criminal investigation is crossed. There must be adequate and concrete grounds for suspecting a crime. A mere allegation is not enough. 

According to Melander, a mere allegation basically amounts to stating “I was assaulted somewhere last Saturday.” In the cases investigated by Helsingin Sanomat, the criminal complaints give a clear account of the circumstances and identify details such as the name of the employer and the place of work.

“At that point, you cannot really consider these to be mere allegations of crimes. The threshold for opening a criminal investigation is purposefully low, and it is the responsibility of the police to gather evidence to find out if a crime has been committed,” says Melander.

“If there are allegations related to serious crimes, such as human trafficking, it should be pretty difficult to argue for killing the investigation before it even starts. The thinking should never be, Oh, there is no need to look into this. Also, the victims might not have any real possibility of going to court on their own in order to try and collect their wages.”

Melander sees problems in many of the cases discussed in this article. 

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One criminal complaint against a cleaning company, for example, was dismissed by Helsinki police because the prosecutor had in an earlier case decided not to press charges against the same company. The earlier case had had as many as eight victims of suspected labor crimes.

“I would rather think that if there are new criminal complaints related to the same company, there would be more reason to investigate what goes on in that company,” says Melander.

INVESTIGATION 5530/R/XXXXX/18

According to the criminal complaint, the employee of a hair salon in Espoo was paperless, meaning without a residence permit and under threat of deportation. He worked twelve-hour days every day, for a year and a half, and was paid less than 400 euros a month. When the victim had sought help, he was taken into the Assistance System for Victims of Human Trafficking. 

The police stated that there was no reason to suspect a crime in the matter. 

One of the reasons given was that both parties had agreed on the work and had voluntarily and knowingly committed to the working conditions. According to the police, the employee was aware of the nature of the work, working times, and working conditions before he had started working.

Melander says that if an employee signs a contract that commits them to illegal working conditions, the employee’s consent is, according to law, null and void.

Another reason the police gave for closing the case was that, at least on paper, the hair salon’s profits were so low. According to the police, the employer had told the employee that they sign make a contract, but the company would not be able to pay the contractual wage.

“When it comes to figuring out whether a crime has been committed or not, absolutely no significance can be placed on a company’s claim that its profits are so low that it’s unable to pay even the minimum wage,” says Melander.

“If that argument were accepted, businesses in distress could always take advantage of, say, immigrants in need of a job.”

Yet another reason for closing the case was that the victim had decided to sign the contract of employment, and had also benefited from the contract while applying for a residence permit in Finland. 

The fact that getting a residence permit is dependent on the job cannot be considered an argument against exploitation, says Melander. 

On the contrary, being dependent on the work is exactly what makes the immigrant employee vulnerable, because it becomes extremely hard to quit. 

Melander says that the cases discussed in the investigation by Helsingin Sanomat clearly show that the police need to think about how human trafficking, and other exploitation, can be better investigated.

“These cases paint a large picture that says: the authorities are unable to identify human trafficking.”

 INVESTIGATION 5XXX/R/XXXX/19

The decision had to be fast. The man wouldn’t be gone for long.

A call to a women’s refuge. A taxi arrives at the house. Amina escaped with no money and knew next to nothing about Finnish society.

Amina was forced into marriage in her home country. She says that her opinion was not asked and her family did not allow her to say no.

The couple moved to Finland. Once they arrived, the husband’s behavior became controlling and violent. He forbade Amina from speaking to anyone and restricted her personal movements. He took Amina’s social benefits for himself. 

He beat and raped her. 

When Amina went to see a doctor because of her injuries, the man followed her into the office. Amina spent her days at home doing chores. If she asked her husband to do something to help, he would hit her.

“He said that he had paid my family for the marriage, so I was now his slave,” says Amina. 

When she escaped, Amina was taken into the Assistance System for Victims of Human Trafficking. The decision states the following.

Your husband controlled your actions and kept you under his power with threats and violence. According to the proposal of admittance to the Assistance System, you have been put in a situation in Finland that violates human dignity, as you have been forced to live as a victim of exploitation and violence, and you have been the target of sexual abuse.

The police received a criminal complaint about human trafficking and rape. The criminal complaint described the conditions Amina was forced to live in.

This is how the police’s chief investigator interpreted the conditions: The matter is related to a married couple, and the criminal complaint also contains elements that have more to do with a married couple’s arguments and private disputes.

These statements are not explained further by the police. Human trafficking was never investigated, and Amina was not questioned about the conditions. 

After closing the human trafficking case without investigating it at all, the police investigated assault and rape. The rape investigation eventually was closed due to an inability to gather enough evidence.

Because the police decided that they would not investigate the claims related to human trafficking, the police also forbade Amina’s lawyer from pointing out, during the interrogation, issues that were evidence of human trafficking. These questions could have clarified Amina’s conditions for the police. 

“I thought that the police would investigate how he tried to enslave me. But they were not interested in it,” Amina says.

According to Amina, the interrogator would constantly interrupt her and press her for specific answers. If Amina could not remember something, the interrogator would lose her temper. 

“I felt like crying, she scared me. She acted like she wanted to punish me for something.”

Amina’s support person as well as her lawyer also feel that the interrogator’s behavior was rude.

Amina speaks warmly about the help she received from the workers at the women’s refuge.

The behavior of Amina’s ex-husband was threatening. Amina noticed he was following her. 

The Assistance System asked the police for an assessment of the security threat against Amina, so they could better ensure her safety. The police replied that the assessment of a security threat you have requested can be requested from the Finnish Security and Intelligence Service since the local police do not conduct assessments of security threats.

The Finnish Security and Intelligence Service’s job is to protect national security. It does not conduct security threat assessments regarding domestic abuse. These are conducted by the local police.

The police were asked for a safety device that would allow Amina to get help faster if needed. The police refused to give one and told Amina to call the emergency number if she was in need of help.

Amina speaks warmly about the help she received from the workers at the women’s refuge.

“They never made me feel like I was worthless. That gave me confidence. I found the courage to file for divorce, even though I knew that it would end my residence permit.”

Amina tried to get a new residence permit by working as a cleaner. However, the company did not hire her and instead offered her a freelance contract. Eventually, the back pain Amina got from being assaulted became worse. When Amina was forced to take a break from work, the company decided to terminate her contract.

Amina is too scared to return to her home country. She is afraid of her husband and her own family. Amina’s family blames her for the divorce and has disowned her.

Still, she does not regret escaping from home.

“When I came to Finland, I didn’t know that women had equal rights here. And the opportunity to live freely, even if you are divorced,” Amina says.

Amina knows that there are still a lot of women in Finland who live under the same conditions as her. 

“I hope that those who are in the same situation realize that they can get help. I hope that if my daughter is ever in a similar situation, she will have the courage to leave, too.”

Amina heard that her ex-husband has brought himself a new wife to Finland.

For a long time, people thought that there was no human trafficking in Finland. 

The thinking was that if anything, Finland is a transit country. The crime didn’t even exist in Finland’s criminal code. 

A change came from the United States of America. The Department of State regularly publishes an influential reports on human trafficking. At the beginning of the 21st century, Finland was put on the State Department’s list of shame for its passive attitude in the fight against human trafficking. 

International pressure grew. As a result, Finland began taking action. Human trafficking was codified as a crime in 2004 with little effect. Five years later, there was only one final conviction. 

The office of the Non-Discrimination Ombudsman, tasked with reporting on human trafficking, began a review. Its aim was to find out if Finland really was free of such crime or if the exploitation was simply not identified. 

The review found that criminal cases were not being investigated, prosecuted, or convicted as human trafficking, even though they showed clear signs of being just that. The Finnish Parliament was notified of the review’s results in 2010.

Around the same time, a lawyer named Emilia Kaikkonen started her career.

Emilia Kaikkonen is an attorney specializing in human trafficking. (SAMI KERO / HS)

Kaikkonen wasn’t supposed to end up working on human trafficking. During a seminar for her Master’s thesis at law school, the person next to her took the topic she had wanted. Instead of terrorism, she ended up writing about the exploitation of foreign labor.

Kaikkonen worked as the victims’ counsel when a case related to a Chinese restaurant in Savonlinna, a small Finnish city, was going to court. It was one of the first human trafficking investigations in Finland. 

Since then, Kaikkonen has been involved in almost every significant case, from Vietnamese nail salons and a Romanian sex trafficking league to Thai berry pickers and abusive cults. She has represented hundreds of clients. Kaikkonen is also a member of the criminal law expert group of the Finnish Bar Association, which she represents in matters related to human trafficking.

“For a long time, it seemed impossible to get anything even investigated,” Kaikkonen explains in her Helsinki office.

Today, this type of exploitation is identified better. But the situation is still dire.

Kaikkonen deals with other crimes too and sees how those are investigated. 

“Investigations of exploitation, such as human trafficking, often seem to get killed early. A lot of times these cases just aren’t investigated.”

Kaikkonen believes that the police and the prosecutors often take on the role of a judge. She explains that, in criminal cases, the evidence is rarely completely one-sided. Where in other crimes, contradictory evidence is taken to the judges to be decided on, with human trafficking and similar crimes the investigation is often closed or the prosecutor doesn’t press charges. 

According to Kaikkonen’s assessment, the authorities often do not understand what the crime of human trafficking means. The term brings up images of the slave trade, but in reality, modern human trafficking is often a matter of a much more subtle kind of control. 

Domestic relationships can also have characteristics of human trafficking, as we found in Amina’s case. This is also something the police seem to have problems identifying.

“There are many cases where the domestic relationship resembles human trafficking. Very often this is either not recognized or the trafficking investigation is closed almost automatically,” Kaikkonen says. 

Investigating all the crimes in question isn’t just about bringing the perpetrator to justice. Whether a particular crime is investigated or not can affect the victim’s right to compensation, a residence permit, or free counsel. 

Human trafficking often means continuous exploitation. It is in a sense a process crime, unlike crimes such as assault or rape, for which one can often define a more specific time and place. 

Continuous conditions of exploitation could yield more evidence. However, it’s typical that domestic violence cases which bear signs of human trafficking are just split into parts, each of which is separately investigated. 

“Singular cases of assault, illegal threats, or cases of rape might move forward in the criminal process but the wider exploitation is not identified,” Kaikkonen explains.

If the victim has been isolated from the rest of society and, for example, cannot get to a doctor in time, investigations into singular events might fail due to a lack of evidence. Even if they don’t, the punishment is often minor compared to how severe the continuous exploitation has been.

One example of this recently became public.

Finnish President Sauli Niinistö pardoned a woman who had stabbed her husband in self-defense. She was sentenced because, despite the violent husband who had threatened to kill her while holding a knife, the court had deemed that she had gone too far in defending herself. 

Based on an interview the woman gave to the newspaper Ilta-Sanomat and backed up by official records, she had been the victim of forced marriage and severe abuse that lasted for years. The authorities, however, had failed to identify her as a victim of human trafficking. 

The violent husband was investigated for a number of singular events. He was eventually given a conditional prison sentence for just three assaults and one illegal threat. She, on the other hand, would have had to go to prison had it not been for the presidential pardon.  

The police don’t even file a criminal report in all of the cases.

Poor investigations are not just a matter of resources or competence. They also reflect the attitudes and priorities of the police. 

Finland has seen excellent examples of human trafficking investigations in cases when the authorities have decided to put in the effort, says attorney Emilia Kaikkonen.

The situation is familiar to many police officers. A number of them told Helsingin Sanomat that some police departments try as quickly as possible to close, or “kill,” cases of human trafficking without investigating them. 

The reason is that the cases are laborious, difficult, and to some police officers of not much interest. The police officers who spoke to HS asked to stay anonymous due to the sensitive nature of the matter. 

HS has also interviewed about ten lawyers from different regions of Finland. Most of them have had similar experiences of poor investigations regarding human trafficking and related crimes. Two of the lawyers said that they grew so frustrated they decided to quit and change their line of work.

At an NGO that helps victims of human trafficking, the frustration is shared.  

“Many of our clients have felt that the police expect them to hand over all possible evidence to the authorities as soon as they report a crime. Even though gathering evidence is the responsibility of the police,” says Pia Marttila, an expert at Victim Support Finland. 

According to Marttila, sometimes the police don’t even file the cases as possible crimes. Even in cases where the police have received legitimate criminal complaints, including information about evidence and witnesses, the case has been filed away as “miscellaneous” and not as a potential criminal matter. 

It is much easier to close a case that was labeled as “miscellaneous” than it is to close a criminal case. How a case is labeled can also affect the victim’s chance of getting a lawyer. 

According to Marttila, some of the problems in human trafficking investigations have been recognized. A new national human trafficking task force in the police was set up at the beginning of 2021. However, it only investigates a portion of the cases. The vast majority of investigations will still be the responsibility of local police. 

One of the main aims of the task force is to detect and dig up criminal activity. That means the police expose exploitation proactively on their own. Marttila says that even though this is important, it becomes meaningless if the criminal complaints that have already been made are not investigated. 

Suspected victims of human trafficking, who reported crimes years ago, are still waiting on their cases to be investigated. 

“On the other hand, a situation where more recent cases end up at the back of the queue is not ideal either. All cases should be investigated without undue delay,” Marttila says.

Pia Marttila, an expert at Victim Support Finland. (SAMI KERO / HS)

Marttila often hears claims that victims of trafficking know the Finnish system and make false claims in order to be able to stay in Finland. She says that these claims are hard to comprehend because reporting a crime often leads to problems for the victim’s residence permit. 

For many victims, filing a criminal complaint about exploitation has caused years of anxiety, fear of deportation, and even violence. It has also destroyed victims’ livelihoods as they have lost their jobs and are shut out of their communities.

Many clients of Victim Support Finland cling to the job offered by the abuser as a last resort. Some only realize they have been exploited when they don’t get the employment contract or residence permit they were promised by the employer.

Attorney Emilia Kaikkonen believes that one factor explaining the poor state of investigations is that most victims of human trafficking in Finland are immigrants.

“This situation is partly explained by prejudice. Certain biases are easy to see.”

According to Kaikkonen, the authorities might have strong prejudices and believe that the only reason the victim is claiming to have been exploited is to avoid deportation. 

This is manifested, for example, in situations where the victim who has filed a criminal complaint is, in fact, interrogated as though they were the suspect. The victim is pressed about the basis of their residence permit and asked why they are not ready to go back to their home country. At the same time, many questions that would be essential to solving the crimes are not asked.

This prejudice is abundantly clear in Viktor Podolianchuk’s case. The Ukrainian construction worker was nearly deported after his Finnish employer accused him of theft. However, the police were reluctant to investigate the Ukrainian’s claims that he had been exploited. 

The Ukrainian roofer Viktor Podolianchuk came to Finland for work in 2016. The Assistance System for Victims of Human Trafficking filed a criminal complaint about his work conditions, but the police were reluctant to investigate the case. (SAMI KILPIÖ)

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Over the years, Viktor Podolianchuk had worked in Finland numerous times. In 2016, he found work in a construction company located in the town of Salo in Southwest Finland. The company had sites all over Finland.

In the beginning, Podolianchuk received his pay in a regular manner. Then things changed. This is what he says happened:

When his work visa expired, his workdays got significantly longer and the payments stopped. His employer promised to pay him his wages once he had his residence permit in order. When Podolianchuk complained about the situation, the employer threatened to have him deported.

When he couldn’t afford rent, Podolianchuk slept in an old caravan that was standing in the warehouse area of the construction company. There was a hole in the roof, and water would get in when it rained. There was no toilet or shower. The heater would act up, and Podolianchuk recounts how on nights with subzero temperatures, he would lie awake, unable to sleep because he was so cold.

When Podolianchuk ran out of money and couldn’t afford rent, he lived in a caravan that would be freezing cold in the winter.

The caravan was in bad shape. Because he was so cold, Podolianchuk would stay up all night when it froze.

Podolianchuk worked for about four months without getting paid. When his residence permit was almost due, the owner of the construction company asked how much the company owed him. Podolianchuk replied that it was at least 14,000 euros.

About a week later, while Podolianchuk was in Espoo working on a customer’s roof, the police showed up.

He spent three weeks in detention. The employer had told the police that Podolianchuk and another immigrant worker had stolen metal equipment from the worksite. According to Podolianchuk, he had taken the equipment to the company’s warehouse as he had been instructed. He drew a picture of the area for the police and told them what the equipment looked like. Podolianchuk asked the police to go there and see for themselves. The police refused.

While the investigation into the alleged theft moved forward, Podolianchuk tried to get the money he was owed. Since his wages weren’t being paid, he decided to make a criminal complaint. The Assistance System for Victims of Human Trafficking took Podolianchuk on as a client. The Assistance System filed a criminal complaint about human trafficking.

Viktor Podolianchuk says he is disappointed that the police weren’t interested in investigating his exploitation claims. (SAMI KILPIÖ)

Information on bank transfers, which were given to the police, showed that no payments had been made to Podolianchuk’s account for months. Podolianchuk had records from the company, showing that he had worked full days that often dragged on until late. He provided messages that he exchanged with the owner as evidence. He had multiple witnesses.

Helsingin Sanomat was able to contact an Estonian construction worker one of the named witnesses, Rolf Räis. Räis helped Podolianchuk survive by loaning him money for food and winter clothes. Räis says that what he saw confirms Podolianchuk’s claims about his working conditions. 

Räis also had his fair share of problems with the company. In 2018, a court ordered the construction company to pay Räis over 50,000 euros in wages and compensation for illegal furlough and termination of employment.

Podolianchuk’s human trafficking investigation was transferred to Salo’s police station because the company was registered in Salo. Records kept by the Assistance System for Victims of Human Trafficking offer a window into how the investigation progressed. Podolianchuk gave these records to Helsingin Sanomat.

In March 2017, Terhi Tafari, a senior inspector at the Assistance System, asked the police department whether they were opening a criminal investigation. 

The police officer in charge of the investigation replied that, for now, it seems that the claims of theft [against Podolianchuk] will need to be investigated first. Very different stories of the same situation, he says, Tafari recorded. 

Podolianchuk’s lawyer asked the police to hear the witnesses quickly because they would have to leave the country soon. The police did not reply to the lawyer’s messages.

Senior inspector Tafari managed to get in contact with the police sergeant investigating the case. This is what Tafari wrote down about her conversation with the police sergeant:

We are discussing the essential elements of the crime. I state that, at least from our perspective, it seems that the unpaid wages, accommodation that violates human dignity, the threats and taking [Podolianchuk’s] passport indicate extortionate work discrimination, aggravated extortion, or even human trafficking.

[The police sergeant] says that they know that “the victim has been so and so and blah blah blah, nasty conditions blah blah.”

He [the sergeant] says that he has enough work experience, and in a town this small they know people well enough and know how they operate. And that Ukrainians often have a habit of reacting to things in their own way.

Tafari continues her conversation with the police sergeant and records the following: I return to the issue of unpaid wages. There is very clear evidence of it. [The police sergeant] states that he knows about them. According to him, Viktor could be liable to pay the employer sum as compensation [for the alleged theft] that far exceeds the amount he’s owed in wages. 

According to the records, the police sergeant went on to say that the Finnish employer had not paid Podolianchuk because the employer was expecting  Podolianchuk to pay him a lot of money as compensation for the theft.

Tafari replies: I state that the employer has the right to withhold these wages by any means, especially when no conviction has been made in the case. [The police sergeant] replies that this is true, the employer doesn’t have the right to do this.

After this, the police informed Podolianchuk that they will not open an investigation into whether or not he was the victim of exploitation. The office of the Non-Discrimination Ombudsman also inquired about the case. It received the same information from the police: no witnesses would be heard and no investigation would be opened. 

Podolianchuk’s lawyer tried to ask the police for a reason.

“They repeated that there are always two sides to a story, and now we’ve only heard one. When I said that surely the very point of a criminal investigation is to get an objective view of what happened and that this can only be done by the police, they responded by being belittling,” says the lawyer.  

The police were already making preparations to deport Podolianchuk from Finland. The lawyer reminded the police that, again, the witnesses would soon leave the country and Podolianchuk might also have to leave soon.

“The way the police reacted indicated that this is exactly what they hoped would happen since that would make it impossible to conduct a criminal investigation that was so unpleasant for them.”

Viktor Podolianchuk (middle) waiting on a court session to begin with witness Rolf Räis (right) and his lawyer Tirnash Ramezan. Podolianchuk was accused of working illegally, in a case heard at the Southwest Finland District Court in Salo. (SAMI KILPIÖ)

When reached for comment by Helsingin Sanomat, the chief investigator of the case admits that the investigation became a “farce” as it bounced from one police department to another. When asked specific questions, he directed HS to the investigating police sergeant. 

The police sergeant in turn directed HS to the chief investigator. He also stated that he “doesn’t have to confirm or deny” whether he made the comments recorded by the Assistance System.

The owner of the construction company denies that Podolianchuk has been exploited in any way. According to the owner, he had agreed that Podolianchuk would “work a little” while he was waiting for the work permit, and the owner claimed he didn’t understand this was illegal. The owner says that Podolianchuk was supposed to be paid for all the hours he put in, as soon as he had a valid work permit. The owner denies threatening Podolianchuk in any way or taking his passport.

In May 2017, Viktor Podolianchuk received a conditional one-year prison sentence for aggravated theft. He was ordered to pay 38,000 euros in compensation to the owner.

The human trafficking case was, at this time, still pending. Podolianchuk was questioned at the end of 2017. However, he was heard as a suspect because he had been working without a work visa. According to the police documents, an official criminal investigation into human trafficking had not even been opened. 

Podolianchuk says that when he was questioned, the police asked him nothing about the potential exploitation, but instead kept asking him if he had had permission to work. This description is supported by the record of the police investigation.

The interpreter ran out of time, and the interrogation had to be concluded. A new session was never arranged.

None of the witnesses Podolianchuk named were questioned.

The Court of Appeal gave its decision in the theft case in the summer of 2018. Podolianchuk was acquitted of all charges. 

The metal equipment that was claimed to have been stolen had been clearly visible in the company’s warehouse area the entire time. Because the police had refused to check it, Podolianchuk’s colleague Rolf Räis, the Estonian, had gone to the area himself and taken pictures of the equipment. 

Podolianchuk’s lawyer says that after repeated demands, he was able to get the police to go to the area. After the verdict given by the District Court, the police finally went to the warehouse area and documented the equipment.

In its decision, the Court of Appeal also questioned the logic of thinking that Podolianchuk would take a huge risk by stealing scrap metal, that was nearly worthless, while he was waiting for his residence permit.

The police’s decision on the human trafficking investigation came over two years after the criminal complaint was made. According to the police, the investigation found no evidence that Podolianchuk had been in the kind of dependent or subordinate position that would cause suspicion of human trafficking. 

The investigation was closed. According to police documents and comments made by the chief investigator, none of the witnesses named by Podolianchuk were questioned, and the police didn’t seem to do much at all to investigate the alleged exploitation. 

Podolianchuk filed another criminal complaint. The police didn’t open an investigation. 

Podolianchuk got a new lawyer and filed yet another criminal complaint. The complaint named multiple witnesses and different types of evidence. The request to investigate was directed to the police department of Western Uusimaa in the hope that the case would not be investigated in Salo. 

The investigation was transferred to Salo. 

Podolianchuk had also sought compensation through a civil suit. In December 2019, the construction company was ordered to pay him nearly 60,000 euros in wages and compensation for, among other reasons, discrimination and illegal termination of employment.  

However, the company was bankrupt. The owner continued to run his business through another company, and it seemed to be very profitable. According to a recent financial statement acquired by Helsingin Sanomat, this company made a profit of nearly 350 000 euros with a turnover of over a million euros. 

Podolianchuk has received money from the wage security fund, but he has not gotten a penny out of the bankruptcy estate.

But, Podolianchuk says, money is not the reason he has been demanding his rights. 

He just wants to be treated equally before the law. Like everyone else. 

Podolianchuk still works as a roofer and plans to bring his wife and child to Finland if he can get a longer residence permit. A new human trafficking investigation has now been opened in his case.

“Four years! For four years I have waited for my case to be investigated. I am sure that they will close the investigation again,” he says.

Podolianchuk’s case dragging on for years is not an exception. It is more or less the norm. 

One human trafficking investigation of a Nepalese cook stalled at the Eastern Uusimaa police department for three years, with nothing being done by the police. 

An investigation into human trafficking in a Bangladeshi restaurant in Oulu took four years, with very little done in that time.

In a number of cases, the investigation has been pending for so long that even the right to prosecute for many exploitation crimes has expired. 

According to Pia Marttila from Victim Support Finland, it is unusual for an investigation into trafficking or similar crimes to take less than a few years. It’s not unusual that the victim is questioned for the first time after over a year has passed since the criminal complaint. 

Helsingin Sanomat has reviewed many cases where a criminal complaint about human trafficking has been filed a couple of years ago and not even the victim has been questioned.

“Many of our clients are concerned that after such a long period of time evidence is no longer available and witnesses cannot be reached. If the criminal investigation then eventually fails, it understandably creates a great sense of injustice,” says Marttila.

“People don’t seem to understand how much the victims have riding on these cases. How big of a personal risk they take.”

According to the law on criminal investigations, crimes must be investigated “without undue delay.” Professor Sakari Melander says that investigations that have stalled for years clearly seem to be illegal.

“It is completely inappropriate to first let a long time pass without investigating the crime at all, and to then close the investigation based on the grounds that there is no evidence.”

Human trafficking investigations may collect dust for years.

Human trafficking and related crimes fall within the scope of “formal prosecution.”

That means that when the possible crime has come to the authorities’ attention, i.e. when the police have decided that there is reason to suspect a crime, the matter must be investigated. It is mandatory for the police to investigate it. The investigation cannot be closed purely on the grounds that the victim withdrew their claims.

Many crimes fall under formal prosecution, but their importance is heightened with serious crimes such as human trafficking. The idea is that crimes like these don’t just violate the victim, but society in a larger sense, and there is a larger societal interest in investigating them. 

In addition, formal prosecution is a means to protect the victim and the interests of justice in cases where the victim is threatened or pressured to withdraw their claims by, for example, the perpetrator.

Despite this, the investigation by Helsingin Sanomat reveals that the police have closed investigations into serious crimes on the grounds that the victim withdrew their statement. This has even happened in cases where there have been clear signs that the victim was being pressured or threatened to do so. 

The following two cases are examples of this. 

INVESTIGATION 5590/R/XXXXX/19

The criminal complaint was sent to the Häme police department by the Assistant System for Victims of Human Trafficking. 

An immigrant woman had said that her husband had been forcing her into prostitution for a long time and this had continued after they had arrived in Finland. According to the woman, the man raped and assaulted her repeatedly. She also said that the man had sexually abused her child. 

The police opened an investigation into human trafficking. A couple of weeks went by. During that time, the man got in touch with a lawyer. 

Soon, the police received a statement. In it, the woman withdrew her claims, said that no crime had been committed, and claimed the allegations she had made were due to her illness. In the statement, the woman wrote that because of her illness, she had also forced her child to lie to the police and child protective services.

The police closed the investigation. When contacted by Helsingin Sanomat, the police admitted they had not questioned the woman after receiving the statement. They also admitted that the man, suspected of human trafficking, had not been questioned at any point. 

Potential witnesses, like those who had helped the woman in a women’s refuge, were not questioned. No coercive means of the investigation were used. According to the police, the question of whether the woman had been pressured to withdraw her statement wasn’t really investigated.

The chief investigator of the case told Helsingin Sanomat that the investigation was closed because the woman withdrew her statement. The chief investigator compared it to a situation where someone reports their bike stolen but later says that actually it wasn’t stolen after all. 

The Häme police department had previously, a year earlier, opened a separate investigation into abuse the woman had faced. However, nothing had been done; the woman was not questioned within the year, and then she said that she was withdrawing her statement. 

After the recent human trafficking investigation was closed, the woman told another police department about the exploitation she had suffered. This police department has now opened an investigation. It suspects the man of rape and illegal threats. In addition, the man is suspected of sexually abusing the child. 

INVESTIGATION 5620/R/XXXX/17

A similar decision was made in a case that had to do with the forced labor of a Pakistani man. 

Employers moved the man between two restaurants, in the Southeastern cities of Lappeenranta and Kouvola. The man worked around the clock for little pay or no money at all. The employers threatened the cook that if he complained about the conditions, they would make sure that he was deported. When the man finally fell ill, he was thrown out of the job. 

The police opened an investigation into extortionate work discrimination. The Pakistani cook’s allegations were supported by the statements of two witnesses. The cook told police that the employers had pressured him and had threatened his family back in his native country. 

Then, it seems like the investigation ground to a halt.

Six months later, the Pakistani man came to the police station. With him, he had a document. It was an agreement he had made with one of the employers, facilitated by the service union PAM. 

The cook had previously told the police that he had worked for no pay in the restaurant, for almost four months full-time. According to the terms of the agreement, he would get a sum of 3,000 euros and withdraw all claims he had made to the police.

This raises a question: why is the trade union PAM facilitating agreements like this? 

On receiving the agreement, the police closed the investigation into the employer in question. The case documents show that the police encouraged the cook to make a similar deal with the other restaurant owner.

After the last questioning, it was mentioned that you would make an agreement with [the suspect]. How did it go? the police investigator asked. 

The cook replied that the employer had refused to make an agreement. They didn’t want to pay me any compensation, he said.

PAM had calculated that this restaurant owed the man more than 53 000 euros in wages. Soon, this other employer also promised to pay the cook 3 000 euros, on the condition that he withdrew his claims to the police. 

Even though the suspected crime is serious and subject to formal prosecution, the police were satisfied with the agreement. They proposed that the prosecutor close the investigation, on the grounds that the suspected crime was so minor. The prosecutor gave his blessing. The investigation was closed.

Attorney Emilia Kaikkonen says that if the police are already investigating a crime that is subject to formal prosecution, by law the investigation mustn’t be closed simply on the grounds that the victim has withdrawn their claim. 

Agreements made by the victim with their exploiter can reduce possible compensation later. However, such agreements shouldn’t make any difference with regard to the criminal investigation. 

Professor of Criminal Law Sakari Melander agrees with this. He considers the “agreement” made by the Pakistani cook to be so blatant that it in itself indicates exploitation.

A majority of the victims of human trafficking or similar crimes are too afraid to speak to the police at all. Those who do may face pressure and threats, Kaikkonen explains.

“It would be important to try and find out why someone is withdrawing their statement. Or how someone is made to sign an agreement that is not beneficial to them at all.”

The police make decisions that are often final.

Only a few victims have the ability to file a complaint about a decision to close the investigation or to seek justice in other ways.

Filing a complaint may involve financial costs. In addition, many people do not want to relive traumatic events. 

For example, one woman interviewed for this article described that during the criminal investigation, she would suffer frequent panic attacks, anxiety, depression, and insomnia. She didn’t want to go through that again and therefore didn’t file a complaint about the decision of the police to close the investigation into her human trafficking case.

Many victims experience shame and go through a dark period when the investigation into their exploitation is closed, says Pia Marttila from Victim Support Finland. The victim might wonder whether they should have listened to their abuser who told them that there was no point in going to the police.

Many don’t seek restorative justice simply because they have lost their faith in the justice system.

All this highlights the importance of how the police act. Professor Sakari Melander is concerned about the fact that human trafficking investigations in Finland can be in such a poor state.

“What kind of a signal are we giving about the functioning of the criminal justice system? This really is a huge problem,” he says.

“Now we have to figure out the causes of this and start taking corrective action. Also, in these circumstances, there is a strong argument for re-opening investigations, in the interests of establishing criminal liability.”

Attorney Emilia Kaikkonen thinks that the current situation sends a clear message to the perpetrators as well as the victims: exploitation is not effectively addressed and seeking help might even worsen the victim’s situation.

Word gets around. How many victims who have been sexually abused, forced into work, marriage, or prostitution, or have been otherwise oppressed, are forced to settle for this fate?

Kaikkonen believes that investigating these crimes is also important as a matter of principle.

“Human trafficking is one of the worst crimes that can be done to someone, it so clearly violates a person’s freedom. Stopping this type of exploitation has to mean something in our criminal justice system.”

The police are the first link in a society built on the rule of law. What do we have left if they fail?

The Finnish people trust the police.

We believe in the system. 

We trust that at least serious crimes are investigated, victims get justice and the perpetrators are held responsible for their actions. 

The Finnish people believe that the police do everything in their power to solve the crimes reported to them. The leadership of the police assures us that the police protect the fundamental rights of everyone.

But do they? 

Does the police effectively tackle those crimes that have little impact on the majority of the population?

Or is the population’s high level of trust in the police based on the fact that so few have experienced serious criminal investigations? In other words, is the trust based on the false image that crimes are always well-investigated?

The police are responsible for guarding a lot. 

They make decisions that have far-reaching consequences. 

For the person who files a criminal complaint about the exploitation they have faced, the decision of the police might be one of the most important ones in their life.

The police are the first link in a rule-of-law state. 

What is left if they fail?

The Hidden Honour Girls

A teenage girl comes running along the quiet street with ordinary suburban villas on both sides. She’s not wearing any shoes and screams for help. A neighbour lets her in and calls the police. The girl says that she has been locked up and brutally abused during the night because her father had discovered that she has a boyfriend. 

“[My father] asked me if I was afraid. Then he punched me in the head and said that he would kill me with the kitchen knife,” she says. 

Death threats, chokeholds, and torture. A review of hundreds of court rulings reveals that most of the children who have endured honour-related oppression have been exposed to physical violence on a large scale. Among the perpetrators are fathers, mothers, siblings and cousins. 

No one knows exactly how many children are subjected to honour-related oppression and violence in Sweden.  

SVT went through over 400 court orders concerning taking into care of minors due to violence in the home. Fifteen per cent can be tied to the term honour-related physical punishments and murders.  

For several months, SVT followed several girls who were taken into care by social services in order to investigate honour-based oppression and violence in Sweden. The girls we followed describe feeling completely alone, and say that they’ve become stuck in a constant loop of despair. 

It is often the father who beats the child 

The court rulings investigated by SVT concern 100 children and teenagers who were taken into care by social services. Most of them are girls whose families have subjected them to physical violence. Often it’s the father who, as the sole perpetrator, beats the child, but one-quarter of the children say that their mother beats them as well. 

Several laws have been introduced or reformed in recent years to combat forced marriage, child marriage and genital mutilation. Also, the Swedish parliament approved a law that increased the length of prison sentences for those convicted of honour-based crimes. Yet very few of the cases investigated by SVT have led to a guilty verdict. In most cases, the children are too afraid to testify. 

“There’s massive pressure from the family, relatives and siblings to withdraw [the accusations], to minimise and downplay the violence,” says Professor Devin Rexvid at Stockholm University, who studies the work of social services in honour cases.

Showered in cold water

When questioned by the police, a girl who did not want to be forced into marriage confessed what had happened to her. 

“My mother said: “Instead of ruining my life it’s better if you die.” She put me in the shower with freezing cold water. Then she hit me across the shins with a metal ladle. And she used a mobile phone cord to whip me across my back as though I was a slave.” 

Yet, the girls often retract their stories before the case goes to trial. Earlier studies show that minors subjected to honour-related abuse often do not feel ready to ask for help. Yet third-party information shared with social services can lead to them being taken into care with no consent needed from them or their guardians. 

“There have also been a few cases with older girls, some as old as 19, being removed from the home. It has been seen as the final attempt to rescue them from being married off or from being genitally mutilated,” Rexvid says.  

“Controlled by society instead” 

One of them is Aisha. She is profoundly angry. Not with her family, who has spent a lifetime assaulting her, but with social services. She has grown up with honour-related oppression and abuse akin to torture. At the same time, she has withstood the pressure to get married. 

“Social services said it was courageous of me to put my trust in society, but I was let down,” Aisha says during one of many conversations about her situation.  

Aisha feels that the people who were supposed to protect her, the victim, have instead treated her as a perpetrator.  

“I thought they were going help me” 

SVT has investigated social services’ attempts to help these young people whose families subject them to a high level of violence with the aim of restoring the “family honour.” When Aisha was taken into mandatory care, she was placed in one of the juvenile facilities run by the Swedish National Board of Institutional Care (SIS). Known as “SIS Homes,” these institutions are used to house under-age convicts and/or young people who struggle with drug addiction problems or have a history of self-harm. These homes are often described as prisons.

When Aisha was placed in an SIS home, it was not because she had done anything wrong or been convicted of any crimes. She was locked up because the institution was the only place with enough security [to protect her against her family] and thus social services felt confident that her family could not gain access. 

“For the family, it’s shameful that their daughter has been taken into care by the authorities. She is disloyal, she is disobedient. She’s opened up the possibility of sexual relations. In itself, the situation is dishonourable. That’s the reason they’ll do their utmost trying to get her back,” says Professor Rexvid, who researches honour-related violence and oppression. 

“An emergency measure” 

Aisha is not alone. Many of the girls taken into care have been placed in [for example] safe houses, but SVT’s investigation revealed 20 cases where social services instead used juvenile detention facilities. 

The reasons behind these decisions include cases where the location of a safe house was disclosed when the girl has herself chosen to run away, or when the family has found and kidnapped her.  

“Generally speaking, I would say that we do not use SIS institutions, it’s an emergency measure,” according to the head of social services in charge region where Aisha was entitled to support.  

Because SVT cannot risk revealing Aisha’s current whereabouts, we will not disclose the name of the region in question. 

Social services: The only way to protect 

In a recording from a meeting with social services that SVT has listened to, a social worker can be heard telling Aisha that they placed her in an SIS institution to protect her from relatives who might want to “abduct her.” 

“[Previous] measures did not work. They found you. This was the only place available and SIS provides the only way to detain young people,” the social worker says in the recording.  

The head of social services was given the opportunity to listen to the recording but declined to comment on the decision-making process regarding Aisha.  

If the price of locking them up is that the young people lose confidence in you, then is it worth it?  

“It may be worth it, in which case you have to rebuild that confidence again,” the head of social services tells SVT. 

Rather return home than be locked up 

SVT has read almost 70 mandatory-care orders related to honour-related oppression and violence. We have found cases where girls who have previously been kept under lock and key in an SIS home have told the court they are so frightened of being sent back there that they’d rather return home.  

“[It doesn’t address] their experience of oppression, which just changes shape.  They have been controlled in their home environment and are now being controlled by the authorities instead,” says Johanna who runs a security company specialising in safe houses for women and children that are persecuted by their families.

Lost confidence 

Like many before her, Aisha chose to run away from the SIS home and she has lost every shred of faith in social services. At present, she’s in hiding in a different part of Sweden.  

Social services still have no solution to offer her. 

“If there is one thing that will stay with me for the rest of my life, it will be social services betraying me. They removed me from a violent home and controlling environment only to place me in an SIS institution where violence was commonplace. There’s nothing more controlling than being detained in the way I was.” 

Disclosed by the authorities 

The girls we have followed this autumn are in hiding. Every single one has a previous experience of their hiding place being disclosed by the authorities. 

Maria has also been let down by social services, even though they were the only place she could turn to for help.  

She was forced into marriage here in Sweden during the summer break between eight and ninth grade. At age 14, she moved in with her husband’s family but then convinced her father to let her come back and live at home until she turned 18. “Every time he came home to us, he raped me. My family could hear me screaming every night. It felt like everyone was deaf to me needing help. My mother was completely deaf when I screamed.” 

Maria managed to escape. But it took a long time before she would feel free. And neither of her parents was convicted of the abuse. The police closed down their investigation citing a lack of evidence. 

Need to learn more 

Sweden has failed to bring the parents to justice. An extremely small number of parents were convicted of child abuse. In many cases, the suspects were freed of all charges because their children were too afraid to testify.  

All authorities, the police included, need more knowledge in order to be able to help young people who live under honour-related oppression according to Hilda Ramsten, an officer with the police unit dedicated to investigating honour crimes. 

Between January and September 2021, the police have checked the “honour-crime” box in some 1,300 case files. But where these cases end up varies significantly. A police report can be forwarded to different departments of the police, depending on which category of crime the report falls under assault, coercion and threats, or violation of the child’s right to integrity.  Scattering cases across units has made it difficult for the police to assemble all the knowledge that exists across different departments about this crime. 

Few cases lead to prosecution 

Convincing a person subjected to honour crimes to be courageous enough to defy her family, report them to the police, testify in court, and then cut off contact is difficult.  

“Even if I were to report them, my father or my brothers ending up in prison doesn’t make any difference. I will still be hunted for the rest of my life by my uncles,” one girl told SVT. 

Police officer Hilda Ramsten says that their investigations often stall while the young person takes time to make the most difficult decision of her life: whether to testify or not. Without their cooperation, which is crucial to making a case hold up in court, the police have little incentive to actively pursue the investigation. 

“I have also had several young people tell me there’s an additional dimension [to their decision-making,” says Ramsten.” Even though there’s violence in their home, at least they have some sense of control of what’s happening: who knows what about you and what the consequences will be. But they have no control of their lives if they go into hiding.” 

Important to listen to the victims 

Ramsten says that it’s of utmost importance that we as a society start listening to the victims when making decisions about how to protect them.  

“Some girls choose to return to their family. I believe that the authorities have quite a poor understanding of why they chose to do so,” says Ramsten. 

To protect girls from honour-related violence and oppression, several measures can be put in place. Social services can take away their mobile phones, gain access to their social media account and, in certain cases, take them out of school. Always with the purpose of keeping their families away from them. 

“I was forced to ask social workers for permission to go to school, but they didn’t allow it,” says Sara, 16, who was taken into care earlier this year. 

School is considered a safe haven by many of the girls SVT has spoken to. A place free from the rules at home, a place where their family cannot control them.  

“My father and his relatives don’t think women should be educated,” says Aisha.  

Girls who have received help from social services taking them into care and then also out of school, in some cases for long periods of time feel like a betrayal because school and getting an education were supposed to help them get out of their situation.  

Girls’ addresses have been disclosed – and they have been killed 

SVT can reveal the mistakes that have put these girls in mortal danger. They should be impossible to find, but in several cases, the authorities failed to keep their whereabouts secret.  

“They’ve revealed my location three times,” says Maria. “ I stopped trusting them, believing in them. I’m too afraid to.”  

We have examined 30 of these cases where secret locations were revealed. In some cases, the person taken into care has been placed in the same city as their relatives. There are instances where social services have let their locations slip. In other cases, the police have sent a standardized letter, meant to notify the victim that their police report has been entered into the case-file system, to the parents’ address. 

Following some of these instances, the consequences have been disastrous. SVT has found cases where women have disappeared and some have been killed. Sometimes, it’s been a person that the girl trusts who have caved under pressure from her family and told them where she is. The authorities may not understand that those people have their own self-interest in mind because if they do not help the families, they themselves have broken the code of family honour.  

That means that, in many cases, a choice has to be made about whether to reveal the information or be subjected to abuse themselves.   

SVT’s investigation has also revealed that it’s equally common for the girls themselves to disclose their location, a phenomenon corroborated by experts and police officers.

Many run away from home  

Amal was 16 years old when she was persuaded to marry a man from her family’s home country. Her husband abused her for several years before she finally managed to escape. Many years have passed, yet her family have found her location time and time again, which means she leads a life on the run. 

“I have lost confidence in the justice system, to be honest,” she says when SVT meets her in her apartment. 

The curtains have been closed. They always are.  

She has turned for support to other women and girls in the same situation. They have met at support centres and shelters and helped each other with everything from giving someone a ride to offering them a safe place safe to stay. 

There’s hope 

Some of the girls we’ve followed have started over with a new identity and in a new town. They have wanted to tell us that living your life in freedom is possible.  

From sheltered housing all over Sweden come voices with glimpses of hope. 

One 15-year-old girl, who had been locked up in an SIS institution, tells us: “We must become braver and ask for help.” 

“I just needed help to take the first step, for someone to see me,” says another 19-year-old girl. 

 The 25-year-old is happy to be alive: “I am an LGBTI-person and come from a family that has a clan structure. I guess you can understand how that experience has been for me.” (Clan is an  accepted term in Sweden that refers to large families organized hierarchically and ruled by “honour”) 

The girls all agree: They have to tell their story for people to be able to understand. And it is important to have the courage to ask for help and to have the strength to build a new life for yourself. 

Maria and Amal now live in their own apartments and have jobs and new social safety nets. They would never tell anyone at work or at school the reason for their identities being protected. Once the word gets out, they’ll be hunted down again. 

“I think that social services have to acquire better knowledge. Every document they handle represents a life,” Maria says. 

Aisha, Maria and Amal have all been given pseudonyms.