Sources told the The Reporter that though the Ethiopian government requested as a precondition fingerprints of the Ethiopians who are set to be deported, the Norwegian government refused to get engaged as the request was not in their repatriation agreement.
The agreement was signed between the two countries to let citizens repatriate voluntarily, Ambassador Dina Mufti, spokesperson with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs told The Reporter. According to the agreement, the repatriation is going to be carred out by the Norwegian government.
“In the first place there was no one who could voluntarily return back to Ethiopia, as many are political refuges and that is why the demonstration has kept on here in Norway,” an Ethiopian who resides in Norway told The Reporter in a telephone interview.
The agreement stipulates that Ethiopian citizens, who choose to return voluntarily, are entitled to receive a lump sum upon arrival and will be offered support to reintegrate, which paves the way for a new start in Ethiopia. For Ethiopians, who do not want to go voluntarily, the Norwegian government will resort to the option of enforced return.
A recent report from Norwegian Organization for Asylum Seekers (NOAS) shows that before the repatriation agreement was signed, the deportation of Ethiopians was very complicated. The number of deportations of Ethiopians from Norway and other Western countries in the past few years has been minimal. There have also been relatively few voluntary returns to Ethiopia.
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