Hesha
Nari Saleh endures a harrowing 2,000-mile journey
from war-torn Iraq to seek refuge in Sweden – alone.
June
4, 2007
STOCKHOLM, -- In late January, 17-year-old
Hesha Nari Saleh left his home in the northern Iraqi
city of Mosul and headed on foot for the Turkish
border. He carried $4,000 in cash and a few
belongings in his backpack.
His widowed mother had paid $15,000 to a smuggler
who would guide her oldest son to the border and
help him crawl under the barbed-wire fence into
Turkey. Later, he hopped a freight truck that took
him on a harrowing, three-day journey to Sweden,
some 2,000 miles away.
During the trip, the Kurdish teen was locked in a
trailer as dark as a coal mine with another Iraqi
refugee whom he didn't know. He was given only
crackers, water, a blanket, and a thin mattress. As
the truck crossed the Mediterranean by boat to Italy
and then headed north on land through Europe, Hesha
began losing track of time.
"I was scared, I thought I would die in there,"
recalls the teenager. "We sat in the dark with boxes
and stuff all around us. We didn't know what country
we were in or how long we'd been in there. The truck
driver would sometimes yell back to us to make sure
we were OK, but he didn't stop to let us out until
we got to Sweden."
Hesha is one of a growing number of youths who are
making the anguishing journey – often alone – from
Iraq to Sweden in the hope of starting life over in
a new land. |

Hesha Nari Saleh (seated), a 17-year-old Iraqi Kurd
who fled to Sweden by hiding in a truck

Hesha Nari Saleh |
|
The Scandinavian country has become one of the top
sanctuaries in the world for fleeing Iraqis because
of its liberal refugee policies. Last year, Sweden
received nearly 9,000 Iraqi refugees, three times as
many as the year before. That made it the top
destination outside the Middle East for those
escaping the violence in Iraq.
But the sharp rise in the number of unaccompanied
minors is posing a new challenge for this country of
9 million. During the first quarter of this year,
342 children like Hesha sought asylum – half from
Iraq. The Swedish government expects as many as
1,500 more this year, most from the war-torn nation.
"We know that there are big networks in place,
abroad and here in Sweden, that steer refugees to
countries where they're likely to be accepted," says
Sophia Öhvall Lindberg, an expert on child refugees
at Migrationsverket, the government immigration
authority. "Today, the vast majority of children who
come here, between 80 and 90 percent, are allowed to
stay."
The influx has taken Sweden by surprise,
overwhelming social agencies and leaving hundreds of
minors languishing in temporary shelters as they
await word on whether they can stay. By the end of
2006, it took an average of five months to handle a
child's asylum application – up from less than four
months the year before, according to Save the
Children Sweden.
In Mosul late last year, many middle-class families
were making plans to send their teenage sons abroad.
Hesha says that he and his mother reasoned that "any
place must be better than Iraq."
The man who organized the trip assured them that
Hesha would be well taken care of. In the business
of human smuggling, that is, of course, a relative
concept. When the Turkish truck that carried the
teen finally stopped in the southern Swedish port
city of Malmö, the driver demanded more money before
letting him out. Hesha paid him an additional 150
euros (about $200).
The trucker then took the teen to the train station,
showed him where to buy a ticket for Stockholm – and
left. Speaking no Swedish and very little English,
Hesha found himself rolling north through the wintry
countryside with only a vague idea of what would
happen next. "I looked out the train window and
thought, this is what Sweden looks like," he
recalls. "It's neat and tidy, and there is snow. But
most of all I felt relief. I knew I wasn't going to
die."
***
Sweden takes its job as a refuge seriously. It
provides free housing, classes in Swedish,
healthcare services, a $400 startup check, and a
daily cash stipend of about $10 to those who settle
here. The provisions for unaccompanied child
refugees are even more extensive. They start with
the state providing adult supervision and temporary
guardians and, often, help with managing their own
money for the first time.
"We also know that even if they're 17 now, our
responsibility won't end when they turn 18," says
Nils-Erik Färnbrink, refugee coordinator in Danderyd,
a county northeast of Stockholm that recently
announced it would accept five refugee children.
"They must finish high school, they must have
housing, and maybe other support."
The government recently raised its reimbursement to
counties that take in refugees in the hope of
getting the children out of shelters and into foster
homes and group homes. But even those communities
that have agreed to accept refugee children say it
usually takes several months to line up homes and
schools.
***
At the bustling train station in downtown Stockholm
where Hesha showed up Jan. 30, a stranger ignored
his request in halting English for directions to the
immigration office. Confused, the teen wandered
around the cold city for several hours until he
overheard a man speaking Kurdish and asked for help.
The man whisked him onto a subway train and took him
straight to the immigration center. There, Hesha
applied for asylum, becoming one of 59 unaccompanied
Iraqi minors to do so that month.
He now lives with about 40 other children from half
a dozen countries in a shelter in a rented section
of a mental hospital south of Stockholm. The shelter
was meant to serve as overnight accommodation for
children who just arrived in the country. Instead it
has turned into a long-term living arrangement for
such teens as Hesha who have nowhere else to go.
On a recent day, a quiet group of Somali girls clad
in colorful veils filled the dishwasher after
breakfast. One of them reminded a young man from
Afghanistan that it was his turn to vacuum the
kitchen floor, which he did. "We work hard on gender
equality here, even though it's tough sometimes to
make these boys understand why we do it," says
Tobias Kronqvist, deputy manager at the shelter.
"They're in Sweden, now."
In the hallway, a cluster of Iraqi youths listened
to music, like typical teenagers. At times, however,
the children's frustrations rise to the surface:
Staffers occasionally have to break up fights, and
child psychologists have been called in to help
teens who became depressed.
"There's a lot of pressure on these kids to make it
here and to show their families that they pulled it
off," Mr. Kronqvist says. "They've gotten away from
the war, but they still have problems."
***
Nearly four months after his arrival in Sweden,
Hesha, too, is struggling to keep his spirits up. He
is anxious to get out of the shelter. But he worries
he will be placed in a town far from Stockholm's
immigrant neighborhoods where he has already
befriended some Kurds.
Looking older than his 17 years, Hesha is
soft-spoken and polite. But he grows visibly tense
when talking about the sacrifice his family made to
send him to a safe place and about the uncertainty
he faces now. "Not knowing what will happen," he
says, "that's what's so difficult."
More than anything, he fears being sent back to
Iraq. "There is no future for me there," he says.
"All we have is war. Saddam was not good, but at
least we could go to work, go to school, live normal
lives."
Hesha attends a high school that recently began
offering a Swedish language program for child
refugees. His dream is to learn Swedish well enough
to enroll in regular high school in the fall, and
eventually become a doctor. Permanent residency
would pave the way for his mother and 12-year-old
brother to move here.
"I'm always thinking of my family," the teen says.
"I wish I could bring everybody here. Then I
wouldn't have to worry that someone will die."
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