Journalist convicted of smuggling for helping Syrian boy migrate to Sweden - It's Over 9000!

Journalist convicted of smuggling for helping Syrian boy migrate to Sweden

The Guardian

 Fredrik Önnevall met teenager in Greece while filming documentary about the migration crisis

A Swedish court has found a TV journalist guilty of smuggling for helping a Syrian boy migrate to the country and given him a suspended sentence.

In the spring of 2014, Fredrik Önnevall was filming a documentary about the response of European nationalist parties to the migration crisis when he met the 15-year-old boy in Greece.

Along with two colleagues, Önnevall helped “Abed”, which is not his real name, travel to Sweden.

Scrawny and exhausted, the teenager was travelling alone and asked Önnevall to help him get to Sweden to join his cousin.

 “It took 10 to 15 minutes maybe for me to get that question into my head, and to understand what he was asking me and to make up my mind,” the 43-year-old journalist told AFP in an interview last month in the southern Swedish town of Malmö just prior to the start of his trial.

“Everything became more clear when it came down to that very question: ‘What decision will I be able to live with in the future for myself?’” he said.

Önnevall’s lawyers had called for an acquittal on the grounds that he acted out of compassion and concern for the boy’s fate.

But the Malmö district court found him guilty on Thursday of smuggling and gave him a suspended sentence and ordered him to complete 75 hours of community service.

While the court noted the SVT team had acted for purely humanitarian reasons, it said “jurisprudence leaves little scope to acquit someone for that reason”.

The journalist said he would appeal against the ruling.

“This is no surprise because I was prepared for all scenarios,” he told AFP.

“The district court is only the first legal step and I hope the appeals court will come to a different conclusion,” he added.

His two colleagues, a cameraman and an interpreter, received the same sentence.

Since 2015 – when the number of asylum applications in Sweden soared (from 80,000 in 2014 to 160,000 in 2015), requiring the country to halt its generous refugee policy – the number of cases of people helping illegal immigrants come to Sweden has rocketed.

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