Sweden passes 'good behaviour' law —Why are immigrants criticising it? (opens original article in a new tab)
Sweden passes a law allowing authorities to revoke immigrants' residency permits based on non-criminal behaviors, drawing criticism from immigrants and rights groups who call it arbitrary and vague.
- Sweden passes law allowing revocation of immigrants' residency permits for bad behaviour like unpaid debts or links to extremists.
- Immigrants and rights groups criticize the law as arbitrary and vague, citing uncertainty over what actions could lead to permit revocation.
- The law is part of broader immigration tightening by the right-wing government and Sweden Democrats ahead of September's election.
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