In Copenhagen, the Danish daily Information let 12 refugees, some newly arrived, all professional journalists, take over the entire 48 pages of the newspaper on Friday, October 9.
Lotte Folke Kaarsholm, a features editor at Information, explained in an interview to The Guardian on October 9:
"Refugees are almost all we talk about in Denmark these days," he said. "We thought we would shut up and let refugees set the agenda. What we got is radically different from what politicians are discussing."
The newspaper has shared the initiative on its Facebook page, including the initial process of identifying guest journalists. The idea did not come out of the blue but was spurred on by the wave of other citizen-driven actions trying to lend more gravity and nuance to the refugees’ situation.
The issue of refugees and how to handle them in Denmark has been on the agenda for years. However, during early September, Denmark experienced a large influx of refugees, as seen in other parts of Europe, which increased the polarization of the debate in Denmark.
The minority Liberal administration, which came into power in June 2015, is supported by the populist Danish People's Party. This has meant a shift to a harsher right-winged policy on refugees and immigrants. In September the Danish government placed adverts in Lebanese newspapers basically warning refugees going to Denmark. Ironically, the publication of these adverts collided with one of the most massive waves of refugees in decades.
The Danish government has been criticised for not taking a proactive and constructive approach to provide conditions for refugees, and several citizen-driven initiatives to welcome refugees have emerged as responses to the government's inaction. Amongst others, a group called “Citizens Reaching Out” produced counter-reaction crowdfunded adverts welcoming refugees and apologising on behalf of the Danish people. On September 27 another group, “Forsamlingen” (the Assembly), hosted an event gathering many citizen-driven initiatives working to support refugees.
Last week the government introduced demands for stricter rules on obtaining citizenship, and significantly lowered financial and practical support to refugees.
Several European newspapers have included refugees and their stories on their pages, but the Danish initiative stands out for allowing refugees themselves to write and edit every word. Reactions have been very positve, and many international media are picking up the Danish daily's initiative, Huffington Post and The Guardian among them.
The Danish MP Uffe Elbæk tweeted:
Radio host Anders Stegger also commended the initiative:
Much to many people's surprise, the newspaper's former editor, Lars Hedegaard—who later became a widely-known critic of Islam and in 2011 was convicted of hate-speech—has offered praise for the courageous editorial decision, recommending people buy the newspaper. In a radio interview with Radio24syv Hedegaard reviewed the unique issue and said that publishing it was a good idea, since it could enrich the debate about the fate of refugees.
Information's Editor-in-Chief Christian Jensen and administrative director Mette Davidsen-Nielsen explained their choice to hand over the reins:
"[The refugees] are numbers in a statistic, and they are stand-ins in a political debate, in which they often feel estranged. We all talk about refugees but today the refugees are speaking to us. Each and everyone of them have their story, their destiny, their profession and dreams for the future. But we hear them too seldom and only too sporadically"
A version of this story was cross-posted at Global Voices, a community of 1,200 bloggers and reporters worldwide.
The story you just read is accessible and free to all because thousands of listeners and readers contribute to our nonprofit newsroom. We go deep to bring you the human-centered international reporting that you know you can trust. To do this work and to do it well, we rely on the support of our listeners. If you appreciated our coverage this year, if there was a story that made you pause or a song that moved you, would you consider making a gift to sustain our work through 2024 and beyond?