Girls who are taken into custody by the social services often come from families with honor traditions, according to a study by the Stockholm and Västra Götaland counties. A third of the girls in custody have been subjected to violence, threats and surveillance, says professor Astrid Schlytter of Stockholm University.
Schlytter says that those girls don't have free time and that they're inspected in school, they don't get to use the TV, computer or phone without somebody overseeing them. They watch TV together with somebody else or a brother checks up later what she's done on the computer.
They must be isolated at home. All these girls have two parents who are born abroad, so there is a problem that had do with immigration, immigration patterns, says Schlytter. Read more ...
Schlytter says that those girls don't have free time and that they're inspected in school, they don't get to use the TV, computer or phone without somebody overseeing them. They watch TV together with somebody else or a brother checks up later what she's done on the computer.
They must be isolated at home. All these girls have two parents who are born abroad, so there is a problem that had do with immigration, immigration patterns, says Schlytter. Read more ...
Source: Islam in Europe