Islamophobia in Norway
Islamophobia in Norway refers to the set of discourses, behaviours and structures which express feelings of anxiety, fear, hostility and rejection towards Islam and/or Muslims in Norway. Islamophobia can manifest itself through discrimination in the workforce, negative coverage in the media, and violence against Muslims.
Discrimination
In October 2015, a Muslim convert named Malika Bayan was turned away from a hair salon in Bryne by a hairdresser named Merete Hodne who said that she saw the hijab as "a totalitarian symbol" and a "political symbol representing an ideology that frightens her", rather than a religious one. Hodne was subsequently charged 10,000 kroner for religious discrimination, after refusing to pay the initial fine of 8000 kroner. Former MP Peter N. Myhre sided with Hodne, arguing a hijab was similar to a Nazi uniform and denounced the court system for convicting her of discrimination. It was revealed by Norwegian media prior to the court ruling that Merete Hodne was once a member of the anti-Islam group PEGIDA.Bayan, who has since changed her name to Charlotte Faviano, revealed to Norwegian media in May 2020 that she had been forced to wear the hijab by her abusive ex-husband who in 2017 was sentenced to one year and eight months imprisonment for abusing her over a period of three years.
Surveys
In a national representative survey from 2012, prepared by the Center for Studies of the Holocaust and Religious Minorities, 66 per cent of those surveyed reported that they would "strongly dislike" or "dislike" a Muslim to be married into their family.In employment
A 2012 study by researchers at the Institutt for Samfunnsforskning found that job applicants with Pakistani-sounding or Muslim-sounding names received 25% less callbacks from employers than true Norwegian applicants given exact similar qualifications and work experience. The observed net discrimination was weaker in females than males. An older 2006 study concluded that Somali and Iraqi immigrants faced the most discrimination of any immigrant group in the labor market and housing.In education
Research by the Institutt for Samfunnsforskning in 2014 concluded that the coverage of Islam and Muslims in Norway in an academic setting further negative societal attitudes.In June 2018, Norway's parliament voted to ban the burqa and niqab in schools, nurseries and universities. This makes it one of ten European countries to restrict the religious attire of Muslim women.
In politics
In August 2014, MP Ulf Leirstein was criticized for making reference to the Eurabia conspiracy theory in reference to immigration. Leirstein also accused Muslim MP Hadia Tajik of supporting ISIS and practicing taqiyya. Vice Chairman of the Progress Party, MP Per Sandberg, defended Leirstein's statements as "freedom of expression."Following a March 2017 ruling by the European Court of Human Rights upholding the ban on headscarves at work, former leader of the Progress Party, Carl I. Hagen, expressed support for banning municipality employees in Oslo from wearing "political, religious or philosophical symbols at work", including the hijab. Councillor Tone Tellevik Dahl rejected the suggestion.
In the media
The Convention Against All Forms of Racial Discrimination raised concerns in 2015 about an "increase in... speech and xenophobic discourse by politicians, in the media and in other public platforms" in Norway.In the justice system
The Norwegian government has been criticized by the European Council's European Commission Against Racism and Intolerance, the United Nation's Convention Against All Forms of Racial Discrimination Commission, and the Norwegian Equality and Anti-Discrimination Ombud for a lack of sustained efforts against hate speech. The first ever sentence against a Norwegian citizen for hate speech targeting a Muslim was in October 2014. Norwegian Muslims interviewed for a newspaper report in Aftenposten about this issue in August 2015 asserted that "Muslims do not report hate crimes" since they had "no confidence in the police taking it seriously."Hate crimes
In 1985 the Ahmadiyya Muslim Nor mosque at Frogner in Oslo was blasted with dynamite. A woman of 38 suffered from smoke inhalation. The bomb was detonated by an activist from the National People's Party, which resulted in several other people from the party being arrested by the police.In May 2016 a woman was caught on camera trying to set fire to a mosque in Oslo, having been allowed into the building by asking to use its lavatory.
In February 2015, three men were charged with racist-motivated violence against two Norwegian Kurds in downtown Oslo. The perpetrators allegedly yelled “Fucking Muslims, you don’t have anything to do here” and “Go back, fucking terrorists” while kicking and punching the victims in their heads and bodies. Two of the perpetrators had ties to neo-Nazi groups in Norway.
On 10 August 2019 21 year old lone gunman Philip Manshaus opened fire on a mosque in Bærum, Norway, a suburbia 20 kilometers outside of Oslo. He injured one person and was then subdued by two worshippers. At the time of the shooting there were three congregants in the mosque before the gunman opened fire on the Al Noor Islamic center of Bærum. Before the incident he killed his adopted stepsister at their home and posted on 4chan ten minutes prior to the failed attack, praising the Christchurch shooter, the Poway synagogue shooter and the El Paso shooter. In June 2020 the two worshippers who prevented the attack, Muhammad Rafiq and Mohammad Iqbal, were awarded the Medal for Heroic Deeds. Manshaus was sentenced to 21 years in prison a few days earlier.