For those seeking asylum with a parent or other legal guar­dian

This information is for children who have come to Sweden together with their family to seek asylum. Seeking asylum means coming to a new country and asking for protection from war or persecution.

Here we describe what steps you go through as an asylum seeker, how the Swedish Migration Agency decides who is entitled to asylum, and what support you and your family are entitled to while you wait for a decision.

The information can be read in different ways. You can either read everything from the first to the last page to get knowledge about what happens when you apply for asylum. Or you can read the section that feels most important to you right now.

Applying for asylum

To apply for asylum, the whole family must come to the Swedish Migration Agency. At the first meeting, the staff will ask you and your family many questions in order to be able to register you in the Swedish Migration Agency's computer system.

Waiting for an asylum inve­sti­ga­tion

The next step in the asylum process is for you and your family to come to an asylum investigation, a longer interview where you can tell us more about why you want asylum in Sweden. How long you will have to wait for an asylum investigation can be different for different people.

While you wait for a decision, you will be in contact with a reception unit. The staff at the reception unit work, among other things, with determining whether you are entitled to financial support, tell you if you have received a decision, and give you support if the Swedish Migration Agency decides that you are not allowed to stay in Sweden.

If you live in one of the Swedish Migration Agency's apartments, you will also meet the reception unit's accommodation staff. They tell you about rules and provide practical information. With the help of an interpreter, you can tell us what your name is, when you were born and what language you speak. The staff wants to know what your family looks like, how you are doing and if anyone in the family needs special support. If you are afraid of someone or something, it is important that you tell them.

At this first meeting, you will tell us briefly about where you come from, how you have travelled to Sweden and why you need protection in Sweden. You will have more time to talk about it at a later meeting, an asylum investigation. Then you will also have the opportunity to talk to the staff yourself, if you want it and if your parents allow it.

Show who you are

The Swedish Migration Agency wants to know who you are and where you come from in order to make the right decision. It is also important for the Swedish Migration Agency to know how old everyone in the family is, since asylum-seeking children have different rights than asylum-seeking adults.

It is your parents' responsibility to show who you are. The best way to show who you are is by showing a passport or identity card, for example. If your parents cannot show who you are, it will be difficult for the Swedish Migration Agency to assess whether you are entitled to asylum or not.

Photo and fing­er­print

You will be photographed, we will measure how tall you are and if you have reached the age of six you will be asked to provide your fingerprints.

Fingerprints are taken by pressing your fingers against a machine that reads your fingerprints. If you are 14 years or older, the Swedish Migration Agency will check if your fingerprints are registered in another country in Europe.

If your fingerprints show that you have already applied for asylum, or have a residence permit, in another country in Europe, the Swedish Migration Agency may decide that you should travel back there. The Swedish Migration Agency may also decide that you should have your application for asylum examined in another country in Europe if you have family members there. Before this is decided, the staff will ask what you and your parents think about it. These rules are called the Dublin Regulation.

LMA Card

Once the Swedish Migration Agency has registered your family's application for asylum, you will receive a receipt showing that you have applied for asylum. After a couple of weeks, you can exchange the receipt for an LMA card.

LMA means the Reception of Asylum Seekers Act. An LMA card is a plastic card with a photo of you. It is proof that you are an asylum seeker and that you can stay in Sweden while you wait for a decision. You must bring your LMA card with you every time you visit the Swedish Migration Agency, go to the doctor or pick up medicine at the pharmacy.

Asylum inve­sti­ga­tion

The asylum investigation is a conversation where you and your family are asked to tell us more about why you want asylum in Sweden. An asylum investigation for a family can take several hours, so you may be at the Swedish Migration Agency all day. You must bring with you what is called evidence to the investigation. This evidence is identity documents and other things that show that what you tell us is true.

A person from the Swedish Migration Agency is in charge of the investigation and writes down what you are talking about in a report. Sometimes there may be two people from the Swedish Migration Agency involved in an investigation, in that case one person will ask the questions and the other person writes. If you have a public counsel, they can come with you to the asylum investigation. An interpreter translates what you say so that you can understand each other. Sometimes one or more people can participate in the investigation by phone or video.

The case officer from the Swedish Migration Agency will ask you about what you have experienced in your home country and what you think would happen if you returned there. You will also be asked questions about your identities and how you got to Sweden.

You have probably heard these questions before, but now you will have more time to tell us more details than in previous conversations.

Children are also allowed to talk

The Convention on the Rights of the Child says that you have the right to speak up if you want to, and that all adults who decide things that affect children must think about what is best for the child. This means that the Swedish Migration Agency must listen in particular to what asylum-seeking children have been through. Children may have other reasons for wanting asylum than their parents have. Therefore, the case officer would like to interview you as well, if you yourself want it and if your parents agree with it. If you wish, you can bring your parents or another adult that you feel safe with.

When the Swedish Migration Agency investigates your reasons for asylum, the case officer must try to adapt the investigation to your age, maturity and health. If you cannot understand a question, you must let us know. It is also important that you speak up if you do not understand the interpreter. If you do not want to talk at all, that is okay too, the case officer can ask your parents what you have been through.

You may be asked questions about things that may be difficult or embarrassing to talk about. It is important that you tell the Swedish Migration Agency the truth, even if it is difficult. If you are asked the same question several times, it does not mean that you have answered incorrectly, only that the case officer needs more information and really wants to understand your story. If you need to take a break, you can ask the case officer for a break.

Deci­sion

The Swedish Migration Agency decides whether you should be granted asylum in Sweden by looking at everything you have told and shown, and what we know about the situation in your home country. After that we compare this with what the law says about who should be granted asylum in Sweden.

Once the Swedish Migration Agency has decided whether you should be granted asylum, your family will be invited to a meeting. At the meeting, the case officer will explain the decision and what happens next. The asylum decision is written in Swedish, but a case officer at the reception unit will explain what it means with the help of an interpreter.

The case officer who tells about the decision may not be the same person who interviewed you and made the decision. There are always two people who make the decision together. This is so that we can be sure that the right decision is made. The case officers at the Swedish Migration Agency are not allowed to decide as they see fit, but must follow the law.

Yes or no

If you receive a yes to your application, you will be granted a residence permit and have the right to stay in Sweden.

If you receive a no to your application, your application is what you call rejected.

Who can get asylum?

Swedish law states who can be granted asylum in Sweden. The Swedish Migration Agency examines whether the reasons you and your family tell us are sufficient to be granted asylum. You can be granted a residence permit if you are a refugee, or a person in need of protection or if you need to stay for other reasons.

Refugee

According to the UN Refugee Convention and Swedish law, you are a refugee if you have reason to be afraid of being persecuted because of:

  • race
    – for example, what skin colour you have
  • nationality
    – for example, your citizenship, language or ethnic group
  • religion
    - which god you believe in, or that you do not believe in a god at all
  • political views
    – for example, your views on how your home country should be governed
  • gender
    – if you are a girl or a boy
  • sexual orientation
    – for example, if you are a girl who falls in love with girls or a boy who falls in love with boys
  • that you belong to a particular social group
    – sometimes children can be considered a separate social group.

Sometimes it is those who decide in a country who persecute and threaten people so that they have to flee. But you can also apply for asylum if there are individual people or groups who are persecuting, and the authorities in the home country (such as the police) are unable or unwilling to protect and help the victims.

It is not enough that you have experienced this kind of persecution. There must also be a high risk that you will be exposed to it again if you go back. That is why the case officer at the Swedish Migration Agency asks about what you think will happen if you have to go back to your home country.

If you are considered a refugee, you will be granted a residence permit for three years.

Alter­na­tive subsi­diary protec­tion

According to Swedish law, you can sometimes get asylum in Sweden even if you are not considered a refugee in the way described in the items above, but are still afraid to return to your home country.

You are called eligible for alternative subsidiary protection if you risk torture, the death penalty, or other inhuman or degrading treatment in your home country. You can also get a residence permit as a person eligible for alternative subsidiary protection if there is so much war in your home country that everyone who stays there risks being killed.

A person who is considered eligible for subsidiary protection receives a residence permit for 13 months.

Resi­dence permit in other cases

In some cases, an asylum seeker may be granted a residence permit even if he or she does not meet the requirements of the law to be called a refugee or a person eligible for alternative subsidiary protection. It is unusual and requires special circumstances, for example that the person is very ill or that the situation in the home country is very difficult.

If you are granted a resi­dence permit

Residence permit means that you have received a YES to your application for asylum. You are allowed to stay in Sweden.

If you and your family are granted a residence permit, you will be asked to come to a meeting with staff at the reception unit. The staff will explain what your decision says and why you have been granted a residence permit. You will receive a paper showing that you have been granted a residence permit.

Once you have received a residence permit, you must go to the Swedish Tax Agency to register in the national population register. This means that you receive a personal identity number with the last four digits.

If you have lived in accommodations provided by the Swedish Migration Agency you can get help to move to a new home.

How long is my resi­dence permit valid for?

If you are called a refugee, you will be granted a residence permit that is valid for three years. If you are called persons in need of alternative subsidiary protection you will receive a residence permit that is valid for 13 months. After that time, you can apply for an extension. If you still need protection, you can get a residence permit for another two years.

Perma­nent resi­dence permits

When you have had a residence permit for three years you can apply for a permanent residence permit at the same time as you apply for an extension. If you are 15 years or older, you must live a well-behaved life in order to get a permanent residence permit. For example, if you have committed a crime, your application for a permanent residence permit may be rejected. If you are 18 years or older when you apply for a permanent residence permit, you must also have a job and be able to support yourself.

If you do not meet the requirements for permanent residence, you may still be able to receive an extended residence permit if you still need protection.

If your appli­ca­tion is rejected

Rejection means that you have received a NO to your application for asylum. You are not allowed to stay in Sweden.

You and your parents will come to a meeting where the staff will help you understand what the decision says. If you and your parents wish, you can join the conversation.

A rejection to your application means that the Swedish Migration Agency assesses that you do not have enough reasons to be granted asylum in Sweden and that you must return home. The Swedish Migration Agency will help your parents plan for how you will return home.

Appeal

If you disagree with the decision, your parents can appeal. This means that they write a letter to the Swedish Migration Agency in which you tell us why you think the decision is wrong and that you want the court to change the decision. If you have a public counsel, they can help you write an appeal.

If the Migration Court agrees with you, the Swedish Migration Agency will change the decision and you may stay. If the Migration Court rejects your appeal, it means that they think that the Swedish Migration Agency's decision is correct. You can then appeal to the Migration Court of Appeal.

The Migration Court of Appeal is a court that only tries certain special cases where it is unclear how the law should be interpreted. If the Migration Court of Appeal decides not to try your case, it means that you cannot appeal anymore and that the Swedish Migration Agency's decision comes into effect. This is called that the decision "gains legal force".

You can change your mind at any time and withdraw an appeal and instead decide to return home. If you decide to do that you can get help from the Swedish Migration Agency to return home.

Return

Whether your parents appeal the decision or not, you must prepare to return to your home country. Your parents will be asked to come to several meetings with the Swedish Migration Agency to talk about what needs to be done in order for you to return. If you and your parents wish, you can join the meetings.

Your parents are responsible for ensuring that you leave Sweden within the time that is written in the decision. If you do not travel within that time, there is a risk that you will have a re-entry ban. This means that you are not allowed to enter Europe or Sweden for a certain time.

If your parents accept the decision and cooperate with the Swedish Migration Agency, they can, for example, get help to book tickets or arrange practical matters that concern the trip. You are also entitled to help with money and accommodation until it is time to leave.

If you do not comply with the deci­sion

The Swedish Migration Agency can only help you return if your parents themselves agree to travel back to your home country. If you do not show up when the Swedish Migration Agency summons you to meetings, or if you show that you do not intend to cooperate, the Swedish Migration Agency will hand your case over to the police.

If your case is handed over to the police, it is the police who must make sure that you comply with the Swedish Migration Agency's and the court's decision, in other words that you must leave Sweden.

New events after rejec­tion

Sometimes things may happen after the decision that prevents you from leaving Sweden. For example, it may be that someone in the family becomes too ill to travel, or that new reasons for asylum or new evidence of your reasons for seeking asylum emerge that the Swedish Migration Agency did not know about when we made the decision. If this happens, your parents should write to the Swedish Migration Agency and tell them about what has happened. The Swedish Migration Agency will then decide whether the new reasons are sufficient to stop the deportation.

Sometimes the deportation can be stopped temporarily so that the Swedish Migration Agency has time to investigate the new event. A temporary stop is called inhibition.

While you wait to return home

You have the right to go to school and receive medical care as long as you remain in Sweden, even if the Swedish Migration Agency has handed over your case to the police.

When you leave Sweden, it is good that you bring with you

  • a certificate showing that you have attended school here
  • grades from school, if you have any
  • vaccination certificate(s)
  • postal addresses, e-mail addresses and telephone numbers of anyone that you want to keep in touch with.

Your rights

In Sweden, you are considered to be a child until you turn 18. Asylum-seeking children have the same rights as all children in Sweden.

That means, for example, that you have the right to live in safety, to go to school, and to have leisure time. You are entitled to any healthcare and dental care you might need. You get to make decisions about your own body, and no one can force you to have sex or get married. No one is allowed to hit you or threaten you.

The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) is the law in Sweden. It states what rights all children should have. Some of the most important rules in the Convention on the Rights of the Child are:

  • All children have the right to live and develop.
  • The best interests of the child should always be important.
  • Children have the right to speak their minds.
  • All children have the same rights.

When adults who are responsible for you make a decision that affects you, they need to listen to what you want and think about what is best for you. You have the right to say what you think and to be heard, but that doesn’t mean that things will always turn out the way you want.

Autho­ri­ties and people you will meet

You will meet many different adults who are responsible for different things that affect you and your family.

The Swedish Migra­tion Agency

The Swedish Migration Agency is responsible for deciding whether you and your family should be allowed to stay in Sweden. If you and your family have nowhere to live, you will receive temporary accommodation that the Swedish Migration Agency is responsible for providing while you wait for a decision. If you and your family do not have any money of your own, you will get help from the Swedish Migration Agency, so that your parents can buy food and clothes.

You will visit the Swedish Migration Agency several times together with your parents, and you will meet several different people who work there.

The muni­ci­pa­lity

The municipality is responsible for making sure you can go to school and that young children can go to preschool while their parents work. There are many adults working at school to whom you can turn if you have questions about how something works in Sweden.

In the municipality, there is something called ‘social services’. Social services help children who do not feel safe at home or who do not have an adult who can take care of them.

Inter­preter

In order for you, your family, and the staff at the Swedish Migration Agency to understand each other, an interpreter will translate what you say. The interpreter can speak both Swedish and the language that you and your family speak. Either the interpreter is in the same room as you, or they are on the phone or video. It is the interpreter’s job to translate everything that is said in the room and not say anything more.

It is important that you and the interpreter understand each other and that you dare to say everything you want to say while the interpreter is there. If you do not understand the interpreter, you need to tell them. Also tell us if you and the interpreter are related or know each other in some other way. If you prefer to have a man or a woman as an interpreter, you or your parents should say so in advance.

You and your family have the right to an interpreter when you go to important meetings. This could be when you meet with someone from the Swedish Migration Agency or someone who works at the municipality, when you visit the doctor, or when your parents have an appointment to talk with your teachers. Children often learn Swedish faster than adults, but you should never have to be an interpreter for your parents. It is not your responsibility to translate when adults are talking.

Public counsel

A public counsel is a person who knows Swedish laws and who helps you and your family with your application for asylum. It is the Swedish Migration Agency that decides who will be your public counsel, but they do not work for the Swedish Migration Agency. If the Swedish Migration Agency has decided that you should receive a public counsel, you do not have to pay for it. If your parents want a special person as a public counsel, they can tell the Swedish Migration Agency that.

Profes­sional secrecy

Everyone who works at the Swedish Migration Agency is bound by an obligation of secrecy. This means that they are not allowed to tell anyone what they know about you and your family. Only your parents and those working on your application have the right to know what you have said.

The interpreter and the public counsel are also bound by professional secrecy, as well as staff at the municipality and staff in healthcare or school.

Anyone who is bound by professional secrecy may break their obligation of secrecy so that they can talk to another responsible adult if they think you are in any sort of danger.

Your parents are not bound by an obligation of secrecy, as it is their responsibility to talk to other adults about you.

Accom­mo­da­tion

If you and your family have relatives or friends that you want to live with, you can do so. Then your parents must tell the Swedish Migration Agency where you are living, so that we can send you letters.

If you do not have a place to stay, you can stay in one of the Swedish Migration Agency's temporary accommodations. You might live in a large building together with many other people who have also applied for protection, or in an apartment in a regular residential area. No matter how you live, you will be able to live with your family.

If you need the Swedish Migration Agency's help with accommodation, you cannot decide where to live. The Swedish Migration Agency will provide you with accommodation where there is room, and you may have to move to another location while you wait for a decision.

If the Swedish Migration Agency decides that you can stay in Sweden, you can get help finding your own accommodation.

Health

You have the same right to healthcare and dental care as all children in Sweden. Healthcare and dental care are free for all children. If someone in your family needs to go to the doctor or dentist, you must show your LMA cards.

Everyone who applies for asylum in Sweden is offered a health exam. The purpose of the health exam is to make sure that you get help as soon as possible if you need care, and that you receive information about how the healthcare system works in Sweden. Take the opportunity to ask any questions you might have, and do not be afraid to tell healthcare staff how you are feeling. The healthcare staff are bound by professional secrecy, and the health exam does not affect your case with the Swedish Migration Agency.

Eye exam

If you need glasses, you can apply for special allowance from the Swedish Migration Agency and then book an appointment with an optician.

Dental care

You have the right to receive both preventive dental care and the treatment that the dentist decides you need. Dental care is free for all children in Sweden.

Violence and sexual abuse

Many asylum seekers have been subjected to violence or sexual abuse in their home country or while fleeing to Sweden. Such experiences can make you feel bad both physically and mentally, but help is available. For example, you can talk to the healthcare staff during your health exam, to staff at your youth guidance centre, or to the school nurse or counsellor at your school. They can help you get the right care.

All forms of violence and sexual assault are illegal in Sweden. It is always the person who has harmed you who is responsible, and you can never be punished for being subjected to violence or sexual abuse. This applies regardless of what relationship you have with each other. It also applies, for example, to rape within a marriage and when parents beat their own children. When an adult has sex with a child under the age of 15, it counts as rape. In Sweden, it is also illegal to force or trick someone into getting married, and children under the age of 18 are not allowed to marry.

Contact the police at telephone number 114 14 if you are being subjected to violence or sexual assault or if you are afraid of being married off. If you are in acute danger, call the police at 112.

Genital muti­la­tion

Genital mutilation (or ‘female circumcision’, as some people call it) is when you cut or stitch up a girl’s vulva or damage it in some other way.

Genital mutilation is completely prohibited in Sweden and is seen as a serious crime. A person who has been subjected to genital mutilation can have both physical and mental problems. If someone has done this to you and you have problems because of it, you can get help from the healthcare service. Talk to your school nurse, the staff at your youth guidance centre, or your health centre.

Sexu­ally trans­mitted dise­ases

You have the right to knowledge about how to protect yourself from sexually transmitted diseases and how to avoid infecting others. Examples of sexually transmitted diseases include chlamydia, hepatitis, gonorrhoea and HIV. If you know that you have such a disease, you must inform the healthcare staff during your health exam, so that you can receive care and avoid infecting someone else. If you are unsure whether you are infected, the healthcare staff can take samples.

Contra­cep­tion and mater­nity care

In Sweden, maternity care and obstetric care is free for asylum seekers. You also have the right to free contraceptive advice, so that you can choose whether you want to become a parent. Both girls and boys have the right to information on how to protect themselves and others from pregnancy. Girls who have become pregnant and do not want to have the child have the right to terminate the pregnancy through an abortion.

Mental illness

It is common to feel worried about what will happen in the future while you are waiting for a decision on your asylum application. Some people may also feel bad because they have experienced frightening things or because they miss their family. Examples of symptoms of poor mental health include anxiety, difficulty sleeping or feeling sad and depressed.

You can get help and support from the healthcare service where you live. You can also talk to the counsellor or school nurse at your school.

Disa­bi­lity

A disability is when you have an injury or an illness that makes it difficult, for example, to move, hear, speak or understand things. If you have a disability, you have the right to receive practical support in your everyday life, at school or when you talk to the Swedish Migration Agency. Having a disability does not affect your application for asylum in Sweden. If you have (or if you think you have) a disability, you can tell the healthcare staff during your health exam.

More infor­ma­tion about health

On www.1177.se/other-languagesExternal link, opens in new window., there is information in several languages about various diseases and how the healthcare system in Sweden works. You can also call the healthcare information services at telephone number 1177. Then you can talk to a nurse who can answer questions and give advice on where to turn to get the right care.

The website www.youmo.seExternal link, opens in new window. provides information for young people about health, relationships, sex and much more, in several languages.

At www.rfsu.se/uposExternal link, opens in new window. you will find short informational videos for those who want to know more about their body, sexuality and health. The films are available in many different languages. Here you can find, among other things, informational videos about contraception, childbirth and pregnancy.

Kvinnofridslinjen (Sweden’s National Women’s Helpline) offers advice and support to women have been subjected to threats and physical, psychological and sexual violence. Call 020-50 50 50. They can arrange for an interpreter in just a few minutes. You can also read more at kvinnofridslinjen.seExternal link, opens in new window.. The information is available in several languages.

Call the police at 114 14 if you want to report a crime, such as someone hitting you or sexually assaulting you. You can also call the police if you are afraid of being married off or circumcised. If the situation is urgent, call 112.

School

In Sweden, school is free and all children must go to school. You have the right to go to school just like all other children who live in Sweden.

Compul­sory school

Compulsory school consists of primary and lower secondary school. It lasts ten years, and you usually start the year you turn six. The first year of school is called preschool class. It involves a lot of play and creative activities to prepare young children for their future schooling. In compulsory school, all students study approximately the same subjects.

Upper secon­dary school

Upper secondary school is a voluntary education where students have the opportunity to choose a specialisation to prepare for professional life or continued studies at a university or college. In order to study at an upper secondary school, you must have completed your compulsory school studies.

If you are an asylum seeker, you have the right to complete an upper secondary education if you started your upper secondary studies before you turn 18. This also applies if you move to another municipality.

Finances

If your family does not have any money of your own, you have the right to apply for financial support from the Swedish Migration Agency. There are two forms of financial support to apply for: daily allowance and special allowance.

Daily allo­wance

All asylum seekers who do not have any money of their own can apply for a daily allowance. Among other things, the daily allowance should cover food, clothes, shoes, shampoo, medicine and things that you want to do in your leisure time. It is called a daily allowance because you receive a certain amount of money for each day, but the money is paid out once a month. Your parents will receive a bank card to which the money will be deposited.

Special allo­wances

If you need to buy something that the daily allowance does not cover, you can apply for a special allowance. For example, this could include eyeglasses, winter clothes, or a pram. When you and your family apply for a special allowance, it is important that you explain why you need the money. The application is submitted to the reception unit, which decides whether or not you should receive the money. It may be that you get less money than you asked for. If you are dissatisfied with the decision about the special allowance, you can lodge an appeal.

Your rights as a child in Sweden

Asylum-seeking children have the same rights as all children in Sweden. For example, all children have the right to go to school, to receive care when they need it, to live in safety, and to say what they think. Here you can read about the rights and special rules that exist to protect children.

Children are particularly vulnerable and need extra protection. The age limit for being considered a child or an adult can differ between different countries. In Sweden, you are considered to be a child until you turn 18.

The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) is the law in Sweden. The Convention on the Rights of the Child states what rights all children should have. There are also other laws in Sweden that exist to protect children.

You have the right to be free from violence

All children have the right to be free from violence. No adult is allowed to strike, kick, push, pull your hair, or threaten you.

Contact the police by calling 114 14 if you are being subjected to violence. If you are in acute danger, call the police at the number 112.

Child marriage is prohi­bited

Different countries have different age limits for when you are considered an adult and when you are considered a child. The rules for getting married also differ from country to country.

A child cannot marry

In Sweden, you are a child until the day you turn 18, and before that you cannot get married.

This is because it is believed that children should not bear the responsibility of a marriage. Early marriages can make children feel bad both physically and psychologically, because a child can be prevented from developing into their own, independent person and living the life to which they have a right.

Once you have reached the age of 18, you decide for yourself whether you want to get married and, if so, to whom. No one is allowed to force or trick someone into marriage. It is illegal to try to force or trick a child into travelling to another country to get married. This is a crime that can lead to imprisonment. It is also illegal to force a child to live in a relationship similar to a marriage. When an adult has sex with a child under the age of 15, it counts as rape.

If someone is under the age of 18 and married

If either of the people in a marriage were under the age of 18 when they married, the marriage will not be valid in Sweden.

If you are under the age of 18 and apply for asylum together with the person that you are married to instead of with your parents, you are considered an unaccompanied minor. You will then be appointed a guardian who will help you in your contact with the authorities.

Where to turn

If you have questions or need help, you can talk to a teacher, counsellor or healthcare professional. You can also contact the Swedish Migration Agency or social services. If you have a guardian, you can also turn to them.

If you are afraid that you or someone you know will be married off, you can call the police at 114 14.

Genital muti­la­tion is prohi­bited

Genital mutilation, sometimes referred to as female circumcision, occurs in many parts of the world. Genital mutilation is when you cut or stitch up a girl’s vulva or damage it in some other way. No one is allowed to do that to a girl, even if it has been a tradition in the family.

Genital mutilation is completely prohibited in Sweden and is regarded a serious crime. The person who has been subjected to genital mutilation is never punished.

Contact the police at 114 14 if you are afraid that you or someone you know will be subjected to genital mutilation. You can also call Kvinnofridslinjen (the National Women’s Helpline) at 020-50 50 50 to get advice and support. Kvinnofridslinjen is a national helpline for women who have been subjected to threats or violence.

You have the right to freedom from honour related violence and oppres­sion

In some families and extended families, it is important that the family maintain a good reputation. There may be rules about what clothes you can wear, who you can hang out with, that you cannot be together with and marry whomever you want, study what you want, or pursue the profession you want.

Both girls and boys are affected

These rules tend to be the strictest for girls, but there are also rules that apply to boys. If the rules cause you to be poorly treated or punished, this is known as “honour-related violence and oppression”. The poor treatment or punishment may include beatings, threats, or being called mean names. Exposing a child to honour-related violence and oppression is a violation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child and Swedish law.

Sometimes children are forced to control their siblings because the family is worried that rumours about them will spread. But all people have the right to live their own life, the way they want to live it. This applies regardless of your religion or cultural background, what country you come from, or who your family is. All children have the right to live their own lives, and should not have to control anyone else.

Where to turn

If you or someone you know is being subjected to honour-related violence or oppression, you can turn to a teacher at your school, the social services in your municipality, or the Swedish Migration Agency for help. There are also various organisations that can provide support and information about honour-related violence and oppression.

GAPF – National Organisation against Honour-Related Violence (In Swedish): Here you can get support if you or someone you know are being subjected to honour-related violence or oppression. You can call 08-711 60 32, send an e-mail, or use the chat function. https://gapf.se/

Love is Free (In Swedish): Here you can get support via chat and e-mail if you have questions about honour-related violence or oppression, your rights, love, forced marriage or genital mutilation. https://www.raddabarnen.se/rad-och-kunskap/karleken-ar-fri

Tris – Girls’ Rights in Society (In Swedish): Here you can get support if you feel limited by your family or relatives or are subjected to threats or violence when you try to make your own choices. Call 010-255 91 91. https://www.tris.se/

The equal value of all people

In Sweden, there are many laws that state that all people are equal and have the same rights. We are entitled to have the same rights and opportunities in life no matter who we are, what we look like, where we come from, what we believe in, who we fall in love with, or how we function.

There are laws to prevent someone from being discriminated against or having their rights violated. As human beings, we are allowed to feel, think and believe as we please, but we are not allowed to do whatever we want. The Fundamental Law on Freedom of Expression states that all people have the right to express their thoughts, opinions and feelings, as long as they do not infringe on the rights of someone else. We must all respect the right of our fellow human beings to their own identity and their own life choices.

Gender equa­lity

Gender equality means that boys and girls are equal and should have the same opportunities in life. It also means that adult men and women should have the same rights and obligations. They should have equal power to influence society and their own lives.

Gender equality means that boys and girls are equal and should have the same opportunities in life. It also means that adult men and women should have the same rights and obligations. Members of each gender should have equal power to influence society and their own lives.

100 years ago, this was not the case in Sweden. Back then, women didn’t have much power to make decisions about their own lives. It was mostly men who got an education and worked while women stayed at home, taking care of the children, cleaning and doing laundry. A lot has changed since then.

In most families in Sweden today, both parents go to work or study and the children go to preschool, kindergarten, school and after-school care during the day. In the home, both parents often help each other to clean, do laundry, shop and cook, and they take care of the children together.

In order for society to be as fair as possible and give women and men equal power to influence society and their own lives, the Swedish Parliament has decided on various gender equality goals.

The goals state that

  • men and women should have the same opportunity to be financially independent, so that no one is forced to be financially dependent on anyone else
  • boys and girls should have equal access to education and the right to choose what educational path they wish to pursue
  • men and women should have equal rights to make decisions about their bodies, and men’s violence against women must be eradicated
  • household chores should be evenly distributed between men and women. This also means that sisters and brothers in the same family should have equal responsibility for helping with household chores.

Gender iden­tity and sexual orien­ta­tion

In Sweden, everyone has the right to their own gender identity and sexual orientation. Your gender identity is the gender(s) you feel you are, regardless of what others expect. Your sexual orientation describes the gender(s) of the people to whom you are attracted and fall in love. You have the right to love and be with whomever you want, regardless of whether the person is the same gender or a different gender than yourself.

You don’t have tell other people about your sexual orientation or gender identity unless you want to. There is no sexual orientation or gender identity that violates the law. On the contrary, it is illegal to treat someone unfairly or inferiorly, for example in school or in an organisation, because of the person’s sexual orientation or gender identity.

Where to turn

There are several different organisations and youth guidance centres to which you can turn if you want to know more or if you need support.

RFSL: https://www.rfsl.se/en/

Through this organisation, you can connect with other LGBTQI+ people, participate in activities and get support. They also have a network for people who are new to Sweden, RFSL Newcomers: https://www.rfsl.se/en/organisation/asylum-and-migration/newcomers-contacts/

UMO – about sex, health and relationships: https://www.youmo.se/sprakvalsida/

UMO is a website for everyone aged 13–25 years where you can read more about sexual orientation and gender identity.

Racism

Racism assumes that people can be divided into different groups and that people belonging to certain groups are of lesser value. For example, it can involve dividing people into groups according to their skin colour, culture or religion.

In Sweden, there are laws that are created to protect people from being subjected to racism. For example, it is forbidden to deny a person a job or housing because of the person’s name or origin. It is also forbidden to wear jewellery or clothing with racist text, swastikas, or other symbols that are racist or offensive to a particular group. It is also not permitted to disseminate information claiming that a group or person is worth less, for example because of their skin colour or religion.

Sometimes when you are treated badly, it can be difficult to know whether or not what you have been subjected to is illegal. Talk to someone you trust about what has happened, such as a teacher or someone else with whom you feel safe.

For adults that are impor­tant to a child who has sought asylum

It is sometimes said that people who apply for asylum, and especially unaccompanied minors, are strong. That if they can get to the other side of the world on their own, they can probably do anything. But even the strongest and most hardened children need safe adults around them, so that they can just be kids. Refugee children are no exception, and when they don’t have their parents with them, or if their parents are exhausted, confused or perhaps traumatised, other important adults are needed to offer these children some security and calmness in an uncertain situation.

Every child is different and every asylum seeker has a unique story. Some asylum-seeking children have been refugees for a long time and may not have seen their relatives for years. Others have been separated from their parents recently. Some have contact with their close relatives, while others do not know where to start looking. All asylum-seeking children carry with them questions and concerns. Some have questions about their situation and ask for help. Others bottle up their worries and dare not ask about them.

As an adult, you play an important role. You are a person who can guide and support the child in their current situation. You can read these pages together with the child. Together, you can review the various stages that you go through when you are an asylum seeker.

An important adult may be

  • a parent
  • another legal guardian
  • a guardian
  • a relative
  • a teacher
  • a school counsellor
  • someone from a non-governmental organisation (NGO)
  • an employee of the Swedish Migration Agency.

More infor­ma­tion and support

Here you will find tips on organisations that can offer you support and links where you can learn more about Sweden.

BRIS, Children’s Rights in Society, is an organisation that works for children’s rights. You can contact BRIS if you need an adult to talk to.

Call the BRIS helpline for young people: 116 111

www.bris.se/for-barn-och-unga (In Swedish)External link, opens in new window.

Save the Children is another organisation that works for children’s rights.

www.raddabarnen.se/rad-och-kunskap/barn-och-unga (In Swedish)External link, opens in new window.

The Swedish Red Cross is an organisation that works to protect and help people in need. The Swedish Red Cross can help you look for your relatives.

www.rodakorset.se/en/get-help/External link, opens in new window.

The Ombudsman for Children is an authority that ensures that other Swedish authorities comply with the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Here you can learn more about your rights.

www.barnombudsmannen.se/stod-och-verktyg/kunskap-om-barnkonventionen/mina-rattigheter-for-barn-och-unga (In Swedish)External link, opens in new window.

Youmo is your online youth guidance centre online. Here you can read about sex, health and relationships in several different languages.

www.youmo.se/sprakvalsidaExternal link, opens in new window.

RFSL works to promote the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and intersex people. RFSL Newcomers works with asylum seekers and new arrivals.

www.rfsl.se/newcomers/asyl/External link, opens in new window.

Kärleken är fri (Love is Free) is a chat-based support service for young people subjected to honour related violence and oppression.

www.raddabarnen.se/rad-och-kunskap/karleken-ar-fri/ (in Swedish)External link, opens in new window.

Kvinnofridslinjen (Sweden’s National Women’s Helpline) offers advice and support to women who have been subjected to threats and physical, psychological and sexual violence. The information is available in several languages. You can also call 020-50 50 50. They can arrange for an interpreter in just a few minutes.

www.kvinnofridslinjen.se/en/home/External link, opens in new window.

Kollpåsoc.se is a website with information about your rights and opportunities for support from social services.

www.kollpasoc.se/en/External link, opens in new window.

Min rätt – Din roll (My right – Your role) is aimed at unaccompanied minors, their guardians, and other actors who play different roles in helping these minors. Here you can get more information about these various roles and what rights you have. For example, you can watch short videos about what a guardian should help you with.

rfs.se/om-rfs/projekt/min-ratt-din-roll (In Swedish)External link, opens in new window.

The videos What happens now? is for unaccompanied minors in Sweden and who live in an accommodation or in a family home. In the videos you will find out what will happen during the first time in Sweden, who you can meet and how the asylum process works. You can watch the videos alone or together with an adult. The videos are available in several languages.

Search for “Socialstyrelsen” (the Swedish National Board of Health and Welfare) and ‘Vad händer nu?’ (‘What happens now?’) on YouTube.External link, opens in new window.

Informationsverige.se is a portal for new arrivals in Sweden. Here you can get information about how Swedish society works - for example, in terms of accommodation, education and healthcare.

www.informationsverige.se/enExternal link, opens in new window.

Lärasvenska is a page on informationsverige.se about how you can learn Swedish on your own.

www.informationsverige.se/en/jag-ar-asylsokande/lara-svenska

What do the words mean?

A person in need of alternative subsidiary protection is someone who has applied for asylum in Sweden and been granted alternative subsidiary protection status. These people are usually granted a residence permit for 13 months.

Asylum means sanctuary. When a person applies for asylum, he or she seeks protection in a country other than his or her country of origin.

The asylum process is the various steps that an asylum seeker goes through – from application to decision.

An asylum seeker is a person who has arrived in Sweden and applied for asylum, but who has not yet received a final answer to their application.

An asylum investigation is an interview where you can say why you want protection in Sweden.

Rejection of an asylum application means that the Swedish Migration Agency has said ‘no’ to granting a person’s application for asylum.

Children are all people under the age of 18.

A decision in an asylum case is when the Swedish Migration Agency has decided whether or not an asylum seeker can stay in Sweden.

Daily allowance is an allowance from the Swedish Migration Agency that an asylum seeker can apply for if they do not have their own money.

Judgement. Most of the Swedish Migration Agency’s decisions can be appealed in the courts. When a court makes a decision, this is called a judgement.

A refugee is a person who has applied for asylum and been granted refugee status. This means that you meet the requirements of the UN Convention on the Rights of Refugees, the so-called ‘Geneva Convention’. These people are usually granted a residence permit for 3 years.

A guardian is a person who must look after the interests of asylum-seeking children when their parents are unable to do so. It can be a man or a woman.

Identity means who a person is. When the Swedish Migration Agency asks about your identity, we mean your name, how old you are and where you come from.

Legal force means that the decision can no longer be appealed.

The Swedish Migration Agency is the authority in Sweden that examines applications from people seeking asylum. The Swedish Migration Agency also examines applications from people who want to visit or move to Sweden, or who want to become Swedish citizens.

Authorities ensure that society functions as it should according to the laws decided by the Parliament.

Public counsel is a person who knows Swedish laws. This counsel will help you with your asylum application. A public counsel is a lawyer or law graduate and does not work at the Swedish Migration Agency.

Social services are available in every municipality. They work according to a law called the Social Services Act. The Social Services Act deals with the right to health and social care that everyone in the municipality has. It contains rules for how society should assist people who need help but who cannot get it from anyone else.

Obligation of secrecy means that people who work at, for example, the Swedish Migration Agency are not allowed to tell share what you have said with anyone who does not have the right to know.

A residence permit means that a person has received a ‘yes’ to their application to live in Sweden.

When someone lodges an appeal, this means that they write to an authority or court and inform them that he or she does not agree with what the authority or court has decided. The person says they want the authority or court to change the decision.

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