福利姬

05 December 2016

At the global level, the number of people seeking refuge has never been as high as today, and never have so many applied to come to Sweden. Suad Ali is an expert on Sweden鈥檚 refugee quota, and it鈥檚 against this backdrop that she has worked tirelessly for refugees worldwide. For her dedication, Suad Ali has been chosen as one of 福利姬鈥檚 two Alumni of the Year.

鈥淟ook at Malala and what she has achieved. She has proven that age doesn鈥檛 matter a bit,鈥 says Suad Ali, walking briskly across the campus at Link枚ping University. It鈥檚 an unusually warm Friday evening in September, and her only available time this week.

鈥淵oung people are constantly hearing that humanitarianism is a generational thing. As if it鈥檚 not that important. But it really is,鈥 she says, as she zigzags through a storm of bike-riding students.

Suad Ali has just finished a summer temp job at the Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs, where her duties included preparations for the UN summit on refugees and migrants. A week and a half ago she returned to her job at the Swedish Migration Agency.

Making a difference

She opens a door and walks into a department where she studied political science four years ago. A sign on the wall says 鈥淎mbassaden鈥 鈥 Swedish for The Embassy. Which could be a future workplace for her. As could the UN Headquarters in New York City.

鈥淭he most important thing is to be where I can make the most difference. Where that is, I don鈥檛 know yet, and I don鈥檛 need to make up my mind right now.鈥

She鈥檚 right; she has time. At just 26 years of age Suad has already led a Swedish Migration Agency delegation whose mission was to prepare 200 refugees from the world鈥檚 largest refugee camp for life in Sweden. She has had a column in the Swedish business magazine Chef; and has been awarded the title of Super Talent by Veckans Aff盲rer, another Swedish business magazine. She has also been on the staff of the Swedish Migration Agency鈥檚 director-general Anders Danielsson.

Earlier in the week the Swedish government announced that the number of UN convention refugees will increase from the current 1,900 to 5,000 at the end of 2018. By raising the quota, more people can safely make their way to Europe.

鈥淚 see immediately how our work with the quotas makes a difference. When you鈥檙e in a refugee camp, you see how different decisions affect the people there. By seeing their day-to-day lives in the camp, I understand more about what my job involves.鈥

But also on a personal level, Suad has had to reflect upon what it means to be a refugee. When she was a year and a half old she and her family left Somalia during the civil war, and the Dadaab refugee camp served as a home while they waited for the conflict to end.

鈥淲hen I was in Dadaab last year I met people my own age. Their lives could have been mine.鈥

Instead her family ended up in Sweden, and now, visiting the camp many years later, she is a well-educated, trilingual expert employed at a government agency in Sweden, who has also taken courses in field safety.

Courses that proved useful during a terrorist attack in the camp.

I wasn鈥檛 scared; I was cautious and security conscious. At that moment my focus was on getting my team home. I鈥檓 an ordinary civil servant who does her job. But it鈥檚 tragic for the people who live amidst this,鈥 she says, nudging her eyeglasses higher up her nose.

Happiest in the field

Her work requires lots of travel 鈥 between her home in Link枚ping and the Swedish Migration Agency鈥檚 office in Norrk枚ping, the refugee camp in Dadaab and UNHCR鈥檚 head office in Geneva. But she is happiest 鈥榠n the field鈥. When she gets to meet the people behind the statistics, and see their lives, she feels that her work brings positive outcomes.

鈥淧erhaps more so than sitting in an office at the UN in New York.鈥

Suad got her interest in humanitarian issues from home. Her parents, who have also been involved in these matters, always encouraged discussions on the state of the world. They also impressed on her what she is capable of:

鈥淥h, you want to write a book? Write a whole library!鈥

But her interest in social issues grew from her experiences during her school years.

Suad came to Sweden as a three-year-old. But although she had grown up in Sweden, her school placed her in Swedish classes for second-language learners.

鈥淚n school the approach was one-size-fits-all. All the immigrants were put there, regardless of our skills. Not until junior high school did I get to take a language test. After that I was free.鈥

School taught her that she was different, and that consequently she would have more difficulty than everyone else.

鈥淭hat was something I took for granted for a long time 鈥 that everything would be more difficult for me.鈥

The outsidership imposed by her school, she has shaken off. Today she is happy that she can be what she herself lacked at school: a role model.

鈥淎 while ago I was sitting at the Link枚ping train station, working. A girl came up to me and said that I was the reason she was studying political science. I love the idea that I can inspire other people to dream.鈥

Not bad for an ordinary civil servant.

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