Several asylum cases have recently received attention in various parts of the country.

Together, they are about people who are to be deported, despite being integrated, gaining a life in Sweden and getting a job here.

In Malå in Västerbotten, votes are raised for Wahid Sharafi, who will be deported to Afghanistan.

SVT Nyheter Väst has in several features lifted the sisters Kalac in Grästorp, who will be deported to Serbia.

Aftonbladet, among others, has drawn attention to the carpenter Mustafa who is being sent back to Afghanistan against protests.

The question many people involved ask is how to expel someone who obviously works and is needed in society.

The Swedish Migration Agency states that they follow the existing laws and regulations.

Migration Minister Morgan Johansson (S) now responds in an email to SVT:

As Minister, I can neither comment nor intervene in this specific matter.

Then I would break the constitution.

- In general, however, I understand that those who have been in the country for a long time and have had their application rejected are reluctant to return.

At the same time, the rules are known to everyone.

Anyone who comes here and wants to stay must either have a need for protection or work with conditions in line with current rules, he says.

An application for a work permit must be made from the home country

One chance to stay in the country is to apply for a work permit.

But the main rule is that the application must be made from the home country - of course difficult if you come as a refugee.

But there is another possibility.

- The Alliance Government introduced a possibility for those who have had their asylum application rejected to, in certain circumstances, be granted a work permit without first having to leave the country (so-called track change).

The requirements for changing tracks mean that there is a limited number of people who meet all the requirements and can be granted a work permit, says Morgan Johansson.

Most were refused track changes

Last year, more than 3,300 people applied for a track change in the country.

More than 2,000 were rejected or rejected for various reasons.

1,361 people were granted a temporary permit.

- One must remember that this is an exception rule.

We must not create an arrangement that leads to the asylum system being used by people who want to travel into Sweden to gain access to the labor market, says the Minister of Migration.