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View Full Version : WATCH how Muslim "refugees" behave as Hungarians struggle with influx



Anglojew
07-06-2015, 06:10 AM
Sorry I can't embed the video. It's here (click links):

https://www.facebook.com/DiscourseEU/videos/882069328526902/


https://video-hkg3-1.xx.fbcdn.net/hvideo-xtp1/v/t42.1790-2/11652972_882070855193416_1735725680_n.mp4?efg=eyJy bHIiOjg4NywicmxhIjoyNzczfQ%3D%3D&rl=887&vabr=493&oh=aa94ef4cd7e13947444c6457d0ffceb8&oe=559A3A21


Illegal Islamic immigrants screaming “Allahu Akbar” have rioted in a refugee camp in Hungary. The violence broke out this week, spilling onto the streets of the country’s second city of Debrecen.

Footage of the events, which shows heavily outnumbered riot police lined up against a baying crowd of young Muslim males, was leaked to the country’s M1 Aktuális news program.

Struggling to understand the languages of the migrants, a handful of officers facing down the mob are branded as “mother****ers” for not being Muslim.

A dispute between two immigrants over money hidden in a Quran is said to have led to the violence, which is in stark contrast to the saccharine reporting of those flooding into Hungary from Muslim countries as needy refugees from conflict.

In the full half hour recording, Pakistani flags are seen being waived by the rioters. Additional filming also shows the men breaking down the walls of their reception compound, after which they ran amok in the rural town on 29 June.

A small country with a population of less than 9.8 million, Hungary is experiencing an unprecedented influx across its southern border with the non-European Union (EU) member state of Serbia.

Coaches arrive at the border daily, filled with illegals hoping to travel to richer pickings in the west of Europe.

Those detained on arrival in Hungary, have asylum claims processed at an increasing number of centres. Others, unable to communicate with locals or occupy themselves, are populating the streets and squares of towns nationwide.

In June, the scale of the illegal immigration led a government spokesman to announce that the country’s capacities to cope had already been “exhausted.”

Reuters reported in the same month that 61,000 had already breached Hungary’s southern frontier this year, up from 2,150 in 2012.

With 92,500 Hungarians born in the country in 2014, the number of migrants predicted to arrive in Hungary in 2015, from war zones and the developing world, is expected to exceed 130,000.

Most travellers aim to exploit Hungary’s membership of the Schengen Area, which began erasing internal border controls in Europe in 1995.

To cope with the surge, Hungary is planning the construction of a 110-mile long border fence with its southern neighbour, a response that has been internationally condemned.

When the Schengen zone was agreed to, by means of multiple international agreements like the 1997 Amsterdam Treaty, it was never intended to operate independently.

Intimately twinned with the policy, and thereby making it secure, was to come a stringent and illegally-impassible external border. A principle both criticized and advocated under the position called, Fortress Europe.

In contrast, the institutions of the EU to which national sovereignty over frontier controls were transferred by such treaties, are hastening and facilitating the porosity of Europe’s external border to illegal entrants.

With the institutions of the EU demanding “immediate clarification” from countries like Hungary, when they attempt to reassert autonomy over their own borders, its Prime Minister, has also received emotional haranguings this year, from key figures in the EU’s parliament.

An example came when Viktor Orbán’s government recently suspended its membership of the EU’s Dublin Protocol, which obliges it to re-accept all those sent back to its territory rejected by western European nations.

Hungary had argued the illegals crossing its border, had already first entered into the EU through Bulgaria and Greece, countries responsible for them under the rules of the Protocol.

Following diplomatic pressure from Austria, the government rescinded its move a few days later.

While the world’s attention has focused on illegal immigrants flooding into Europe across the Mediterranean, chiefly into Italy, greater numbers have been entering a country less than a third of its size and with a sixth of its population.

The immediacy with which Hungary’s population is changing, is having far-reaching political repercussions.

Neo-Nazis are planning to blockade a main railway station in the capital Budapest, on 10 July, which is a frequent stop-off point for the predominantly Muslim travelers.

After its Islamic conquest in the 16th century, through the same narrow geographic corridor being exploited today, Hungary became Majaristan. The destruction which resulted from its 158-year occupation, as the westernmost province of the Ottoman Empire, is still commemorated daily by the ringing of noonday church bells nationwide.

Fears that as a result of its history, a statement on May 18 by the EU’s foreign policy chief would merely add fuel to Hungary’s problems with the Far-right, are proving well founded. Speaking to the UN Security Council, Federica Mogherini announced that there would be no “forced repatriations,” in spite of the rising migrant wave crossing illegally into Europe.

In April, the ongoing crisis led Orbán to announce a national consultation on the subject of migration. It asks Hungarians if they associate mass immigration with the threat of terrorism now gripping western Europe.

The move sparked controversy in a mostly rural Hungarian population, as yet unaffected by the migratory pressures, and led to the pillorying of Orbán’s government by human rights groups, for its asking of “leading questions” tantamount to xenophobia.

At present, the security agencies of European countries with established Islamic populations, are struggling with the cost of monitoring returnees from the Islamic State.

Following jihadist terrorist attacks in Paris in January, the national security committee of the Budapest parliament concluded that there was no danger of similar terrorism in Hungary. Perhaps unsurprising at a time when its Muslim population was virtually non-existent.

Those in Hungary watching the footage from Monday’s riots, from one of the country’s growing number of such refugee camps, will find it hard to imagine that such a peaceful status quo is likely to continue.