What's new

'We can't take any more!' Germany stops ALL trains from Austria as they reintroduce border controls

mike2000 is back

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Apr 12, 2015
Messages
8,513
Reaction score
19
Country
United Kingdom
Location
United Kingdom
'We can't take any more!' Germany stops ALL trains from Austria as they reintroduce border controls and temporarily suspend Schengen Agreement
  • Germany has become the destination for many desperate Syrian refugees
  • Munich, which has been the main entry point, is now at breaking point
  • Germany has announced a reintroduction of 'temporary' border controls
  • The move marks a dramatic shift back from Europe's Schengen agreement
  • Europe is struggling to deal with the huge influx of people fleeing violence
By THOMAS BURROWS and SAM TONKIN FOR MAILONLINE

PUBLISHED: 13:54, 13 September 2015 | UPDATED: 09:22, 14 September 217kshares
836

View comments




Germany’s open-door policy to refugees appeared to be unravelling tonight following the country's reinstatement of border controls to curb the overwhelming influx of migrants.

Europe’s top economy halted all trains from Austria and, in an historic move, temporarily suspended the open borders Schengen agreement in response to the arrival of tens of thousands of Syrian refugees in recent days.


The decision marks a dramatic shift away from the current abolishment of passport checks throughout Europe's Schengen zone.

Scroll down for video

2C44FC6000000578-3232744-image-a-30_1442163930976.jpg



+39
Closed: Germany has today halted all trains from Austria and reintroduced border controls after temporarily suspending the Schengen Agreement to cope with a record influx of refugees, pictured arriving in Munich

2C423A3F00000578-3232744-image-a-13_1442162211683.jpg



2C33998A00000578-0-image-a-5_1442011212386.jpg



+39
Some 10 million people have been forced from their homes in Syria, with almost 500,000 arriving in Europe

German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said: 'At this moment Germany is temporarily introducing border controls again along [the EU's] internal borders. The focus will be on the border to Austria at first.

'The aim of these measures is to limit the current inflows to Germany and to return to orderly procedures when people enter the country.

Mr de Maiziere added: 'This step has become necessary. The great readiness to help that Germany has shown in recent weeks... must not be overstretched.'

The Interior Minister did not specify how long the border controls would remain in place or give details of exactly how incoming migrants would be handled. He said there could be disruption to rail travel.

Most migrants have been arriving by train, with 800,000 in total expected to arrive this year.

Germany's national railway, Deutsche Bahn, said it had halted service between Austria and Germany for 12 hours at authorities' orders.

Tonight, officials were seen carrying out the first passport checks at the country's border with Austria.

Three Syrian migrants were stopped at the Freilassing crossing and told to remain on the side of the road in the Bavarian commune close to Austria's Salzburg, after German officers looked at their papers.

2C479FC600000578-3232744-image-m-61_1442173014370.jpg



+39
A policeman playfully touches the window as a child looks out from a bus packed with migrants in Munich


Mr de Maiziere's announcement came on the eve of tomorrow's meeting of EU interior ministers in Brussels, where European Commission proposals to redistribute about 160,000 asylum seekers across the bloc will be discussed.

But there are deep divisions between member states and no sign of a solution.

The Schengen agreement – allowing passport-free movement across much of the European continent – is now under real threat following Germany’s temporary opt-out, although the European Commission said rules do allow countries to reintroduce controls in exceptional circumstances.

In a statement the EU executive said: 'The temporary reintroduction of border controls between member states is an exceptional possibility explicitly foreseen in and regulated by the Schengen Borders Code, in case of a crisis situation.

'The current situation in Germany, prima facie, appears to be a situation covered by the rules.'

2C3C631100000578-3232744-image-m-17_1442163238838.jpg



+39
The German Interior Minister did not specify how long the border controls would remain in place or give details of exactly how incoming migrants would be handled. Most have been arriving by train (pictured in Munich)

2C3C637000000578-0-Munich_in_Germany_s_southern_state_of_Bavaria_has_been_the_main_-m-17_1442147609344.jpg



+39
Munich, in Germany's southern state of Bavaria, has been the main entry point for those entering the country, but authorities say the city has reached its upper capacity

Germany has become the destination for many desperate Syrian refugees fleeing their war-torn home country, after it waived EU rules in August. Refugees are pictured arriving by train at Munich rail station

Soldiers from the German Bundeswehr build an emergency shelter for migrants on the campus of the Bundeswehr university in Munich as the city struggles to cope with the huge influx of refugees

It added that the executive would keep the situation under review and said the aim would be to return to the normal situation of no border checks between member states of the Schengen zone 'as soon as feasible'.

The European Commission added: 'The German decision of today underlines the urgency to agree on the measures proposed by the European Commission in order to manage the refugee crisis.'

The Czech Republic also said it would boost controls on its border with Austria following Germany’s decision.

It is not yet clear exactly what the temporary measures include, but the move comes as German authorities have warned they are at 'the limit' in coping with the migrant crisis, with locals claiming Munich is on the brink of collapse.

German newspaper Bild cited security sources as saying the state government in Bavaria had asked the federal police to help deal with the task.

The newspaper said the federal police would send 2,100 officers to Bavaria to help it secure its borders.


Meanwhile, in Austria, refugees were pictured sitting on the platform waiting for a train at a railway station in Vienna. Germany has stopped all trains arriving from Austria

.
Germany has become the destination for many desperate Syrian refugees fleeing their war-torn home country, after it waived EU rules in August.

Tens of thousands of people have crossed Austria by train on their way to Germany since the two countries threw open their borders to the migrants last weekend. A record number were expected to enter Austria from Hungary on Sunday.


The German government announced the nation would take in applications for Syrian asylum-seekers, regardless of where they first arrived in the EU.

Munich, in Germany's southern state of Bavaria, has been the main entry point for those entering the country.

Some 13,015 refugees arrived in Munich yesterday alone and 1,400 more are expected to reach the city today - but there are fears it is already at breaking point.

A police spokesman in Munich said: 'Given the numbers from yesterday, it is very clear that we have reached the upper limit of our capacity.'

Federal transport minister Alexander Dobrindt added how 'effective measures are necessary now to stop the influx'.

Migrants arrive at dawn at the Hungarian border with Serbia - a record number of more than 4,000 crossed the Hungarian border yesterday - but the country is now clamping down on refugees entering the country

Budapest has recorded some 180,000 people entering illegally this year and has passed a raft of tough new laws that will take effect on Tuesday, meaning anyone crossing the border.


In a statement, he said: 'That includes help for countries from where refugees are fleeing and also includes an effective control of our own borders which also no longer works given the EU's complete failure to protect its external borders'.

Christoph Hillenbrand, president of the Upper Bavaria region, said he did not know 'how we can cope'.

Bavarian public television BR said the city 'came very close to a humanitarian disaster', but managed to limit the number of people sleeping on mattresses on the ground to a few dozens rather than the hundreds that was first feared.

German Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel added: 'The European lack of action in the refugee crisis is now pushing even Germany to the limit of its ability'.

The authorities are considering whether to open up the Olympiahalle - a stadium used for the 1972 Olympics and which today serves as a concert hall or sports arena - as a temporary shelter for the refugees.


Germany has allowed 450,000 refugees in so far this year and has been praised for the warm welcome it has afforded to migrants.

Chancellor Angela Merkel has defended the decision to let in the huge numbers, saying she was 'convinced it was right'.

But in recent weeks this has inflamed tensions, with the far-right taking an increasingly hostile stand to the thousands of migrants entering the country.

Last week, a three-storey house in the neat village of Gerstungen, in Thuringia, was firebombed by far-right protesters after it was revealed it had been opened to some of the 800,000 refugees set to enter Germany this year.


This year there have been 306 attacks on refugee accommodations – 46 of them torchings such as the one in the eastern state of Thuringia. Nine of them have been in the past fortnight alone.

Tens of thousands of people took part in a 'day of action' yesterday in several European cities - and in Australia - in support of refugees and migrants. However some cities also saw ugly counter-demonstrations.

2C43A09200000578-0-image-a-28_1442148096041.jpg



Roughly 6,000 migrants have entered Austria since midnight, and the number for all of Sunday could surpass 10,000, which would be the strongest daily flow since Germany and Austria threw open their borders more than a week ago, a police spokesman said.

Tens of thousands of people have streamed into Austria, almost all of them continuing to Germany, since the two countries said they would let a wave of migrants, many of them refugees fleeing Syria's civil war, enter their territory.

'The flow of refugees remains very high', the spokesman said. 'I don't think I would be wrong in saying that we might exceed the threshold of 10,000 if it continues like this.'

In the initial rush of arrivals last weekend, 16,000 to 17,000 people had crossed the border with Hungary in two days, the spokesman said.

Europe as a whole is struggling to deal with an enormous influx of people, mostly from Syria but also Afghanistan, Eritrea and other countries, fleeing violence and poverty.




+39
Riot police in Hamburg were forced to keep apart left and right wing demonstrators amid bitter scenes

The European Commission announced plans last week for mandatory quotas to share out 120,000 additional asylum seekers among 25 member countries.

But Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Romania are opposed to this.

Today the Prime Minister of Hungary Viktor Orban prepared an unprecedented border clampdown.

'These migrants are not coming our way from war zones but from camps in Syria's neighbours... So these people are not fleeing danger and don't need to be scared for their lives, he said.

He added how Merkel's decision to relax asylum laws had caused 'chaos' and accused European leaders of 'living in a dream world'.

Hungarian police said 4,330 migrants were detained yesterday and it is rushing to complete a four-metre high (13ft) fence along its border with Serbia, as well as introducing new rules criminalising illegal border crossings and speeding up decisions about asylum requests.

The Czech prime minister also reiterated his position today. In a TV interview, Bohuslav Sobotka said: 'I think it is impossible to retreat...our position is firm.

2C3C03EA00000578-0-image-a-34_1442148399592.jpg



+39
Thousands in Warsaw attended a demonstration against migrants and carried anti-Islamic slogans

Elsewhere today, 34 people - half of them babies and children - drowned when a boat carrying some 100 migrants capsized off Greece.

Meanwhile, the coastguard was continuing a search for four children missing after another boat carrying migrants capsized yesterday off Samos island.

The latest incidents come more than a week after the harrowing image of three-year-old Syrian boy Aylan Kurdi lying face down on a Turkish beach sparked an international outcry over the human cost of the crisis.


He drowned along with his mother Rihan and five-year-old brother Galip when their boat capsized on a short run from Turkey to the Greek island of Kos.

Germany reintroduce border controls amid influx of Syrian refugees | Daily Mail Online

LOOL So Germany has finally come back to its senses, after criticizing other European countries about their lack of compassion of not opening their doors to ALL refugees. Now they can see the result. lol :woot::rofl: If you want to show you are father Christmas and open your doors to ALL refugees from underdeveloped world/war ravaged countries/economic immigrants, then i'm afraid you will become a minority in your own country in less than 1 year. Since there are hundreds of millions of people from the developing world who would immigrate here for 'refuge'. So screening and restrictions are needed. Its sad but that's the reality, we cant take in everybody.
 
Last edited:
Germany was never the main warmonger that caused the migrant crises

The UK, followed by France are most responsible in Europe

The U.S whose cak handed foreign policy disasters is safely tucked far away and only accepting 10,000 Syrians
 
‘We can’t take any more!’, Germany closes border, stops ALL trains
ByPAMELA GELLER on September 13, 2015
EURABIA: DHIMMITUDE EURABIAN EMIGRATION GERMANY MUSLIM IMMIGRATION
203 Comments
migrant-train.jpeg


Apparently, German Chancellor Merkel has come to her senses and stopped chastising Christiansfor “not knowing the Bible as well as Muslims know the Quran,” which is what she said when asked about the threat posed by the Muslim emigration crisis. I kid you not.(neo liberal rightist ideology yet again @Azizam :disagree:)


Merkel is largely to blame for declaring that Germany would spend 6.6 billion on resettlement and try to accommodate over 800,000 Muslim migrants. Germanistan indeed.

The fact is, if this was allowed to continue, Europe will descend into civil war.(though confess this one is an exaggeration.:D)

‘We can’t take any more!’ Germany stops ALL trains from Austria as they reintroduce border controls and temporarily suspend Schengen Agreement

Germany has become the destination for many desperate Syrian refugees
Munich, which has been the main entry point, is now at breaking point
Germany has announced a reintroduction of ‘temporary’ border controls
The move marks a dramatic shift back from Europe’s Schengen agreement
Europe is struggling to deal with the huge influx of people fleeing violence
migrants-macedonia.jpeg


‘We can’t take any more!’ Germany stops ALL trains from Austria as they reintroduce border controls and temporarily suspend Schengen Agreement

Germany has become the destination for many desperate Syrian refugees
Munich, which has been the main entry point, is now at breaking point
Germany has announced a reintroduction of ‘temporary’ border controls
The move marks a dramatic shift back from Europe’s Schengen agreement
Europe is struggling to deal with the huge influx of people fleeing violence

By Thomas Burrows and Sam Tonkin For Mailonline, 13 September 2015

Germany’s open-door policy to refugees appeared to be unravelling tonight following the country’s reinstatement of border controls to curb the overwhelming influx of migrants.

Europe’s top economy halted all trains from Austria and, in an historic move, temporarily suspended the open borders Schengen Agreement in response to the arrival of tens of thousands of Syrian refugees in recent days.

The decision marks a dramatic shift away from the current abolishment of passport checks throughout Europe’s Schengen zone.
migrant-map.jpeg


German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said: ‘At this moment Germany is temporarily introducing border controls again along [the EU’s] internal borders. The focus will be on the border to Austria at first.

‘The aim of these measures is to limit the current inflows to Germany and to return to orderly procedures when people enter the country.

Mr de Maiziere added: ‘This step has become necessary. The great readiness to help that Germany has shown in recent weeks… must not be overstretched.’

The Interior Minister did not specify how long the border controls would remain in place or give details of exactly how incoming migrants would be handled. He said there could be disruption to rail travel. Most migrants have been arriving by train.

Germany’s national railway, Deutsche Bahn, said it had halted service between Austria and Germany for 12 hours at authorities’ orders.

The rules of Europe’s passport-free travel zone, known as the Schengen area, allow countries to reintroduce controls in exceptional circumstances, and the European Commission said that ‘the current situation in Germany … appears to be a situation covered by the rules.’

In a statement the EU executive said: ‘The temporary reintroduction of border controls between member states is an exceptional possibility explicitly foreseen in and regulated by the Schengen Borders Code, in case of a crisis situation.’

It added that the executive would keep the situation under review and said the aim would be to return to the normal situation of no border checks between member states of the Schengen zone ‘as soon as feasible’.

The European Commission added: ‘The German decision of today underlines the urgency to agree on the measures proposed by the European Commission in order to manage the refugee crisis.’

It is not yet clear exactly what the temporary measures include, but the move comes as German authorities have warned they are at ‘the limit’ in coping with the migrant crisis, with locals claiming Munich is on the brink of collapse.

2C42386B00000578-3232744-image-a-25_1442163539649.jpg
Refugees are pictured sleeping at the main rail station in Munich, which locals claim is on the brink of collapse because of the influx
2C3C631100000578-3232744-image-m-17_1442163238838.jpg



The German Interior Minister did not specify how long the border controls would remain in place or give details of exactly how incoming migrants would be handled. Most have been arriving by train (pictured in Munich)
German newspaper Bild cited security sources as saying the state government in Bavaria had asked the federal police to help deal with the task.

The newspaper said the federal police would send 2,100 officers to Bavaria to help it secure its borders.

Germany has become the destination for many desperate Syrian refugees fleeing their war-torn home country, after it waived EU rules in August.

Tens of thousands of people have crossed Austria by train on their way to Germany since the two countries threw open their borders to the migrants last weekend. A record number were expected to enter Austria from Hungary on Sunday.

The German government announced the nation would take in applications for Syrian asylum-seekers, regardless of where they first arrived in the EU.

Munich, in Germany’s southern state of Bavaria, has been the main entry point for those entering the country.

Some 13,015 refugees arrived in Munich yesterday alone and 1,400 more are expected to reach the city today – but there are fears it is already at breaking point.

A police spokesman in Munich said: ‘Given the numbers from yesterday, it is very clear that we have reached the upper limit of our capacity.’

Federal transport minister Alexander Dobrindt added how ‘effective measures are necessary now to stop the influx’.

‘We can’t take any more!’, Germany closes border, stops ALL trains | Pamela Geller

Hopefully this will make our neo liberal politicians to stop this their outdated political correctness and adopt practical immigration restrictions/control. Enough with the 'we have to open the flood gates to everybody without any control'. Let this be a good lesson to all of them. Better late than never.
 
But...but...fuhrer Merkel said that everybody is welcome!.

Anyway ,European representatives are meeting today to discuss mandatory quotas.Romania will take a maximum of 1785 and not 6500 as per Merkel's dreams.Same for other countries and there's no EU law to force us otherwise.

I call bullshit. Turkey accepted more than 2 million. Germany with a much bigger economy, same landmass and same population can't absorb couple of thousands of refugees? Bollox!


You put them in tents and give them 10 biscuits/day.In Europe they're housed in buildings and offered all kind of welfare/programs to have a better life.
 
‘We can’t take any more!’, Germany closes border, stops ALL trains
ByPAMELA GELLER on September 13, 2015
EURABIA: DHIMMITUDE EURABIAN EMIGRATION GERMANY MUSLIM IMMIGRATION
203 Comments
migrant-train.jpeg


Apparently, German Chancellor Merkel has come to her senses and stopped chastising Christiansfor “not knowing the Bible as well as Muslims know the Quran,” which is what she said when asked about the threat posed by the Muslim emigration crisis. I kid you not.(neo liberal rightist ideology yet again @Azizam :disagree:)


Merkel is largely to blame for declaring that Germany would spend 6.6 billion on resettlement and try to accommodate over 800,000 Muslim migrants. Germanistan indeed.

The fact is, if this was allowed to continue, Europe will descend into civil war.(though confess this one is an exaggeration.:D)

‘We can’t take any more!’ Germany stops ALL trains from Austria as they reintroduce border controls and temporarily suspend Schengen Agreement

Germany has become the destination for many desperate Syrian refugees
Munich, which has been the main entry point, is now at breaking point
Germany has announced a reintroduction of ‘temporary’ border controls
The move marks a dramatic shift back from Europe’s Schengen agreement
Europe is struggling to deal with the huge influx of people fleeing violence
migrants-macedonia.jpeg


‘We can’t take any more!’ Germany stops ALL trains from Austria as they reintroduce border controls and temporarily suspend Schengen Agreement

Germany has become the destination for many desperate Syrian refugees
Munich, which has been the main entry point, is now at breaking point
Germany has announced a reintroduction of ‘temporary’ border controls
The move marks a dramatic shift back from Europe’s Schengen agreement
Europe is struggling to deal with the huge influx of people fleeing violence

By Thomas Burrows and Sam Tonkin For Mailonline, 13 September 2015

Germany’s open-door policy to refugees appeared to be unravelling tonight following the country’s reinstatement of border controls to curb the overwhelming influx of migrants.

Europe’s top economy halted all trains from Austria and, in an historic move, temporarily suspended the open borders Schengen Agreement in response to the arrival of tens of thousands of Syrian refugees in recent days.

The decision marks a dramatic shift away from the current abolishment of passport checks throughout Europe’s Schengen zone.
migrant-map.jpeg


German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said: ‘At this moment Germany is temporarily introducing border controls again along [the EU’s] internal borders. The focus will be on the border to Austria at first.

‘The aim of these measures is to limit the current inflows to Germany and to return to orderly procedures when people enter the country.

Mr de Maiziere added: ‘This step has become necessary. The great readiness to help that Germany has shown in recent weeks… must not be overstretched.’

The Interior Minister did not specify how long the border controls would remain in place or give details of exactly how incoming migrants would be handled. He said there could be disruption to rail travel. Most migrants have been arriving by train.

Germany’s national railway, Deutsche Bahn, said it had halted service between Austria and Germany for 12 hours at authorities’ orders.

The rules of Europe’s passport-free travel zone, known as the Schengen area, allow countries to reintroduce controls in exceptional circumstances, and the European Commission said that ‘the current situation in Germany … appears to be a situation covered by the rules.’

In a statement the EU executive said: ‘The temporary reintroduction of border controls between member states is an exceptional possibility explicitly foreseen in and regulated by the Schengen Borders Code, in case of a crisis situation.’

It added that the executive would keep the situation under review and said the aim would be to return to the normal situation of no border checks between member states of the Schengen zone ‘as soon as feasible’.

The European Commission added: ‘The German decision of today underlines the urgency to agree on the measures proposed by the European Commission in order to manage the refugee crisis.’

It is not yet clear exactly what the temporary measures include, but the move comes as German authorities have warned they are at ‘the limit’ in coping with the migrant crisis, with locals claiming Munich is on the brink of collapse.

2C42386B00000578-3232744-image-a-25_1442163539649.jpg
Refugees are pictured sleeping at the main rail station in Munich, which locals claim is on the brink of collapse because of the influx
2C3C631100000578-3232744-image-m-17_1442163238838.jpg



The German Interior Minister did not specify how long the border controls would remain in place or give details of exactly how incoming migrants would be handled. Most have been arriving by train (pictured in Munich)
German newspaper Bild cited security sources as saying the state government in Bavaria had asked the federal police to help deal with the task.

The newspaper said the federal police would send 2,100 officers to Bavaria to help it secure its borders.

Germany has become the destination for many desperate Syrian refugees fleeing their war-torn home country, after it waived EU rules in August.

Tens of thousands of people have crossed Austria by train on their way to Germany since the two countries threw open their borders to the migrants last weekend. A record number were expected to enter Austria from Hungary on Sunday.

The German government announced the nation would take in applications for Syrian asylum-seekers, regardless of where they first arrived in the EU.

Munich, in Germany’s southern state of Bavaria, has been the main entry point for those entering the country.

Some 13,015 refugees arrived in Munich yesterday alone and 1,400 more are expected to reach the city today – but there are fears it is already at breaking point.

A police spokesman in Munich said: ‘Given the numbers from yesterday, it is very clear that we have reached the upper limit of our capacity.’

Federal transport minister Alexander Dobrindt added how ‘effective measures are necessary now to stop the influx’.

‘We can’t take any more!’, Germany closes border, stops ALL trains | Pamela Geller

Hopefully this will make our neo liberal politicians to stop this their outdated political correctness and adopt practical immigration restrictions/control. Enough with the 'we have to open the flood gates to everybody without any control'. Let this be a good lesson to all of them. Better late than never.


If you want that then dont wage dumb wars on the edge of Europe
 
But...but...fuhrer Merkel said that everybody is welcome!.

Anyway ,European representatives are meeting today to discuss mandatory quotas.Romania will take a maximum of 1785 and not 6500 as per Merkel's dreams.Same for other countries and there's no EU law to force us otherwise.




You put them in tents and give them 10 biscuits/day.In Europe they're housed in buildings and offered all kind of welfare/programs to have a better life.


Well, the migrants made her come back to her sense, not European leaders. :rofl: Frau Merkel must be having nightmares these days i guess. Well at least she will stop her bullshit insults towards other European countries who have been saying you cant let everybody in without any control. So hopefully she will chill now and listen to some reason.:coffee:
 
Turkey is immediate neighbor of Syria and somewhat responsible for all the mayhem there. It has direct and indirect interests in the outcome of what will transpire in post chaos Syria, therefore a direct stake holder, just like Pakistan which took in 10,000,000+ Afghan refugees and hosted them for over three decades.

Germany has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with Syrian economic migrants under the guise of refugee status. Tell me something why these people didn't board ships to Sudan, Saudia Arabia or for that matter to Madagascar? Because they are hoping for gold instead of simple security of life.

Why should the rich West care? Tell me? Were they the insurers of Arab plight? No! Stop kidding your self and stop with the rants.

Arabs belong in Arab lands.

I call bullshit. Turkey accepted more than 2 million. Germany with a much bigger economy, same landmass and same population can't absorb couple of thousands of refugees? Bollox!
 
Well, the migrants made her come back to her sense, not European leaders. :rofl: Frau Merkel must be having nightmares these days i guess. Well at least she will stop her bullshit insults towards other European countries who have been saying you cant let everybody in without any control. So hopefully she will chill now and listen to some reason.:coffee:


They were calling Hungarians nazis when they tried to shut the border.Now the EU agrees with Germany's decision to shut the border.These people are insane.
 
But...but...fuhrer Merkel said that everybody is welcome!.

Anyway ,European representatives are meeting today to discuss mandatory quotas.Romania will take a maximum of 1785 and not 6500 as per Merkel's dreams.Same for other countries and there's no EU law to force us otherwise.




You put them in tents and give them 10 biscuits/day.In Europe they're housed in buildings and offered all kind of welfare/programs to have a better life.
Romanians are also living on biscuits. You want to say Romanians have German kind of lifestyle? Germany can take at least 500 000 refugees. Romania can take couple of tens of thousands too. Nobody expects they get a German life style even at current situation this is not possible. Germany, UK can make similar tents and house these refugees until they are integrated into society. Germany needs to work force anyhow. Their fertility rate is declining very fast.
Turkey is immediate neighbor of Syria and somewhat responsible for all the mayhem there. It has direct and indirect interests in the outcome of what will transpire in post chaos Syria, therefore a direct stake holder, just like Pakistan which took in 10,000,000+ Afghan refugees and hosted them for over three decades.

Germany has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with Syrian economic migrants under the guise of refugee status. Tell me something why these people didn't board ships to Sudan, Saudia Arabia or for that matter to Madagascar? Because they are hoping for gold instead of simple security of life.

Why should the rich West care? Tell me? Were they the insurers of Arab plight? No! Stop kidding your self and stop with the rants.

Arabs belong in Arab lands.
Who created countries like Syria and Iraq? It was carved out from Turkey by France and UK. Then these countries should take the majority of refugees. They placed these dictators there. Nobody told Assad to start killing its people. The faulty one is who created the dictators in the middle-east.
 
They were calling Hungarians nazis when they tried to shut the border.Now the EU agrees with Germany's decision to shut the border.These people are insane.

That was more due to the scummy naziesq behaviour of the Hungarians rather than trying to stop refugees

Turkey is immediate neighbor of Syria and somewhat responsible for all the mayhem there. It has direct and indirect interests in the outcome of what will transpire in post chaos Syria, therefore a direct stake holder, just like Pakistan which took in 10,000,000+ Afghan refugees and hosted them for over three decades.

Germany has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with Syrian economic migrants under the guise of refugee status. Tell me something why these people didn't board ships to Sudan, Saudia Arabia or for that matter to Madagascar? Because they are hoping for gold instead of simple security of life.

Why should the rich West care? Tell me? Were they the insurers of Arab plight? No! Stop kidding your self and stop with the rants.

Arabs belong in Arab lands.

The UK, U.S and France are much more culpable for the wars in Libya, Iraq and Syria then Turkey
 
That was more due to the scummy naziesq behaviour of the Hungarians rather than trying to stop refugees


They are well within their rights to keep out illegal immigrants from their country.Starting today,entering Hungary will be a whole lot harder due to the new laws,new fence and deployement of the Army at the border.All illegals will be arested and put into camps instead of being allowed to roam freely.
 
Romanians are also living on biscuits. You want to say Romanians have German kind of lifestyle? Germany can take at least 500 000 refugees. Romania can take couple of tens of thousands too. Nobody expects they get a German life style even at current situation this is not possible. Germany, UK can make similar tents and house these refugees until they are integrated into society. Germany needs to work force anyhow. Their fertility rate is declining very fast.

Who created countries like Syria and Iraq? It was carved out from Turkey by France and UK. Then these countries should take the majority of refugees. They placed these dictators there. Nobody told Assad to start killing its people. The faulty one is who created the dictators in the middle-east.


This is because British, french meddling in the region goes back decades and centuries

They left these dictators specifically to destabilise the country's

The people of Syria and iraq have caused little pain to the uk or France but the british and french have caused havoc in the lives of Syrians and Iraqis


It is only right they should come here
 
Romanians are also living on biscuits. You want to say Romanians have German kind of lifestyle? Germany can take at least 500 000 refugees. Romania can take couple of tens of thousands too. Nobody expects they get a German life style even at current situation this is not possible. Germany, UK can make similar tents and house these refugees until they are integrated into society. Germany needs to work force anyhow. Their fertility rate is declining very fast.

Who created countries like Syria and Iraq? It was carved out from Turkey by France and UK. Then these countries should take the majority of refugees. They placed these dictators there. Nobody told Assad to start killing its people. The faulty one is who created the dictators in the middle-east.


There was no Turkey,just an old fashioned empire like Austria-Hungary in Europe.Such entities were a thing of the past and it was due time for their dissapearance.Romania will not house tens of thousands,deal with it.All of them should stay in Turkey untill the mess is sorted out and we should help Turkey financially to deal with them.

Last but not least Turkey is involved directly in sustaining anti Assad forces so it has a great blame in all of this.
 
This is because British, french meddling in the region goes back decades and centuries

They left these dictators specifically to destabilise the country's

The people of Syria and iraq have caused little pain to the uk or France but the british and french have caused havoc in the lives of Syrians and Iraqis


It is only right they should come here
I said this earlier. If somebody comes and burns my house. Guess what I will do? I will come to your house, bitch! This is what Syrians are doing. They have the fullest right to do this.
There was no Turkey,just an old fashioned empire like Austria-Hungary in Europe.Such entities were a thing of the past and it was due time for their dissapearance.Romania will not house tens of thousands,deal with it.All of them should stay in Turkey untill the mess is sorted out and we should help Turkey financially to deal with them.

Last but not least Turkey is involved directly in sustaining anti Assad forces so it has a great blame in all of this.
Same can be said about Romania. It was just created by the will of others instead of the determination of its people. Even today it depends on the mercy of others. It really doesn't matter. Who placed those dictators in Syria and Iraq? The refugees should go to those countries. And yes, other European countries like Germany and Romania will also house refugees because of the mistakes of France and UK. They will learn to live with them.
 

Back
Top Bottom