Deceit,
manipulation and propaganda is the core feature of the Muslim psyche.
The only ones attracted to and lured in by these tactics is the
totalitarian left who inhabit the same propensities.
Deceit and propaganda is how the prophet of Islam managed to
manoeuvre his way into Medina as a refugee. Within five years he had
managed to convert, kill or enslave every jew in their city. Within a
century the entire jewish Arabian peninsula became Islamic.
Here we see “Palestinian” propaganda tactics. When they feel the
smell of free taxpayer money and free housing close at hand they become
very aggressive in their pursuit. Did no one intervene and help them
tighten the noose and hang the contraption far higher? How do you “hang”
yourself by a lose noose while your feet hovers a few centimeters above
ground? How many dead bodies end up with a satisfied grin on their
face? Don’t take them to the hospital. Take them to Karachi.
They need to be shot on illegal trespassing. Nothing else. Drop a
chemical bomb or barrel bomb in the stadium they are housed and be done
with it. Enough of this crap.
.
.
Desperate migrants try to HANG themselves in Athens square as struggling Greece warns it won’t become a ‘warehouse of souls’
- 20,000 migrants are stranded in Greece after FYROM shut its borders
- Football stadiums being used to house them and hundreds queue for food
- Yesterday, two men tried to hang themselves in protest in Athens square
- Greek Prime Minister threatens to block EU treaties unless burden shared
Greece has warned it would not be turned
into ‘warehouse of souls’ by the rest of the Europe after tens of
thousands of migrants were left trapped in the country.
Two desperate men yesterday attempted to
hang themselves in a square in the centre of Athens as frustrations grew
with border closures that have stopped people leaving.
One of the men, a Pakistani, was left
unconscious after tying a noose made from twisted lengths of fabric to a
tree and was taken to hospital.
At a makeshift migrant camp in one of the capital’s suburbs, hundreds queued for food.
Greek officials estimate 20,000 migrants
have been stranded there after neighbouring FYROM abruptly shut its
border on Monday to anyone not Syrian or Iraqi.
With all migrant centres full, Greek authorities have started using stadiums as temporary accommodation.
The UN’s refugee agency yesterday
announced it is looking to lease entire hotels with hundreds of rooms
for at least nine months.
More than 800,000 people last year arrived
from Turkey on the Greek islands, where they got boats to Athens and
then headed to the Balkans and continued their journeys up through
Europe.
But the tough new restrictions being
enforced by FYROM, which is only letting 200 people through a day,
have created a bottleneck with thousands continuing to arrive each day
in the country but with no way to leave.
The Greek Prime Minister has warned his
country will block future EU agreements if other member states refused
to share the burden of refugees.
Alexis Tsipras said Greece: ‘Will not
accept turning the country into a permanent warehouse of souls with
Europe continuing to function as if nothing is happening.’
Groups of frustrated migrants, including
families with small children, yesterday walked along the country’s main
motorway in the hope of reaching FYROM after authorities stopped
their buses to ease the crowds at the blocked border.
‘We have been here for six days. We cannot
take it any more,’ said Hasan, an Iraqi in a group of hundreds heading
towards the small border town of Idomeni.
One couple were using a plastic box as a crib for their baby, pulling it along the road.
Nearly 3,000 people are currently massed
at the border. Wassim al Mousalli, 37, a pharmacist from Damascus said
he, his wife and children aged three and six had spent two days camped
at the crossing.
‘We spent the night in a small tent, the
children were very cold,’ he said. ‘I want to reach Germany, and my main
question is why are the borders being kept closed.’
Walaa Jbara, a 23-year-old Syrian student,
said: ‘It took me 20 hours to get here. The police kept stopping us,
but I couldn’t wait.’
Mr Tsipras said it was unacceptable for EU partners to force Greece to shoulder the crisis.
He said: ‘We did and will continue to do everything we can to provide warmth, essential help and security to uprooted people.
‘We will either be in a union of common rules for all or everyone will do as they please: we will not accept the latter.’
At a meeting in Brussels yesterday, Greece
threatened to block all EU efforts to handle the crisis unless
countries along the migrant route up through Europe began allowing
people through again.
Relations between EU countries were
strained to breaking point as Greece accused Austria of behaving like it
still has an empire.
Athens officials were furious after
Austria joined with nine other countries to warn they would no longer
allow migrants to be ‘waved through’.
The countries said they had been forced to
take matters into their own hands to protect their borders after the
EU’s attempts at a unified response had failed to yield results.
As talks descended into chaos yesterday, Greece recalled its ambassador from Vienna.
Greek officials estimate 20,000 migrants have
been stranded in Greece after neighbouring FYROM (pictured) abruptly
shut its border on Monday to anyone not Syrian or Iraqi
The country’s migration minister, Yannis Mouzalas, said the other states were trying to make it take the brunt of the crisis.
He echoed the PM in when he said: ‘Greece
will not accept becoming Europe’s Lebanon, a warehouse of souls, even if
this were to be done with major funding.
‘Greece will not accept unilateral actions. Greece, too, can take unilateral action.’
Lebanon hosts around a quarter of the four million Syrians who have fled to neighbouring countries.
In a strongly worded statement, the Greek
foreign ministry accused Austria of holding attitudes from the ‘19th
century’ – a time when it had an empire in central Europe.
In response, Austria’s interior minister
Johanna Mikl-Leitner raised the possibility of excluding Greece from the
EU’s passport-free travel zone, Schengen.
‘If it is really the case that the Greek
external border cannot be protected, can it be still a Schengen external
border?’ she said.
More than a million people arrived on Europe’s shores in 2015 and over 100,000 have reached Greece and Italy already this year.
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