Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Islamic invasion of Europe update (November 24, 2015)




The Swedish government has proposed tough measures to stem the flow of asylum-seekers into the country, including granting temporary residence permits to refugees who earlier were eligible for permanent residency.

The government says the proposals, in line with the minimum requirements under international conventions and EU legislation, would also limit the rights of family reunification and includes starting ID checks on all forms of transport arriving into Sweden.

The new measures, subject to parliamentary approval, are to be in force for three years and will not affect refugees who arrive under a U.N. quota system.

The government said Tuesday that more than 80,000 asylum-seekers arrived in the Scandinavian country during the past two months. Officials expect some 200,000 new arrivals by year-end — the highest number relative to population size in Europe.

Germany
Police in northern Germany are investigating a fire at a multi-family home housing some asylum seekers as a likely arson.

Police told the dpa news agency Tuesday that the Monday night fire at the home in the town of Woldegk, about 150 kilometers (90 miles) north of Berlin, appears to have been set in the basement. Thirty-five residents, including 10 asylum seekers, were forced to leave move into temporary shelters. A 76-year-old and a 14-year-old were treated for smoke inhalation.

Police say part of their investigation is determining whether there was a "political motivation" for setting the fire.

Two cars were set ablaze in the town 10 days ago in a case that has not yet been solved.

Slovenia
Slovenia's finance minister says the small EU nation so far has spent more than 11 million euros ($11.7 million) on managing the flow of asylum seekers streaming toward Western Europe.

Dusan Mramor told lawmakers on Tuesday the figure included the costs of receiving, accommodating and feeding migrants, as well as the lease of tents and toilets, train and bus transportation.

Mramor says the figure refers to measures related to the 217,000 migrants who entered up until Nov. 15. Police say more than 260,000 had entered by Tuesday.

Mramor said the number does not include any costs by the local communities involved.

The Alpine nation of 2 million people has sought EU aid, insisting it cannot cope on its own.

Czech Republic
Czech police says they have arrested four Czech nationals — three men and a woman — who have been sought by Belgium on suspicion of organizing a people-smuggling ring.

Police spokesman Pavel Hantak says the four, aged 43-53, are suspected of organizing the illegal transfer of the migrants from Albania, Kosovo, Macedonia and Syria to Britain.

Hantak says police authorities in the Czech Republic, Belgium, Britain and Germany have been cooperating on the case, which was coordinated by Europol.

He says police already have evidence the ring smuggled more than 100 migrants.

Police said Tuesday Czech courts now have to allow their extradition to Belgium where they face up to 20 years in prison.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon bloviates that profiling Muslim invaders is racist
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has raised serious concerns about Balkan nations that have recently imposed border restrictions on migrants, stressing that profiling asylum seekers on the basis of nationality "infringes the human right of all people to seek asylum."

The U.N. chief called on all countries in the region "to respond with compassion, solidarity and shared responsibility" to the mounting humanitarian challenge — and to ensure that their policies on screening asylum seekers adhere to international refugee and human rights law, his spokesman said Tuesday.

U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said Tuesday that Ban urges European governments to significantly improve their capacities to receive and relocate refugees.

The secretary-general also stressed that collective expulsion and return of asylum seekers is strictly prohibited under international law, the spokesman said.