Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Islamic invasion of Europe update (January 5, 2016)


We see a woman. They see a vessel to be used as necessary to accommodate their needs. Which brings us to this next story:

The Europe migrant crisis is visiting yet another horror upon the hundreds of thousands duped by people smugglers to make the perilous journey to Europe — the rape of countless immigrant women by their own travelling companions.

Enjoying a literal captive market and possessing the facility of no morals or scruples, human traffickers have found themselves at liberty to abuse their customers and charge them exorbitant rates.

One way in which families being smuggled into Europe can pay the enormous amounts of money demanded by the traffickers is to sell their women into sex work or to give in to direct demands from the smugglers themselves for the use of wives or daughters.

The fact that the migrants coming to Europe are predominantly young men make the journeys of the small number of women even more dangerous, as they are left helpless among their fellow countrymen. One 30-year-old woman who experienced this abuse at the hands of other migrants has come forward to speak of her experience.

Susanne Höhne, a psychotherapist specialising in treating traumatised female migrants arriving in Germany and with patients ranging in age from “barely adult” to pensionable age said the family of the woman had run out of money in Bulgaria while on their way to Germany from Syria, reports the New York Times. Unable to make payments to continue their travels, her husband “offered his wife as payment instead.”

The woman was then raped daily for three months in lieu of payment — abuse in which her husband started to join in. The woman is now in hiding in Berlin with her children, the husband living elsewhere in Germany with a restraining order. She fears that should her exact whereabouts be revealed her husband or other relatives would kill her for dishonouring the family, even though she was forced into the acts.

Another woman identified as ‘Samar’ spoke out of the abuse she received at the hands of a smuggler, and the fear she and others felt for the safety of their daughters. Travelling from Syria to Germany with her three daughters aged 2, 8, and 13, she said she and other mothers slept in shifts to keep the young girls under watch at all times. “I did not leave them out of my sight for one minute,” she said.

Like other women finding themselves in a tiny minority of migrants and easily taken advantage of, she was robbed of all her money and left unable to pay her smuggler while in Turkey. A man offered to take her to Europe with him for free in return for sex; but she refused, working in Turkey for a year to save €4,000 instead.

Samar said: “Everybody knows there are two ways of paying the smugglers. With money or with your body… almost all men in the world are bad.”











Denmark
Danish officials say 18 people without proper ID have been refused entry from Germany in the first 12 hours of increased border crossing checks, a move to make sure that migrants headed for Sweden and turned down there don't get stuck in Denmark.

National Police spokesman Richard Oesterlund la Cour says three people have been arrested suspected of human smuggling. No details were available.

Oesterlund la Cour said in Tuesday's statement police had checked 1,100 people and focused on the three main crossings with Germany.

He said checks "obviously have been a nuisance" but didn't cause any significant traffic problems.

Hours after Sweden demanded that all arriving passengers show ID, Denmark said Monday said it was tightening border checks to stem the flow of migrants coming in from Germany.
Top officials from Denmark, Sweden and Germany will hold talks in Brussels on Wednesday amid concern about new border control measures aimed at stopping migrants entering northern Europe.

The meeting was called after Sweden introduced ID checks on all people traveling to Denmark, and Denmark tightened border controls on its border with Germany.

European Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas said Tuesday that the meeting's aim "is to improve coordination between the countries concerned to ensure better management of migratory pressures."

Denmark on Monday introduced border checks for at least 10 days, citing concerns about public security because of migrant movements and border measures taken by other EU member states.

Slovakia
Slovakia's prime minister says his country is ready to deploy 25 police officers requested by Macedonia to help the Balkan country cope with the influx of migrants.

Robert Fico said on Tuesday that the officers will be deployed Feb 1.

Macedonia, which is not a member of the European Union, is part of the so-called Balkans route that refugees have used on their way to rich Western countries.

Slovakia previously sent dozens of police officers to EU member states Hungary and Slovenia to help with the migrant crisis there.

Fico says "radical measures" are necessary to be taken to protect the external border of the EU's Schengen borderless zone.

Sweden
Swedish police say there has been a sharp drop in asylum-seekers since new ID checks were introduced for travelers entering the country by train from Denmark.

Police spokeswoman Ewa-Gun Westford said Tuesday that 48 asylum-seekers arrived in southern Sweden during the first day of the ID checks, down from 227 the day before.

She said most of the 48 arrived on ferries from Germany. Only two arrived by train from Denmark, which previously was the most common way for migrants to enter southern Sweden.

As of midnight Sunday, people crossing the Oresund bridge from Denmark to Sweden have to show a picture IDs to be able to get on board.

The move was meant to discourage migrants, many of whom don't carry passports or other forms of ID, to try to enter Sweden, which received a record 160,000 asylum-seekers in 2015.