August 31, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
- "SCF"
- In what is being described as the worse
refugee crisis in Europe since the Second World War, tens of
thousands of desperate migrants are streaming across EU borders.
They have risked their lives to get there, only to be then
attacked by EU «border police», or else targeted by racist
street mobs. Welcome to Europe!
Destitute and
carrying their worldly possessions in nothing but a haversack,
men, women and young children are having to outwit
truncheon-wielding police ranks in order to try to reach safety.
This is in the European Union, whose treaties proclaim to the
rest of the world the sanctity of human rights and dignity.
Hungary, Romania and Greece have emerged as the new crisis
points, replacing Italy as the formerly main refugee route.
Crying mothers run
with petrified children jostled on their backs into forests or
ditches just to escape from teargas-firing riot police. One
distraught woman told a France 24 news crew how she had become
separated from her family in the melee. She didn’t know how she
would ever find them because she was stranded on the other side
of the police cordon. Her missing children and husband had to
run away before they were captured by the cops.
One young boy from
Syria told CNN reporter Awra Damon that his family and many
others were forced back by a phalanx of helmet-clad police
officers as they attempted to cross the Hungarian border. The
little boy said his family fled an area in Syria that is under
control of the Islamic State (or ISIS) terror group – the cult
jihadist militia notorious for beheading civilians. (The CNN
reporter didn’t seem to notice the irony that her TV channel has
previously made heaps of news stories out of accusing the Syrian
government as being the one who is terrorising its people.)
What does that say
about the Hungarian border police when beleaguered refugees are
cowering before them? It’s a graphic condemnation of the EU’s
border controls being scarier than blood-thirsty terrorists.
Last month alone,
more than 100,000 migrants crossed EU
borders. This is a humanitarian crisis on a scale that evokes
the harrowing grainy footage showing wandering masses in the
aftermath of World War Two.
The vast majority
of the refugees to the EU are from war-torn Syria, according to
the UN’s International Organisation for Migration. Up to 12
million of Syria’s population – half the total – have been
displaced by more than four years of conflict in that country. A
war that has been fuelled covertly by the United States, Britain
and France seeking regime change against President Bashar al
Assad. Also fuelling the war in Syria are Western allies Saudi
Arabia, Qatar, Jordan, Turkey and Israel.
The Syrian
government has repeatedly said that it is a victim of an
international criminal conspiracy comprising the above Western
states and allies, who are working in collusion with the
so-called Islamic State terror group and other Al Qaeda-linked
mercenaries to topple Assad – an ally of Russia and Iran. The
little boy in the above CNN report clearly said his family and
their neighbours were fleeing«ISIS» not «Assad». But, as already
noted, CNN and the rest of the Western news media don’t seem to
do irony.
Traumatised and
made homeless, the Syrian refugees are now turning to Europe for
shelter. Their naive hopes for humanitarian assistance – a basic
obligation under international law – are cruelly dashed. It is a
fitting, albeit terrible, denouement that these people are
bringing their troubles to Europe – the very place whose EU
members Britain and France have been most gung-ho about
supporting the US-led regime-change war in Syria.
Men carrying
children on their shoulders, women carrying babies on their
backs, the Syrian refugees have to wend their way through war
zones, the ISIS terror networks, then walk for hundreds of
kilometres across Turkey – preyed upon by ruthless human
traffickers – and then pile into leaking boats to make a
treacherous sea crossing to mainland Europe. They do it because
they are desperate to survive. Many die along the way from
drowning or exhaustion. Pregnant women have reportedly lost
their unborn babies on roadsides from sheer fatigue.
And, after all
that, when these people arrive at the borders of the EU, they
are finally confronted with an army of «robo-cops». In recent
weeks, news footage has shown shocking images of police in
Hungary and Macedonia (a prospective EU member) firing teargas
and stun grenades to turn back thousands of refugees. Other
scenes show droves of dishevelled families being herded onto
train carriages, to be shunted off to some other European
country. They say they were even deprived of drinking-water by
the»authorities», never mind medical aid, which was also denied
to them.
EU member Hungary
has even now installed hundreds of kilometres of shiny razor
wire along its border with Serbia to keep refugees at bay.
Twenty-five years after the Iron Curtain came down across
Europe, a steel razor-wire curtain is going up. This is not the
supposedly despotic Soviet Union – it is in the European Union.
The organisation that declares human rights to be its foundation
and for which it was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2012.
Germany’s Foreign
Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier spoke sheepishly about the EU’s
new steel curtain barring war-torn refugees. «We are against the
use of fences,» said Steinmeier, mouthing a cowardly euphemism.
This is while EU
officials are gathering in Vienna this week to discuss the
crisis.
By chance, the
capital of Austria was made rather appropriate in light of this
week’s grim discovery of some 50 migrants found dead in an
abandoned lorry on a motorway in Austria. It is believed they
were being smuggled by human traffickers from Hungary inside a
meat-packing truck. Austrian police became suspicious of the
abandoned vehicle on the hard shoulder of the motorway after
they noticed a putrid smell seeping from under its backdoors.
The victims had been dead for several days.
German Chancellor
Angela Merkel said she was
shocked by the»awful» discovery in Austria. She said with hollow
words that the EU must act in solidarity to solve the refugee
crisis. Solidarity? What is she talking about? Then Merkel
added: «The whole world is watching us». Well, she certainly got
that bit right for sure.
Last week, in
Germany, angry far-right extremists attacked a care centre for
asylum seekers near Dresden. Mobs chanted racist slogans,
screaming for the migrants to go back to their countries.
Go back to their
countries? Yes, that’s right. You know the war zones that
haughty European states like Britain and France have ignited and
inflamed in Syria, Libya, Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere in
Africa.
Which makes you
wonder: who are the real fascists? The anti-immigrant mobs on
the streets, or the coiffured politicians in fancy suits and
plush government offices?