Migration has created 900 no-go areas in EU

Migration ‘has created 900 no-go areas in EU’: Devastating report shows order breaking down – including in London

  • Hungary warns Europe has 900 areas where authorities have ‘no control’
  • It said these areas ‘with a high number of immigrants’ are also in London
  • The government made the claims on a website opposing EU quota system
  • It said the ‘norms of the host society barely prevail’ in these ‘no go’ areas

European cities including London are riven by lawless ‘no-go’ areas as a result of high migration, Hungary’s government has warned.

Viktor Orban
Viktor Orban

The British capital is named alongside cities such as Paris, Stockholm and Berlin as home to ‘more than 900’ areas where the authorities have “little or no control”.

The extraordinary allegations are made on an official website aimed at hardening local opposition to an EU scheme to enforce a refugee resettlement quota on all member states.

Such quotas ‘increase the terrorist threat’ and ‘threaten the culture’ of host nations, it is warned. Hungary’s government has been among the most outspoken in its opposition and anger at the worsening migrant crisis.

The web site was launched this week ahead of a referendum in Hungary on the EU plan that would see 160,000 migrants relocated across the continent. It features a ticking clock representing a migrant entering Europe every 12 seconds.

The website warns: ‘The mandatory European quotas increase the terrorist risk in Europe and imperils our culture. Illegal immigrants cross the borders unchecked, so we do not know who they are and what their intentions are. We do not know how many of them are disguised terrorists.’

germany-spending-6-billion-muslim-migrants-isis-terrorists

Hungary warns that in areas “with a high number of immigrants, the norms of the host society barely prevail”. Officials also suggest that authorities in the affected regions – including London – have “no control” over their residents.

They lambast plans to force every member state to accept a set number of migrants as increasing the risk of terror attacks and making European countries more unsafe.

Last night UK politicians dismissed the claims about Britain as ‘wild’ and ‘unsubstantiated’ – but admitted warnings that the flow of migrants increased the terror risk in Europe were correct.

The claims follow those of US candidate Donald Trump, who sparked outrage last year when he said there were ‘no-go’ areas in London for police officers because of radicalisation.

Asked for the source of the claims of no-go areas yesterday, Hungarian government spokesman Zoltan Kovacs said it came from ‘data publicly available on the internet’ without giving further details (see few example in the previous articles: The “strange case” of Malmö , Sweden: Malmö and other cities’ pools transformed in playgrounds for perverted , 28 cars torched in a turmoil weekend in Berlin and Sweden , etc).

Last night former defence minister Sir Gerald Howarth said: ‘Clearly, it is quite wrong for Hungary to make wild and unsubstantiated assertions about ‘no-go’ areas in the UK. But I agree that increasing the number of migrants most probably increases the risk of importing Islamic State terrorists who take advantage of the mass movement to smuggle themselves into Europe.’

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s government voted against an EU plan in September to distribute up to 160,000 asylum seekers among members as part of a quota. In December, they joined Slovakia in filing a legal complaint.

The disastrous scheme has so far only seen 1,100 migrants relocated, with Hungary not taking a single one.

If voters in the country reject the quotas in the referendum it would be another huge blow to the controversial scheme. Mr. Orban, whose hardline stance in the migrant crisis led him to close Hungary’s southern borders, announced the referendum, which does not have a date yet, last February.

He said Brussels has no right to ‘redraw Europe’s cultural and religious identity’.

The referendum question will ask: ‘Do you want the EU to prescribe the mandatory relocation of non-Hungarian citizens to Hungary without the approval of the Hungarian parliament?’

lesbos

The news comes as tensions rise in areas with high numbers of incoming refugees. Yesterday three migrants were stabbed on the Greek islands of Lesbos and Samos and hundreds more broke out of a detention centre.

Source: Daily Mail