Millions of migrants pour into Italy
This article, translated from the Italian, appeared at François Desouche on July 25. Due to its length, some abridging was necessary:
There are millions of them. They're fleeing war, dictators, religious persecutions, hunger. And they all have the same destination: Italy. For many, it's only a transit, for others the final destination of their desperate journey. They come from Tunisia, Morocco, Egypt, Syria, the Horn of Africa, sub-Saharan Africa, Eritrea, Somalia, Nigeria, Sudan, Congo, India, Sri Lanka, the Philippines.
Concerning Africa, ninety percent reach the Libyan coast and head for our Peninsula. A biblical exodus that enriches the merchants of human beings by encouraging drug trafficking and the infiltration of potential Islamist terrorists. This exodus has caused our welcoming services to explode and our State coffers to become impoverished, which in turn compromises the efficiency of sanitary measures and now raises the specter of infectious diseases, such as Ebola, TB, meningitis and cholera.
"Fortress Europe" is being attacked, and the foothold to getting into the EU lies along the Italian coastlines. Religious or intertribal conflicts, merciless dictatorships, famines and internal pogroms are pushing an enormous mass of people to seek salvation in emigration, a phenomenon that has taken on alarming dimensions in recent months. It is true that our secret services are alarmed. Very much so. In their reports they stress that the recent pogroms are attributable to two main factors: "battles between militias in Libya and the civil war in Syria."
The article describes how Libya is falling apart from the fighting between tribes and separatists, and how criminal organizations engage in illegal human trafficking, counting on the corruption of those who control the borders. In Syria the endless civil war forces many refugees to try to get to northern Europe, via Italy. Other factors are the attacks on Christian communities by Muslims and the growing poverty of the population.
Libya is the point of departure for ninety percent of the migrants from the "black continent". A sort of "preferred migratory hub." And it is there that the greatest number of people waiting to go to Sicily are concentrated, or in rare cases Calabria. On the other hand, many Syrians, but also Palestinians pass through Turkey on regularly scheduled flights, then seek a passage to our shores. The "new Turkish connection" also has its origin in the anti-terrorist and anti-criminal policies of the Cairo government that regards the Syrian refugees as allies of the fallen Muslim Brotherhood.
Libya and Syria are not the only preoccupations of our secret services. In the immediate future they foresee waves of migrants from the Central African Republic where there are already a million refugees. In Nigeria the Boko Haram caused half a million persons to become "displaced", while 60,000 Nigerians fled to Cameroon, Chad and Niger (…)
The article warns that because the politicians are not reliable, the agreements between Italy and Libya cannot be kept, and the massive migrations will become more organized. Trafficking of drugs, weapons and contraband will be encouraged.
We cannot feel safe. Because there is the risk of epidemics as well. The exceptional number of migrants makes hygiene monitoring arduous on board our ships and at Sicilian landing points. Although for now there are no signals of dangerous pathologies, we are aware of the spread in Africa of the Ebola virus in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone. There is cholera in the Sudan, tuberculosis and polio in the Horn of Africa and the sub-Saharan zone. Meningitis in the Iberian enclave of Melilla, and MERS, a respiratory ailment not very different from SARS, in Algeria and Saudi Arabia.
Note: MERS refers to Middle East Respiratory Syndrome. SARS is Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome.
Melilla is a Spanish city on the coast of North Africa.
They will arrive not only in large numbers but they will soon be enraged. Our welcoming services, in truth, are saturated now and it aggravates the discomfort of the migrants, which in turn triggers protests, often violent, such as self-mutilation and en masse fleeing.
This exodus could compromise the integration of foreigners as ethnic ghettos grow larger and as migrants are exposed to prostitution, black markets and organized crime that seeks to intercept demands from southern entrepreneurs in need of workers for the fields.
Finally, the invasion makes it difficult to identify the newcomers, thus allowing criminals or jihadist terrorists to enter through our national borders. Our leaders have been warned.
The video below is in Italian. I regret I don't have time to work out a translation, but the images speak for themselves. The city is Catania, in Sicily, and you can see the situation in the streets and parks. The video comes from Révoltes en Europe, as does the photo above.
Labels: Crime, Crisis of survival, Health, Immigration, Italy, National Identity, Terrorism