Chancellor Angela Merkel is setting aside €90m (£76m) in taxpayers’ money to create a fund which will pay migrants to withdraw their asylum applications and leave Germany voluntarily.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Angela Merkel thought it was a great idea to throw their borders wide open, and let a million, unvetted Muslim migrants come in. Then the attacks on the street started, then the rapes started, and the streets filled with piles of garbage 30 feet high. The Germany people are revolting, as the prospect of her re-election grows dimmer by the hour. Observe her very desperate attempt to solve the problem by throwing money at it. Will it work? Only if the German people are as stupid as she seems to believe they are, but they're not.
The handouts will form part of a 16-point plan to speed up the removal of rejected asylum seekers, after Tunisian migrant
Anis Amri murdered a Polish lorry driver, hijacked his vehicle and drove it into a Christmas market in Berlin while
awaiting deportation.
U.S. president Donald Trump told
The Times that Merkel made a
“catastrophic mistake” when she opened the doors to an
unlimited number of migrants in 2015. Her vice-chancellor, Sigmar Gabriel, later
admitted that his superior had
underestimated how difficult it would be to integrate migrants on such a grand scale, and that Germany had been plunged into a
kulturkampf, or “cultural war”, as a result.
16 y/o German girl talks about muslim immigration, destruction of her own country
Germany rejected 170,000 asylum claims in 2016 but, according to the Mail, just 26,000 were repatriated. 55,000 more decided to leave voluntarily – apparently leaving 81,000 bogus applicants unaccounted for.
“We rely heavily on voluntary departures,” admitted Chancellor Merkel, who was announcing the package after falling behind the Social Democrats in polls for Germany’s upcoming elections.
Martin Schulz, the former President of the European Parliament who has been
nominated as the Social Democrat challenger to Merkel, said he backed the proposals to speed up deportations.
Schulz has previously
insisted that “the people who are arriving [in Europe] are refugees who have been threatened [and] we should welcome them” – a statement which is at odds with the Vice-President of the European Commission’s
admission that at least 60 per cent are economic migrants.
As a leading figure in the European Union, Schulz was a strong supporter of the compulsory migrant quotas. These were
forced through by the bloc despite strong opposition from central and eastern European member-states, which did not agree with Germany’s unilateral decision to throw open the borders.
Schulz hit out strongly at these countries in 2015, accusing them of “national egotism in its purest form”. Polish interior minister Mariusz Blaszczak
described at Schulz’s words as “an example of German arrogance”.
source
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