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Thursday, August 15, 2013

The demands of asylum seeking blackmailers


Meet your usual bite-the-hand-that-feeds-you  dogs walking on two legs.  Stories like the one below are to be found in each and every country the refugees and asylum seekers have force their way into. Would this have been your behaviour if you had the misfortune to have become  a refugee or an asylum seeker?  

The superiority complex that the cult members suffer from, is an incurable disease. However, the far worse affliction  is "political correctness" of our limp-wristed politicians and the sheeple who think that's an admirable quality.

Ten asylum seekers have been camped out  in northwestern Switzerland for days to protest their living conditions in subterranean military shelters, police said Monday.
The protest comes amid a fierce row over the treatment of asylum seekers  after a small town moved to ban them from  some public facilities including swimming pools and gyms.

The protesters — all of them men and most of them from Syria — have been  at the Solothurn train station since Friday to protest their living conditions, cantonal police spokeswoman Thalia Schweizer told AFP.

The men, who have been placed in subterranean military shelters in the  nearby village of Kestenholz, claim the housing is “unworthy of a human being,”  with no daylight and insufficient ventilation, the ATS news agency reported,  citing an information flier handed out by the protesters. 

Kestenholz, a village of 1,700 people, had been scheduled to house the  asylum seekers in refurbished containers, but at the end of June, its municipal assembly voted against dishing out the 190,000 Swiss francs ($205,000, 154,000  euros) it would cost to revamp the containers and opted instead to house them  in existing shelters.

Head of social affairs in the canton of Solothurn, Claudia Haenzi,  meanwhile said the shelters were “built for people. They have normal  standards... These are good flats with all you need.”    She said her office was in discussions with the asylum seekers and expected  to find a solution by Tuesday.

The protest comes after federal migration authorities said a small town  called Bremgarten, with 6,500 residents, had been permitted to deny residents  of a new asylum centre access to certain public spaces....

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