Massive numbers of Afghan and Arab migrants are gathered at the border of Turkey and Greece after the Erdogan government announced on Fr...
Massive numbers of Afghan and Arab migrants are gathered at the border of Turkey and Greece after the Erdogan government announced on Friday to give third world migrants free passage to Europe.
Via Based Poland.
Massive crowds of Afghan and Arab migrants are starting to gather at the border with Greece and Bulgaria near the Turkish city of #Edirne since #Erdogan decided last night to announce that migrants will have free passage to Europe.— BasedPoland (@BasedPoland) February 28, 2020
Expect millions to come in the next 6 months! pic.twitter.com/zXjsSJTPRa
If you have never seen this video on the invasion of Europe you must watch this now…
The Prime Minister of Greece announced Greece will not allow illegal aliens into their country.
Greece does not bear any responsibility for the tragic events in Syria and will not suffer the consequences of decisions taken by others. I have informed the European Union of the situation.— Prime Minister GR (@PrimeministerGR) February 28, 2020
Ejinsight reported:
Turkey, faced with a possible new wave of Syrian migrants and dozens more dead Turkish soldiers in Idlib, will no longer stop Syrian refugees from reaching Europe, Reuters reports, citing a senior Turkish official.An airstrike by Syrian government forces in Syria’s northwest Idlib region killed 33 Turkish soldiers and wounded others, the governor in Turkey’s southeastern province of Hatay said separately early on Friday.Turkey’s communications director, Fahrettin Altun, said that in retaliation, “all known” Syrian government targets were being fired on by Turkish air and land support units.President Tayyip Erdogan has warned that Turkey would launch a full-scale offensive to repel Syrian forces unless they pulled back.He held an emergency meeting with staff for several hours late on Thursday to discuss the attack, which raised the military death toll to 54 so far this month.Nearly a million civilians have been displaced in Idlib near the Turkish border since December as Russia-backed Syrian government forces seized territory from Turkey-backed Syrian rebels, marking the worst humanitarian crisis of the country’s nine-year war.The threat to open the way for refugees to Europe would, if executed, reverse a pledge Turkey made to the European Union in 2016 and could quickly draw Western powers into the standoff over Idlib and stalled negotiations between Ankara and Moscow.
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