Visionner la vidéo traduite par La Mite dans la Caverne :
https://pewtube.com/user/LaMiteDansLaCaverne/WXsS7fY
(vidéo en français supprimée de Youtube pour contenu offensant).
Description de la vidéo de Dancing Dove (en anglais) : à traduire...
So Israel wants to remove the "infiltrators" as they say...
Great, send them home so they can work on their own countries if they want to live in a better situation.
But why does Israel get to "protect the character of their state" while Europe does not?
GTFO
FROM THAT ARTICLE
'“This is the right policy to ease the suffering of residents in south Tel Aviv and other neighborhoods where the infiltrators reside,” said Interior Minister Aryeh Deri, who initiated the deportation proposal. “My duty is to return peace and quiet to south Tel Aviv and many neighborhoods across the country.”
Officials say it is a national duty “to protect the Jewish and democratic character” of the state."'
Israel to send 16,000 African migrants to Western countries, including Canada
Inside Israel’s campaign to deport tens of thousands of African migrants
African countries REFUSE to take back Europe's failed asylum seekers
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3315183/Migrant-summit-chaos-African-countries-REFUSE-Europe-s-failed-asylum-seekers.html
"European leaders offered more than £1billion aid in a bid to persuade their African counterparts to take back tens of thousands of illegal migrants."
Germany blasts countries that won't take back migrants
FROM THAT LAST ARTICLE:
"(In 2015) only 21,000 of the 200,000 asylum seekers whose applications were rejected left the country, meaning 179,000 remain in Germany as so-called ‘tolerated' people.
The most common reason why Germany cannot deport people is that as many as 70 percent of asylum seekers arrive in the country without official documentation, making it extremely difficult for the government to find out where they are originally from.
Berlin has even been accused of paying other countries to recognize people as their citizens, resulting in people being deported to countries they have no attachment to.
Pakistan is particularly problematic. In 2014 there were only two deportations to that country despite 580 people having their applications rejected. In 2013, 533 Pakistanis had their asylum applications rejected but only three of them were sent home.
Local authorities often didn't chase up German inquiries about migrants' identities because they involve long journeys into distant parts of the country, Die Welt writes.
North Africa is another problem region."
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