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No Way Doomsday says Hungary

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban on Friday binned the European Union’s migration plan, and restated his opposition to his country having a multicultural society.

‘In Hungary, we are very strict that we would not like to have a mixed-up culture,’ he told Reuters. ‘We don’t think a mixture of Muslim and Christian society could be a peaceful one and could provide security and good life for the people.’

Migration in Hungary is a ’national security issue,’ said Orban, who previously pointed out correctly that ’multiculturalism has failed in Europe.’

No one can enter Hungary ‘without having a legally completed procedure and getting a clear permission to do so,’ he said in Friday’s interview.

The popular Premier’s comments came a day after discussing migration with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in Brussels, who is under investigation.

The bloc’s new migration plan would force Hungary to welcome Third World migrants, the PM said, but he welcomed that some taboos have disappeared. He cited, in particular, the strengthened focus on sending people who don’t qualify for asylum in the EU back to their countries of origin.

The elephant in the room question is why should Hungary or any other European nation accept anyone from other lands, especially undocumented aliens who are clearly economic migrants looking for a way of life financed by their hosts.

Prime Minister Orban still believes that applications should be managed in traditional collecting points beyond EU borders, and that those who do approach the border would otherwise be detained.

Self-styled rights groups say that detaining migrants, or pushing them back over the border, runs against the right to claim asylum as enshrined under international humanitarian law. Since Hungary adopted its Hungarians first policies following a 2015 rise in migrant arrivals, it has already lost a number of legal cases on migration at the EU’s top court. However, this court is notorious as a state functionary and is entirely appointed and made up of unelected, virtually anonymous and certainly unaccountable legal specialists.

Although it is too early to consider a Hungarian veto, Orban made it clear that Budapest would not agree to anything that could lead to Hungary being obliged to take in people coming from the Middle East or Africa. Source

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