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Barroso letter pleads for EU immigration ‘solidarity’

WARNING: This is Version 1 of my old archive, so Photos will NOT work and many links will NOT work. But you can find articles by searching on the Titles. There is a lot of information in this archive. Use the SEARCH BAR at the top right. Prior to December 2012; I was a pro-Christian type of Conservative. I was unaware of the mass of Jewish lies in history, especially the lies regarding WW2 and Hitler. So in here you will find pro-Jewish and pro-Israel material. I was definitely WRONG about the Boeremag and Janusz Walus. They were for real.

Original Post Date: 2006-09-12  Posted By: Jan

From the News Archives of: WWW.AfricanCrisis.Org
Date & Time Posted: 9/12/2006
Barroso letter pleads for EU immigration ‘solidarity’
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Barroso letter pleads for EU immigration ‘solidarity’

From the News Archives of: WWW.AfricanCrisis.Org


Date & Time Posted: 9/12/2006

Barroso letter pleads for EU immigration ‘solidarity’

[Africa has become such a hell hole since decolonisation that now blacks are flooding Europe in a big way. I am delighted. You see, the Western world did not want to listen to us whites in Africa when we fought, struggled and argued and BEGGED for PROPER, sustainable pro-Western, pro-Capitalist solutions to our political problems. Instead, the West took the easy way out. But now, Africa is invading the whole Western world and is stuffing up dozens of First World countries. And Africa is costing Western taxpayers billions of dollars in wasted foreign aid. Before long American troops will also have to fight in Africa.

So I pose the question: Would things not have been better for The West AND FOR ALL OF US IN AFRICA if the problems had been solved properly to begin with? If the West had the balls to STOP Socialists, Marxists and Terrorists from coming to power in Africa… then maybe Europe and America would not be suffering so much today. But, rest assured, this problem in Africa will get worse and will irritate both Americans and Europeans a LOT MORE! Jan]

Barroso letter pleads for EU immigration ‘solidarity’

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS – Faced with overwhelming refugee numbers on Europe’s southern borders and an obvious lack of resources to tackle the problem, the European Commission president has taken the unprecedented step of writing to governments to ask them to do more to help.

President Jose Manuel Barroso on Thursday (7 September) wrote to EU leaders to say that “it is of the utmost importance that all member States of the union work together in a spirit of solidarity.”

He said it is a European problem that requires a European effort as member states have been slow to commit any aid to the countries most hit by the immigration waves.

Mr Barroso’s request came as 900 refugees, the most ever in a 24-hour period, arrived at Spain’s Canary Islands yesterday – last month the number of refugees coming to Spain from Africa exceeded the number for the whole of 2005.

Italy and Malta – both close to North Africa – are also inundated with refugees and all three countries have repeatedly been asking other member states for aid.

Last week, Spain’s deputy prime minister Maria Fernandez de la Vega travelled to Finland – as current holder of the EU presidency – and Brussels to lobby for more help.

Over the summer the commission launched a (130)‚(172)¬3.2 million air and sea patrol scheme in the Canaries but it has been nowhere near enough to help alleviate the problem.

In his letter; Mr Barroso said that EU efforts for Spain, in particular, must be “increased and intensified.”

EU overburdened
The inexperience of the EU’s fledgling border patrol policy has already been acknowledged by experts, with the head of the European Confederation of Policy, Heinz Kiefer, last week criticising the bloc’s immigration policy.

“If the EU alleges that this problem can be dealt with by sending a few additional patrol boats, this is little more than an attempt to demonstrate that it is able to act while in fact it is not,” said Mr Kiefer.

He also indicated that Frontex, the EU’s border agency, is not yet up to the job.

“Frontex is still in the process of establishing itself and will need more time to conclude this process. To give it the task to solve an immediate crisis situation means to impede its development.”

Spain’s fault?
While the commission has expressed solidarity with Spain and its efforts to fight immigration, it has also indicated that Madrid may have brought the problem upon itself when it last year put into effect an amnesty programme allowing several hundred thousand people illegally living in the country to apply for work and residency permits.

At the time Spain attracted criticism from other member states for acting unilaterally and, in effect, granting these regularised workers access to the whole of the bloc.

Writing in French daily Le Figaro on Thursday, justice commissioner Franco Frattini said mass regularisation makes it appealing for people to come to countries to live illegally waiting for the day when there might be another amnesty.

He also said that member states should be very strict with employers who employ workers on the black as they create a “pull factor” for people coming from poor countries.

Mr Barroso used the emergency situation in southern Europe to call for member states to consider changing the rules for taking decisions in this area.

At the moment, all member states have to agree unanimously. Mr Barroso said this decision-making process is “not very efficient” and urged governments to reconsider this at an informal meeting of justice ministers later this month.

URL: http://euobserver.com/9/22357/?rk=1br>


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