A Crisis Inflicted by The EU
by Michael Copeland
Thousands of Mauritanian, Moroccan, and sub-Saharan Africans are seeking to enter Europe illegally through Spain’s territories of Ceuta and Melilla on the north African coast. Many are being trafficked by criminal organizations, the Spanish Interior Minister said back in 2014, qualifying the situation as ‘‘an absolute emergency’’.
These are not immigrants: they are invaders. The “absolute emergency” has not gone away. Invaders crash the gates in vehicles, or swarm over the fence at night, or swim round the sea fence to the beach. It is a crisis, Europe’s crisis as much as Spain’s, a continuous flow from a continent teeming with millions. Africans are, after all, very, very good, extremely good, at making more Africans.
Ceuta and Melilla are the chief location of Europe’s African frontier: another is French Mayotte, near Madagascar. Once inside, invaders are in the European Union, and can gain the reward of asylum. Using the EU’s Free Movement of People they make their way to generous welfare states like Germany. This is the EU’s pernicious nation-breaking at work. It is no “economic benefit” — the usual dishonest bluff — nor is it an accident: it is part of the intended “de-homogenising” of the component nations, as UN Paid Migration Promoter and EU spokesman the late bullying and tainted Peter Sutherland expressed it:

