Thursday, September 10, 2015

Bashi's journey from Africa to Europe may signal a bigger refugee crisis to come

Mohamed Yahya Monday 7 September 2015

Africa is crying out for more financial support, to tackle the conflict, poverty and instability that drives people like Bashi*, from Somalia, to flee

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Internally displaced Somalis at Badbaado refugee camp in Mogadishu. As Africa’s population grows, the number of people escaping conflict in countries like Somalia will continue to rise. Photograph: Mustafa Abdi/AFP/Getty

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The next time you read the news reports from Sicily and Calais and Greece, I hope you will remember Bashi*, one young African man among many currently in a migrants’ camp in Europe.

I first met Bashi in 2011 at my mother’s house in Kenya. As he grilled me about my work with the United Nations, it was immediately apparent that he was self-assured and articulate. As I got to know him better, I never thought that he would join the young Africans undertaking perilous journeys to seek new starts in faraway lands.

Bashi’s story begins in Somalia: aged 14, he crossed the border into northern Kenya to get away from an intensifying conflict. He ended up in Dadaab, one of the largest refugee camps in Africa, living alongside more than 350,000 people.

After a couple of years, Bashi made another audacious journey, this time to the capital, Nairobi, to seek work and education. It is illegal under Kenyan law for refugees to leave the camp, but Bashi “camouflaged” himself in the predominantly Somali neighbourhood Eastleigh. He became a waiter by day, and a student by night, keen to ensure that the circumstances of his birth did not imprison his future.

2014 was a good year for Bashi. He opened his own small shop, selling clothes and “advancing fashion in Nairobi”, as he put it. Bashi was christened the hipster of Eastleigh because of his fondness for tight jeans, oversized glasses and other trendy paraphernalia.

But when I met him again that year, it was clear Bashi was concerned about his future; things had changed for Somalis in Kenya since the intensification of al-Shabaab activities. He worried he could lose his business and be deported. He seemed subdued, but maintained his entrepreneurial zeal.

Last month when I was back in Kenya, I asked around for news of Bashi. I received a text message with a picture of the front page of an Italian newspaper, showing a well-dressed young man carrying a Syrian baby. It was Bashi, on the Greek island of Lesbos.

I learnt that Bashi had left Kenya in July, having saved $4,500 for his voyage. He chose Sweden because he had heard it is a place of tolerance, opportunity and open access to education. He also has distant relatives there.

The first leg of the journey was from Kenya to Iran, and for this Bashi paid $1,600 to a “broker”. A series of brokers, essentially smugglers, took Bashi through different segments of his journey.

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Bashi’s journey – from Kenya to Iran, then to Turkey and Greece all the way through to Austria. Click here for a larger version of the map. Photograph: UNDP Africa

During his voyage, Bashi met Syrians, Afghans, Sudanese and Eritreans, all united in their refusal to accept life as dictated by geography and circumstance. They shared meals, walked over mountains and evaded border guards together.

Bashi walked 23 hours to the Turkish border, then travelled to Istanbul, and from there to Greece, where the picture I saw was taken. In Athens, another broker facilitated travel through Macedonia, into Serbia.

In Belgrade, Bashi ran out of money. He called on his network of friends, who sent the €1,400 ($1,550) he needed to get to Vienna. There, he was stopped on his way to Germany and was sent to a “holding camp” in Salzburg, where he remains.

Bashi’s story is little different from the stories of millions of Europeans who migrated to the United States in the 19th century. Those Europeans, just like the migrants of today, were escaping poverty, discrimination and conflict. Bashi, like the majority of those people, will most certainly contribute significantly to any nation that will give him asylum.

As Africa’s population continues to grow, the number of people crossing deserts and seas will continue to rise. Responses have focused primarily on enforcement, but it is clear barriers and barbed wire will not deter people who are prepared to risk their lives.

In the short term, there is no escaping the tough decisions required to absorb and integrate a significant number of the people who have already arrived in Europe, and who cannot be repatriated to countries in conflict.

Contrary to some popular narratives, the Bashis of this world are not motivated by the European welfare state; they are attracted by peace, opportunities for development, employment and a legal system that promises equality and protection.

African countries must break their silence and ask why their young people feel compelled to leave. Making the continent politically and economically attractive for young people must be a priority response. African bodies, such as the Intergovernmental Authority for Development (Igad) are aware of this challenge, and are looking for support, but this is a long-term project.

Another positive move could be to ease restrictions for asylum seekers and economic migrants within African borders. Africa already hosts the largest proportion of African migrants, but often they struggle to gain citizenship or the right to work legally.

The international community must act in unison and redouble efforts to address the root drivers of migration: poverty, conflict, and lack of opportunity.

In an increasingly unequal and unpredictable world, the dispossessed refuse to suffer quietly. If their actions do not elicit increased investment in development, conflict prevention and global solidarity, then the current crises will simply herald a bigger exodus to come.

*Bashi is a nickname, the use of which is common in Somalia

Bashi's journey from Africa to Europe may signal a bigger refugee crisis to come | Mohamed Yahya | Global development | The Guardian

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

European migrant crisis: Asylum seekers break through Hungarian police lines on Serbia border for second time

Wednesday 9 September 2015

A asylum seeker carrying a baby is stopped by Hungarian police Photo: An asylum seeker carrying a baby is stopped by Hungarian police officers as he tries to escape (Reuters: Marko Djurica)

Related Story: Hundreds of asylum seekers march along Hungary highway

Related Story: Camerawoman sacked for kicking asylum seekers

Related Story: Top UN official urges 'global response' to migration crisis in Europe

Map: Hungary

Several hundred asylum seekers have broken through police lines at Hungary's main border crossing with Serbia for the second day in a row, leading to a tense standoff during which police used pepper spray on one occasion to move a group off a main road.

Key points:
  • Several hundred asylum seekers broke through police lines
  • During a tense standoff ensued police used pepper spray to contain the crowd
  • Police persuaded the group to be transported to refugee registration camps

The series of breakouts took place on Tuesday local time at a police collection point near the border crossing at Roszke, the first stop on the Hungarian side of the border with Serbia.

The collection point is used to hold people before they are taken to a registration camp nearby.

Some 300 asylum seekers, part of a group of 1,500 people waiting for hours at the collection point, bolted past police through a cornfield onto a train track, to walk to the nearby city of Szeged.

Police later managed to persuade the group to be transported to refugee registration camps around the country.

Later, several hundred more asylum seekers broke out of the collection point in various groups, and walked around a kilometre along a main road.

A tense standoff ensued, during which police used pepper spray to contain the crowd before transporting them by bus back to a registration camp at Roszke.

Refugees of different countries accompanied by police officers walk on the railway tracks near Szeged town Photo: Refugees are accompanied by police officers after breaking out from the migrant collection point near Roszke. (AFP: Attila Kisbenedek)

Hungary continues building fence despite criticism

The disturbances were the latest in a series of incidents on European Union member Hungary's southern border with Serbia, a major entry point into the European Union for asylum seekers fleeing war and misery in the Middle East and Asia.


Asylum seekers as Germany's saviour

Germany may have found a solution to the problem of its ageing population as asylum seekers continue to arrive, writes Andrew McCathie in Berlin.

On Monday, some 300 people pushed past a police line at the same collection point, with scuffles erupting throughout the day as the migrants chanted "Freedom!"

After marching some 15 kilometres along a motorway they eventually agreed to be taken back to the registration centre by bus.

More than 165,000 migrants have crossed into Hungary so far this year.

Most seek to travel on to Germany via Austria.

Hungary recently completed construction of a razor-wire barrier along its 175-kilometre frontier with Serbia, but it has failed to stop large numbers of people getting through.

It is currently building an additional four-metre fence despite widespread criticism, with France's foreign minister saying the barrier does "not respect European values".

Refugees of different countries accompanied by police officers walk on the railway tracks near Szeged town Photo: Police used pepper spray to contain the crowd before transporting them by bus back to a registration camp at Roszke. (AFP: Attila Kisbenedek)

AFP

European migrant crisis: Asylum seekers break through Hungarian police lines on Serbia border for second time - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Saving Islam from the Deceit and Depravity of the Islamic State

Muhammad Al-Yaqoubi ABC Religion and Ethics 9 September 2015

ISIS is destroying Islam from within, striking at the hearts of Muslims and replacing the corpus of knowledge, jurisprudence and principles of legal judgments with the words of ignorant men.

ISIS is destroying Islam from within, striking at the hearts of Muslims and replacing the corpus of knowledge, jurisprudence and principles of legal judgments with the words of ignorant men. Credit: AFP / Tauseed Mustafa

See also

Islam has never been challenged from within as it is now. Scholars are therefore obliged to respond, and their response should be intellectual.

The ideology of the Islamic State (to which the media typically refers with the initials ISIS, which stands for "the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria") is based on a complex system of fallacies that cut the sacred texts from their context, and on a series of devious stratagems that select from the corpus of the law what satisfies their twisted minds.

There are a great many proofs that utterly destroy the claims of ISIS and expose their manipulation of the Shariah (Islamic law), but knowledge of these proofs is confined to the classical texts and is generally inaccessible to the average Muslim reader.

From this void has sprung great confusion, eliciting the following questions which are frequently put to me:

  1. Is the declaration of a caliphate by ISIS valid?
  2. Are the crimes of ISIS justified in Islam?
  3. Does ISIS represent Sunni Islam?
  4. Are Muslims allowed to fight against ISIS?
  5. Where does the ideology of ISIS come from?
  6. What is Islam's position on fighting ISIS?
  7. How do we protect our youth from being brainwashed by the ideology of ISIS?

A number of brigades in Syria have resorted to fighting against these extremists, which has distracted many of them from jihad against the Assad regime, leading to the martyrdom of some among them. Likewise, a number of Muslim nations have declared war against this notoriously dangerous group.

Fighters in Syria and other Arab nations have also enquired about the ruling of this fighting and the status of whoever is killed in these battles - particularly, they are asking if they are martyrs?

For some time, discussions have been taking place in the public sphere regarding the status of pilots who participate in the war against ISIS, and while many famous scholars have hesitated in giving a ruling, some did not even consider those killed while fighting ISIS as martyrs - a position which I utterly reject.

Similarly, wherever I go, I often field questions from the public about Islam's position regarding the heinous crimes perpetrated by members of this group in the name of Islam. Furthermore, a number of non-Muslims have questioned the stance of Sunni Islam regarding the actions of ISIS. Given the false categorization of the followers of ISIS as Sunni Muslims that has proliferated in the public imagination, many non-Muslims are seeking clarity as to what degree the views and actions of ISIS represent Sunni Islam.

The actions of ISIS contradict the Shariah, their claims to a caliphate are invalid, and fighting against them is an obligation for those in the region in order to dismantle their criminal entity.

The need for clarity is intensified by the fact that a number of Western media outlets have jumped at the opportunity to promote a false equivalency between the ideology of ISIS and the position of mainstream Muslims - Fox News being the most prominent among them. These media outlets have found substantial material in this group's fatwas, positions and crimes to promote a fear of Islam among the Western populations, in a time where the tide of moderate Islam in the West is rising, as is the number of those entering the faith.

Due to the gravity of the subject and my obligation to expound upon the ruling of Allah Almighty concerning it, I have compiled a concise book and made it a detailed fatwa explaining the legal ruling of fighting the Khawarij in general and ISIS in particular. I derive the conclusions that the actions of ISIS are in complete contradiction to the Shariah, that their claims to a caliphate are invalid, and that fighting against them is a legal obligation for those in the region in order to dismantle their criminal entity.

The Khawarij are a sect which appeared in the first century of Islam and have manifested throughout the centuries since. It deviated from mainstream Islam and was known for killing Muslims under allegations of takfir, which means accusing a Muslim of becoming an apostate. According to the words of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), the followers the Khawarij are described as "the dogs of Hell" and "the worst of both men and animals."

Although the historical sect of the Khawarij does not exist today, we have clear proofs in the Prophetic Traditions that it would emerge at various times throughout the centuries of Islam. The comparison between the crimes and practices of ISIS and the description of the Khawarij mentioned in the words (hadith) of the Prophet elicits my conclusion that ISIS is the modern-day Khawarij, implying that its followers are deviators and that fighting them is obligatory.

Every imam, speaker and teacher of faith in Islamic institutions carries a responsibility before Allah Almighty to rescue the laity from the clutches of disbelief, misguidance, death and destruction.

ISIS uses Islam and fanciful notions of jihad to recruit the youth and deceive Muslims around the world who feel oppressed by conjuring dreams of establishing an Islamic State from China to the Atlantic that would protect their interests. The question is, do the followers of ISIS not realize that their mission is impossible to achieve? The answer is clearly no, because they live in a world of false prophecies and delusions, believing a miracle will enable them to emerge victorious.

For this reason, they are happy to destabilize the region, tear Syria and Iraq apart, draw the United States into a military intervention and provoke Iran. By fighting the world, they have an underlying goal that we should never allow to happen: to provoke the West against the Muslim world, thus giving legitimacy to their fight and an impetus for angry Muslims to join their cause.

It is thus worth pointing out the overwhelming suspicion surrounding this group, its instigators, its alliances and its objectives. Who is behind ISIS? How did it succeed in dominating Mosul and Ramadi? Why does it target the militias fighting the Assad regime in Syria? Why is it attempting to eradicate any history in the region through demolishing relics? Why is it propelling minorities to migrate from the region? Why is it persecuting Sunni Muslims? Why is it sparking hatred between sects and sowing dissension between clans that have lived harmoniously for centuries? Why is it making deals with the same Syrian regime that it professes to oppose?

These are all questions that raise significant doubt and suspicion, emphasizing the point that perhaps there are nefarious strategists behind the rise of ISIS, and that Islam is nothing but a cloak worn by this group to fulfil ulterior motives, thereby distorting the image of Islam in the public conscious and portraying it as a barbaric religion far removed from civilization, humanity, mercy and justice.

ISIS is instigating a vast propaganda campaign and justifying the heinous crimes it is committing under the pretext of supporting Islam and implementing the Shariah, thereby attracting the hearts of many of the laity. Every imam, speaker and teacher of faith in Islamic institutions and colleges carries a responsibility before Allah Almighty to rescue them from the clutches of disbelief, misguidance, death and destruction.

The strength of Muslims is not in their numbers or material resources, but rather in their belief, humility and obedience to Allah Almighty.

Lest despair arise over the proliferation of this criminal group, I bear glad tidings to Muslims that victory over these Khawarij is imminent. Whoever dies at the hands of this group is the best of martyrs, and whoever remains patient shall be rewarded and shall witness victory.

Islam has endured many malevolent groups, trials, and calamities throughout history, and through its justice and mercy, as well as its adherence to the pious scholars and righteous believers, it has prevailed. The strength of Muslims is not in their numbers or material resources, as proven by the words of Allah Almighty ("And on the day of Hunayn: behold! Your great numbers elated you, but they availed you naught" [9:25]), but rather in their belief, humility and obedience to Allah Almighty and their submission to Him. This was the state of the Muslims in the battle of Badr and Allah Almighty said regarding them, "Truly Allah helped you at Badr, when you were a contemptible little force" (3:123).

The pious predecessors of the first generations provided the most superior and relevant example for all posterity: spreading Islam, opening the way for humanity to embrace it, and establishing a civilization - not by force, compulsion, or oppression, but rather by showing good character. Their excellence in conduct was rooted in being truthful in their interaction with non-Muslims, fulfilling their promises, establishing justice even when challenged, threatened, or defeated, and showing mercy to enemies before showing it to friends.

In their example we find the culmination of sincerity and God-consciousness filling their hearts, mercy dwelling in their chests, and justice governing their intellects. Their model exemplifies the power of belief when coupled with good character.

When our pious predecessors took the Messenger of Allah (PBUH) as their role model in worship and conduct without separating one aspect from the other, they became great and true leaders who inspired the world. They saw how the Prophet pardoned his enemies after thirteen years of oppression and eight years of wars, including the pardoning of Wahshi, the killer of his own paternal uncle Hamza, and the pardoning of Hind, the woman who chewed Hamza's liver upon his martyrdom. They understood the Prophet's definition of a Muslim when he said, "The perfect Muslim is he from whom others are safe from his tongue and hand." This is how a Muslim is recognized by the rest of humanity and how his or her belief is relevant to the society in which he or she lives.

The pious predecessors of the first generations provided the most superior example for all posterity: being truthful in their interaction with non-Muslims, fulfilling their promises, establishing justice even when threatened, and showing mercy to enemies before showing it to friends.

As time passed and true faith became diluted, some of these principles were forgotten, thus paving the way for small fanatical groups which claimed a monopoly on true Islam to emerge. Others grew disillusioned, partly due to the cultural shock of the West and its ideals, and therefore abandoned their history and neglected their heritage, falling victim to the media's portrayal of Islam as a barbaric religion incompatible with modernity. In the process, we left the unique qualities of our faith, which creates an unbreakable link between the theological and spiritual foundations and the social and ethical conduct expected of its believers, as was demonstrated to us in perfection by our Prophet (PBUH).

Consequently, the Muslim nation as a whole plunged from strength to weakness, from honour to humiliation, from a revered community to one of disrepute. The only cure is to return to the supreme example presented by the Messenger of Allah (PBUH) by adhering to his Sunna, embracing his guidance, adorning ourselves with his character, and following his heirs: the pious predecessors and righteous scholars.

The foundational ethics of Islam are based on mercy, wisdom and justice. The Messenger of Allah (PBUH) was only sent with mercy and wisdom. He said, "Allah, the Most Merciful, is merciful only to those who show mercy. Be merciful to all on the Earth and the Master of the Heavens will show mercy to you." Saladin (d. 1193), the famous Muslim ruler at the time of the Crusader invasion during the Middle Ages, did not enter the annals of history but for his character, justice and good conduct with his adversaries during both peace and war.

The Levant shall always remain a cornerstone of Islam, a pillar of the Qur'an, and a land of saints. Its people, especially the Syrians, will remain content with His divine decree, enduring hardships with patience and ever in a state of gratitude for His apparent and subtle blessings.

Cradle of the Quran, swords of Islam

Land of the Abdal, the nation of Sham
Spring of champions, throughout time
Saladin is calling you!

No matter how long it takes, victory is near, as promised by Allah Almighty. However, the real question is not when will victory come, but rather, do we deserve it? If we do not, then we should endeavour to fulfil the conditions of victory within ourselves if we hope to witness it around us.

From the very onset of the uprising in Syria, I have exposed the reality of the Assad regime, fought against it, and disapproved of its crimes in public forums and on the Friday pulpit. I have never hesitated in my positions; however, I cannot accept among our ranks in the war against this regime anyone who perverts the religion, distorts the reality of jihad, deceives the people of the Levant, steals the fruits of their struggles, and tortures them, especially after the Assad regime mastered torture techniques against its own people for over half a century.

The distance between ISIS and the noble qualities of the Messenger of Allah (PBUH) as the distance between the east and the west.

Just as I saw the beginning of the end for the Assad regime, I also see the beginning of the end for this sinister group. This is because their followers are destroying the religion from within, striking at the hearts of Muslims, and replacing the corpus of knowledge, jurisprudence and principles of legal judgments that have reached us with the words of ignorant men. These men have never smelt the scent of knowledge and have not embodied even the lowest level of piety, and have not tasted humility in obedience towards Allah Almighty. The distance between them and the noble qualities of the Messenger of Allah (PBUH) as the distance between the east and the west.

Every science has its own experts, many of whom would spend fifty years reading, revising, researching, teaching and authoring. If they were asked regarding an issue they would stop and ponder. They would not be content with what they acquired throughout their lives, but would persist in contemplation and reflection. They would resolve an issue through revision and research out of fear of Allah Almighty lest they show haste in making a legal judgement or err in giving fatwa.

"There are people of knowledge who are qualified

Every one of them has an awe-inspiring figure
Everyone admits that he is ignorant
When he is like a vast ocean of knowledge
Due to his silence, you think that such a scholar is ignorant
But he is always like a steady mountain
The moment you ask him a difficult question
You hear the clearest and most enriching answer

There is no scholar among these criminals who is an authority for Muslims, whether in belief, jurisprudence, or legal judgements. There isn't even a student of knowledge among them who has taken from trustworthy experts, so how can they embark on issuing fatwas and giving legal verdicts? They pass judgement about killing without a second thought, as though slaughtering humans is easier than slaughtering livestock.

The followers of ISIS are destroying the religion from within, replacing the corpus of knowledge and principles of legal judgments with the words of ignorant men.

Abu Salama once asked 'A'isha regarding the actions that necessitate a ritual bath (ghusl). She responded by saying, "Do you know what you are like, O Abu Salama? You are like the chick who hears the roosters crowing and starts crowing with them." She said this either because he was young or because he delved into something unsuitable for him. So how is it then that we are confronted by a group of youth who are less than beginners in knowledge, yet they readily anathematize Muslims and arbitrarily pass judgements to kill, imprison, kidnap, and loot? To describe them as ignorant is an understatement, as a man may be excused due to ignorance but:

"His ignorance is compound yet

Evident as he looks like a learner"

Sunni Muslims in Iraq have suffered from the injustice of the Maliki regime and the people of Syria have suffered from the terror of the Assad regime. Then came ISIS to increase the injustice and terror, leaving the innocent citizens of Iraq and Syria stranded between two horrific options.

I say to those who are exposed to injustice and oppression in Syria or Iraq: Have patience as victory is near. Don't let despair or revenge lead you to being deceived by ISIS and joining it. ISIS only wants to subjugate, enslave and humiliate you by using the name of religion instead of dictatorship or socialism.

O Allah! Bless us with awe of you and piety.

Fill our hearts with what pleases you.
Enable us to act with knowledge and to conduct ourselves with patience,
for truly you are the All-Hearing.

O Allah! Help your oppressed servants.

Make us your inheritors and
use us to guide humanity, speak the truth, and aid the troubled.

O Allah! Bestow your mercy upon us and upon our martyrs.

Cure us and heal our injured. Grace us with your kindness and
alleviate the sadness that afflicts us.

O Allah! Amend our situation,

put our affairs in order, and unite us.

O Allah! Return the people of Syria to their homes,

free us from these depraved criminals, and
spread peace and security in our lands.

O Most Merciful! You are most generous.

All praise belongs to Allah, Lord of the Worlds.

Shaykh Muhammad Al-Yaqoubi is a world-renowned Islamic scholar of theology, jurisprudence and Prophetic tradition, and a spiritual leader of thousands of Muslims across the globe. He has been named one of the world's most influential Muslims for the past five years.

Prior to being forced into exile, Shaykh Al-Yaqoubi was a teacher in the famous Grand Umayyad Mosque of Damascus. He was one of the first scholars to denounce the Assad regime in Syria and, subsequently, the rise of the Islamic State. He has been active participant in the attempt to form a credible political alternative to the Assad government and has campaigned internationally for the provision of humanitarian aid for Syrian refugees.

His most recent book is Refuting ISIS: A Rebuttal of Its Religious and Ideological Foundations, from which is article is adapted.

Saving Islam from the Deceit and Depravity of the Islamic State – Opinion – ABC Religion & Ethics (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Flashback to February 2015: Islamic State threatens to flood Europe with refugees

By Robert Spencer September 3, 2015

While the world is consumed with horror over the plight of the refugees now flooding into Europe, it is useful to remember these threats that were made just six months ago.

libya-italy-boat

“Islamic State ‘planning to use Libya as gateway to Europe,'” by Ruth Sherlock and Colin Freeman, Telegraph, February 17, 2015:

Islamic State militants are planning a takeover of Libya as a “gateway” to wage war across the whole of southern Europe, letters written by the group’s supporters have revealed.

The jihadists hope to flood the north African state with militiamen from Syria and Iraq, who will then sail across the Mediterranean posing as migrants on people trafficking vessels, according to plans seen by Quilliam, the British anti-extremist group.

The fighters would then run amok in southern European cities and also try to attack maritime shipping.

The document is written by an Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) propagandist who is believed to be an important online recruiter for the terror in Libya, where security has collapsed in the wake of the revolution that unseated Colonel Gaddafi in 2011.

The group has already established Libyan-based cells, who on Sunday released a video showing a mass beheading of 21 Egyptian Christian guest workers.

The video, which prompted Egypt to launch retaliatory bombing raids on Isil positions in Libya, included footage of a khaki-clad militant pointing a bloodstained finger northwards, declaring: “We will conquer Rome, by Allah’s permission.”

The Isil propagandist, who uses the alias Abu Arhim al-Libim, describes Libya as having “immense potential” for Isil. He points out with relish that it is awash with weapons from the Libyan civil war, when large quantities of Col Gaddafi’s arsenals were appropriated by rebels. Some of those weapons came from Britain, which supplied the Gaddafi regime with machine guns, sniper rifles and ammunition during his final years in power, when he was seen as an ally against Islamist terrorism.

Mr Libim also points out that Libya is less than around 300 miles from parts of the nearest European mainland.

He writes: “It has a long coast and looks upon the southern Crusader states, which can be reached with ease by even a rudimentary boat.”

He also cites “the number of trips known as ‘illegal immigration’ from this coast, which are huge in number … if this was even partially exploited and developed strategically, pandemonium could be wrought in the southern European states and it is even possible that there could be a closure of shipping lines and targeting of Crusader ships and tankers.”…

“ISIS Threatens to Flood Europe and Elsewhere as ‘Libyan Refugees,'” by S. Noble, Independent Sentinel, February 19, 2015:

Quilliam Foundation reports that ISIS/ISIL/IS plans to use Libya as a gateway to Europe, sending fighters masked as refugees.

They are urging fighters to flood into Libya from Syria and Iraq to then head for Italy and elsewhere.

Quilliam, the British anti-extremist think tank translated and analysed a document written by an Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) propagandist who uses the alias Abu Arhim al-Libim.

The document is entitled, “Libya: The Strategic Gateway for the Islamic State”, on why jihadists needed to urgently flock to Libya to assist supporters of the so-called caliphate in their jihad.

Libim pointed out that Libya is only 300 miles from some parts of Europe.

The document states that Libya is awash with Gaddafi’s arsenal of weapons and has “immense potential.”

Libim writes: “It has a long coast and looks upon the southern Crusader states, which can be reached with ease by even a rudimentary boat.”…

When ISIS/ISIL recently executed 21 Christian Egyptians in Libya, the terrorist pointed a bloody finger north and said, “We will conquer Rome, by Allah’s permission.”

Flashback to February 2015: Islamic State threatens to flood Europe with refugees

Migrant crisis: Hundreds of asylum seekers march along Hungary highway; thousands more arrive in Munich

 

Asylum seekers on highway heading for Budapest Photo: Hundreds of asylum seekers march on highway towards Budapest. (Reuters: Marko Djurica)

Related Story: Christians to get priority as PM faces pressure to take in refugees

Related Story: Britain and France vow to accept tens of thousands of asylum seekers

Map: Hungary

Hundreds of people have broken through a police line near an asylum seeker centre and marched against oncoming traffic on a highway headed for Budapest.

Key points
  • Asylum seekers march on highway headed for Budapest
  • Hundreds of asylum seekers enter Denmark
  • Thousands arrive and depart from Munich

The group of about 300 walked some 15 kilometres along the M5 highway before police negotiators persuaded them to board buses to take them back to a nearby registration camp for asylum seekers.

Police earlier closed a section of the highway near Roszke in south-east Hungary close to the Serbian border after the group climbed over a barrier and onto the road, which leads to the capital.

The group was part of a 1,000-strong crowd who had earlier pushed past a police line at an asylum seeker collection point at Roszke — the first stop before people are brought to the registration camp.

There were scuffles throughout Monday as asylum seekers chanting "Freedom!" protested at having to wait for hours in the open for buses to take them for registration.

Clashes have broken out between police and asylum seekers, sick of the long delays at the overcrowded collection and registration camp at Roszke, the main crossing point for the thousands of people who have been coming into Hungary every day for the last month.

What isn't acceptable in my view is that some people are saying this has nothing to do with them.

German chancellor Angela Merkel

Police fired tear gas after stones were thrown at officials at the registration camp on Friday.

Some 300 asylum seekers fled the camp earlier, forcing authorities to close the main border crossing with Serbia for around an hour, although they were later caught by police.

About 167,000 migrants have entered Hungary illegally so far this year, with most crossing the border around the Roszke area.

Last Friday, among a raft of anti-migrant laws approved, Hungary's parliament voted to criminalise illegal border crossing, with the ruling expected to come into force on September 15.

Migrant crisis spills into Denmark

Europe's migrant crisis spilled into Denmark on Monday as some 800 people entered the country from Germany and tried to head to Sweden while politicians argued about Copenhagen's immigration policies.

Prime minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen told journalists after an emergency meeting of political party leaders that most of the 800 to 1,000 people who had come to Denmark since Saturday would not seek asylum in the country.

Mr Rasmussen, head of a new minority government dependent on support from a right-wing party, said border controls were no solution, criticised European Union states for not following rules on asylum seekers and said those who had entered over the weekend must register in the country.

The prime minister said the asylum seekers should seek shelter for the night and wait until Danish police coordinated their transfer to Sweden with Swedish authorities.

"We hopefully can reach a situation where people who want to seek asylum in Sweden can do that," he said.

"As a Danish authority, we cannot support people getting to Sweden, if it does not happen with a degree of acceptance from the Swedish authorities."

Danish television channels on Monday showed videos of asylum seekers taking trains from Jutland, in the western part of Denmark connected to Germany, to Copenhagen, where they can ride to Sweden in 35 minutes by train.

Asylum seekers arrive in Munich Photo: More than 4,000 asylum seekers arrived in Munich on Monday alone. (ABC News: Barbara Miller)

Thousands continue to arrive in Munich

Struggling to cope with record numbers of asylum seekers, Germany told its European partners on Monday they too must take in more refugees.

"I am happy that Germany has become a country that many people outside of Germany now associate with hope," German chancellor Angela Merkel said at a news conference in Berlin


At the scene: Munich train station
Europe correspondent Barbara Miller reports from Munich's train station.
Throughout the day trains have arrived in Munich carrying more and more asylum seekers.
The wild clapping and huge crowds greeting the first arrivals at the weekend have disappeared — but there are still many Germans turning up offering to help.
Anyone who comes to help is directed to a makeshift reception centre where they can hand over donations or give their time. People are being sought who are prepared to work through the night greeting new arrivals.
One woman who doesn't want to speak on camera stands quietly watching the scene at the station. She says she feels so much for the people coming because her family fled East Germany when she was a young girl just before the Berlin Wall went up.
Her parents took her but left her younger sister behind so that the authorities would believe them that they were coming back to East Germany after a visit to relatives in the West.
It was two years before she saw her sister again. Tears well up in her eyes as she recounts the story.
It's an emotional time not just for the asylum seekers — but also for the country receiving them.

But she and her vice chancellor, Sigmar Gabriel, coupled their message of optimism with a warning to European Union partners who have resisted a push from Berlin, Paris and Brussels to agree to quotas for refugees flowing in mainly from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan.

Help offered at Munich train station Photo: Locals at the Munich train station ask how they can help asylum seekers arriving from Syria. (ABC News: Barbara Miller)


"What isn't acceptable in my view is that some people are saying this has nothing to do with them," Ms Merkel said.

"This won't work in the long-run. There will be consequences although we don't want that."

Officials in Bavaria, the southern German state that has become the entry point for asylum seekers arriving from Hungary via Austria, said about 4,400 had arrived in Munich on Monday.

Another 1,500 were on trains heading on to cities elsewhere in Germany.

German and Austrian officials appear to have been caught off guard by the numbers.

"It has now reached a volume that is already considerable," Christoph Hillenbrand, president of the government of Upper Bavaria, told reporters at Munich train station.

He said buses that could take 1,000 people north to cities like Dortmund, Hamburg, Braunschweig and Kiel had been made available, but that asylum seekers had also been streaming out of temporary accommodation facilities on foot.

At Munich's international trade fair grounds, three halls have been given over to the effort, with more than 2,000 camp beds and a dining hall with hot food.

Ms Merkel's welcome to asylum seekers has been praised by human rights groups.

But there were signs of dissent within her conservative camp, with officials from the Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU), sister party of her Christian Democrats, criticising her handling of the crisis.

"There is no society that could cope with something like this," CSU leader and Bavarian premier Horst Seehofer said.

"The federal government needs a plan here."

While many Germans have welcomed the refugees, there have also been attacks on shelters, including two early on Monday.

AFP/Reuters

Migrant crisis: Hundreds of asylum seekers march along Hungary highway; thousands more arrive in Munich - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Toying with Russian troop deployment to Syria, Putin appears ready to reset relations with US

Associated Press Published September 07, 2015

Russia Putin-2.jpg

Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, speaks during a meeting with his supporters in Moscow, Russia, Monday, Sept. 7, 2015 Putin took part in a discussion on Monday of a health care reform with his supporters who form All-Russian People’s Front. Stanislav Govorukhin, Russian lawmaker and movie director sits at left. (Mikhail Klimentyev/RIA-Novosti, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP) (The Associated Press)

MOSCOW –  Signs of an ongoing Russian military build-up in Syria have drawn U.S. concerns and raised questions of whether Moscow plans to enter the conflict. President Vladimir Putin has been coy on the subject, saying Russia is weighing various options, a statement that has fuelled suspicions about the Kremlin's intentions.

Observers in Moscow say the Russian manoeuvring could be part of a plan to send troops to Syria to fight the Islamic State group in the hope of fixing fractured ties with the West. They warn, however, that Putin would likely find it hard to sell his idea to a sceptical U.S. and risks potentially catastrophic repercussions if he opts for unilateral military action in Syria.

By playing with the possibility of joining the anti-IS coalition, Putin may hope to win a few key concessions. His main goal: the lifting of Western sanctions and the normalization of relations with the United States and the European Union, which have sunk to their lowest point since the Cold War amid the Ukrainian crisis. In addition, the Russian leader may be angling to make the West more receptive to Moscow's involvement in Ukraine, while retaining influence in Syria.

Early this summer, the Kremlin put forward a peace plan for Syria that envisions enlisting Syrian government forces and Iran in the anti-IS coalition. A few rounds of negotiations with the Americans and Saudis have brought no visible results, and now Moscow appears to be testing the water for a next move: beefing up its military presence in Syria.

While Putin said Friday there is no talk "just yet" about Russian troops joining the fight against the Islamic State, he seemed to keep the door open for the possibility, saying "we are looking at various options." The Russian leader is set to attend the United Nations General Assembly later this month, and some analysts say a proposal to deploy troops to Syria could be the focal point of his visit.

Since the Soviet times, Russia has had close political and military ties with Syria, which hosts a Russian navy facility in the Mediterranean port of Tartus intended to service and supply visiting ships. While the Soviet-era facility has just a couple of floating piers along with a few rusting repair shops and depots, it has symbolic importance as the last remaining Russian military outpost outside the former Soviet Union.

Moscow has staunchly backed Syrian President Bashar Assad throughout the nation's 4 ½-year civil war, providing his regime with weapons and keeping military advisers in Syria. Putin said again Friday that Russia is providing the Syrian military with weapons and training.

Rami Abdurrahman, the head of the Britain-based monitoring group Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said there have been reports since mid-August of Russian troops in the capital's airport and another airport in the coastal city of Latakia.

"We don't know if they are troops or transporters of weapons and ammunition," he said, noting an increase in the flow of Russian weapons arriving in Syria since July.

"The fact that (military cooperation) is not new is one thing, but there is a noticeable increase," said Abdurrahman, who has a large network of activists on the ground in Syria helping him monitor the situation.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry signalled Washington's concern in a phone call with his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov over the weekend. The State Department said that Kerry made it clear that if reports of an imminent Russian military build-up in Syria were accurate, "these actions could further escalate the conflict, lead to greater loss of innocent life, increase refugee flows and risk confrontation with the anti-ISIL Coalition operating in Syria."

According to a U.S. defence official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to publicly discuss the sensitive issue, the U.S. has seen an increasing number of Russian transport planes seeking diplomatic approval for flights into Syria. He said it's not clear what is in the aircraft or what their purpose is.

Greek Foreign Ministry spokesman Constantinos Koutras said the U.S. has asked Greece to cancel over flight permission given to Russia September 1-24, for flights headed to Syria. He said they are examining the request.

The U.S. officials, who declined to be identified because they weren't authorized to speak publicly about the issue, said they also have seen the movement of some prefabricated housing in Syria, although they haven't seen any troops moving in or becoming involved in actual combat activities, as some media reports suggested.

Sergei Karaganov, the founder of the Council on Foreign and Defence Policy, a leading association of Russian political experts, said that Russia was considering the possibility of joining the anti-IS coalition, but the West so far has been unwelcoming. "They are reluctant to accept proposals from Putin, whom they want to contain," he said.

Karaganov, who has good connections among the Russian officials, said he doesn't expect Russia to opt for unilateral military action in Syria if it gets the cold shoulder from the U.S. and its allies. "It would involve enormous risks," he said.

Igor Korotchenko, a retired colonel of the Russian military's General Staff who is now editor of the National Defence magazine, also said that while Russia has supplied Assad's government with weapons, it has no intention to send its troops to Syria.

"Russia will not send its troops to the Middle East, it's absolutely excluded," he said. "It's the U.S. problem. Russia will not pay for that with its soldiers' lives."

Alexander Golts, an independent military analyst, said Putin sees joining the anti-IS coalition as a chance to reach rapprochement with the West. "Russia has found itself in isolation, which has been increasingly felt," he said.

He said the latest reports about the movements of troops and military cargos to Syria appeared to demonstrate Moscow's readiness to join the coalition, falling short of a big-size deployment.

Pavel Felgenhauer, a Moscow-based analyst who specializes in military and security issues, said that the apparent increase in the Russian presence in Syria could be part of Kremlin efforts to raise the pressure on the U.S. to accept Putin's plan.

"Such a coalition ... would allow Assad's regime to survive and allow Russia to maintain its presence in the Middle East," he said.

If Russia ends up sending its military contingent to Syria, it will likely include a few combat jets along with support personnel and some troops to guard them, Felgenhauer said. Staying away from ground action would allow Russia to avoid any significant losses.

Alexei Malashenko, a Middle East expert with the Carnegie Endowment's Moscow office, was sceptical, saying that Putin's apparent plan to use Syria to improve ties with the West will be unlikely to succeed.

He warned that if Russia fails to strike a deal with the U.S. and tries to do it alone alongside Assad's forces, it would further damage its relations not just with the U.S. but regional powers. It will also likely trigger a negative public response, providing a painful reminder of the botched Soviet war in Afghanistan.

"It will not be received with joy here in Russia; everyone will compare it to Afghanistan," he said. "If they do it, it would be a very stupid thing. It's very simple to get in, but it could be quite difficult to get out."

Malashenko also warned that deploying Russian soldiers to fight the IS would draw risks of retaliation and raise the terror threat for Russia.

While launching unilateral action would be extremely risky, it's difficult to predict how Putin will act if his offer of joint action against the IS is rejected by Washington, Malashenko said.

"Putin is unpredictable, and he is very emotional," he said.

___

Lolita Baldor in Washington, Sarah El Deeb in Cairo and Elena Becatoros in Athens contributed to this report.

Toying with Russian troop deployment to Syria, Putin appears ready to reset relations with US | Fox News

Monday, September 7, 2015

Germany’s response to the refugee crisis is admirable. But I fear it cannot last

Doris Akrap Sunday 6 September 2015

A willingness to help Syrian refugees is sweeping the nation. How Germany deals with the long-term consequences of its generosity is equally important

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Borussia Dortmund supporters hold a banner showing their support for refugees. Photograph: Frank Augstein/AP

Sometimes German words end up having an international career. Kindergarten is one of them, Blitzkrieg another. Willkommenskultur could be next. With its uniquely German ring of bureaucratese and poetics, Willkommenskultur means “welcome culture” and is a word not born of custom but created to establish one.


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Migration crisis: Germany presses Europe into sharing refugees

France agrees to proposed new quotas system and Brussels unveils plans to quadruple the number of people spread across most of the EU to 160,000

Read more


Coined by politicians a few years ago, it was originally meant to be the siren call that would attract people from other countries to come to Germany and compensate for a big shortage of skilled workers in vast, sparsely populated areas such as Brandenburg and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.

These days Willkommenskultur is used to encourage help for the hundreds of thousands of refugees coming to Germany. And thousands of Germans have pitched in; they take food and clothes to the camps, take refugees to meetings with the authorities in their own cars, pay their fares, foot their medical bills, teach German, translate forms, share couches and bikes, act as nannies, open up soccer clubs, schools and kindergartens for refugee kids, and go on demonstrations against right-wing attacks across the country.

Those with a particularly sensitive ear may detect an air of passive aggression in the manner in which Germans seek to highlight their goodness these days. The public mood is so empathically pro-refugee, you’d feel guilty if you didn’t at least do the bare minimum, such as offer your spare bed to a Syrian. It’s as if a year after the World Cup triumph in Rio, Germans desperately want to be world champions again – this time as the globe’s most welcoming country for refugees.

And yet, there is something new to all this. The last time there was a major spike in immigration into Germany, in the 90s, refugees were largely left to their own devices. Only the radical left, the churches and a few engaged private individuals offered organised help. All the while they were coming under direct attack from neo-Nazis in Hoyerswerda or Rostock-Lichtenhagen. This became a worldwide symbol of the new “ugly German”. With overseas prestige under threat, the majority reacted: even middle-sized towns got their own Rock Against Racism gig and the government organised candle-lit demonstrations. For all that, in 1993, the Bundestag de facto abolished the right of asylum. When that occurred, it was left once again to left-wing activists, the churches and immigrants to protest. The plight of the other had once again become a niche concern.

Many refugees organised themselves to fight for their political agenda, but they were often hamstrung by the reality of their lives in the migrant camps. Finding a job, and thus integrating into society, and living in constant fear of deportation was exhausting. For at least a decade afterwards, the numbers of refugees coming to Germany dropped. It’s around that time that the detached discourse around Willkommenskultur was established.

But here we are in 2015, watching TV reports of refugees arriving to applause in Munich or those still in transit in Hungary chanting “Germany! Germany!”, for the country where they hope to find conditions for a dignified life. Whatever way you look at it, this is a turning point.

Indeed, another word that is frequently popping up in civil discourse these days is Wende: “turning point”. The term might imply that the rules of the EU today can’t be the rules of the EU tomorrow. But the refugees haven’t time to wait for “us” to work out whether Dublin III or Schengen need to be overhauled . The breakdown of these agreements is already happening.

But as the Germans share their bread with the refugees, Angela Merkel made clear in her speech on Monday that she won’t accept Italy, Greece or Hungary not pulling their weight and opening their borders. She also made clear that all the refugees from the Balkan states will be send back immediately, as they are not in need of protection.

As a child of a “guest worker” who grew up in Germany in the 90s, I can’t claim to be completely impartial about this debate. Phrases such as “Germany can’t take all refugees in the world” or “They can stay, but do they really need an apartment on their own?” give me the creeps. I hear them from conservative politicians. I hear them from colleagues and friends, none of them racist. Butsuch comments remind me of those flung at my father, whose family was killed by the Nazis in Yugoslavia. Even after 30 years of living and working in Germany he had to listen to people telling him: “Isn’t it nice that we let you work here?”

Maybe my fears are as arbitrary as the resentments of right-wing Germans who demonstrate in front of refugee shelters in Dresden or Heidenau. But when I listen to the “good Germans”, I often ask myself: what is going to happen, when the new refugees demand more than a tent, a bottle of water and a slice of bread? How will German society deal with this next turning point? What if it turns out that not every refugee has the skills to equip them for the “made in Germany” brand? Will Willkommenskultur end, when it involves not just singing Hallelujah together, but helping people to become autonomous and articulate their own wishes? Will the liberal segment of German society that is drawing so much praise right now have the determination to fight their own government and abolish Dublin III and Schengen? Or will “Willkommen” be just a slogan on the doormat again?

 


Comment by aleksiasinitchkina

The Schengen agreement requires refugees to seek asylum in the first country they enter under the EU’s Dublin accord. Under the Dublin accord, before it was changed, it stated that it would only examine refugee applications in one state within the Dublin zone to ensure that asylum seekers may not be sent from one country to another. For legitimate reasons, this was implemented. Lets look at the big picture here, by scrapping the Dublin accord makes the Schengen Agreement a de facto, even if Germany tries to justify it by arguing that it would speed up the refugee movement process, nevertheless an influx of illegal Syrian migrants (now deemed legal according to the changes declared in the Dublin accord) is expected to overpopulate Germany with a whopping 800k figure, this year alone. This will lead to catastrophic consequences that Europeans will have to endure i.e imposed levies, crowded housing, increased unemployment, not to mention the criminals and human traffickers. Don't forget, this is on top of the outstanding economic instability that exists in Europe prolonged by the EU and bankers I.e Greece who is basically on life support who have already had 200,000 migrants enter this year, legal and illegally. Also how does Germany expect to sustain their own countries economy referring to Goldman-Sachs outstanding proportions of money loaned to Greece when It's irrefutably clear that they are incapable of paying pack. These are just some of the consequences that EU and banker control have had. Don't think for one moment that They wouldn't happily use the refugee crisis to their advantage as a decoy in their schemes to distract Europeans from political scandals. The EU members, Germany, Austria are going about this the wrong way. Europe needs to help themselves before they start thinking about taking in outrageous proportions of refugees then they can handle. Europe is hanging by a very thin thread.

As for the Hungarian officials in Budapest Killeti, they are not the 'bullies' as so many of you say, if anyone is a bully it's a spineless government who chooses to give in to political peer pressure and allow destruction of their own country by migrant influx on biblical scales, at the cost of the working class people. The solution is this, address the wars, collaborate with Allies, the time for talking is over, send troops down, stop the boats from leaving the ports in Libya. We need to control the flow of refugees, check paper work, and send direct aid to minorities in refugee camps who urgently need the help. Pull them out if we need too. The process of refugee movement should be in moderation using an orderly selection process, It's extremely irresponsible for Germany to allow an open door policy, which only exacerbates the migration crisis and further compromise migration policies of the European Union.

Lastly, just to make it clear for everyone, any asylum seeker is a person seeking protection from their own country, but has not yet received refuge status. By arriving illegally means automatically, will be determine if you are a refugee escaping prosecution from your own country. Once you are granted refuge status then you may reside in the selected country you applied asylum for. A good portion of these refugees become economic migrants when they Abandon their country of asylum and move into another country. Anyone who says otherwise is blind or delusional as is obvious in the pictures we see of Syrians dressed in nice flashy clothing, walking through international borders like we have rolled out the red carpet for them, and making ridiculous acts of protests lying on the floor with cardboard signs when they could be sitting in refuge centres eating meals and sleeping in beds and waiting in line like the rest of us would.
In short, by 'jumping the queue', these economic migrants diminish any chances of a more deserving refugees hoping to acquire resettlement in refugee centres.


Germany’s response to the refugee crisis is admirable. But I fear it cannot last | Doris Akrap | Comment is free | The Guardian

European migrant crisis: Hundreds arrive to applause in Germany as Austria announces plan to phase out emergency measures

 

People hold signs welcoming migrants to Germany Photo: Well-wishers waved to and clapped migrants as they arrived at the main railway station in Dortmund, Germany. (Reuters: Ina Fassbender)

Related Story: Austria, Germany open borders to asylum seekers offloaded by Hungary

Related Story: Exhausted asylum seekers stream into Austria from Budapest

Map: Germany

Another group of asylum seekers has streamed into Germany to cheers and "welcome" signs, as Austria announces it plans to phase out emergency measures that have allowed thousands who were stranded in Hungary to enter.

Key points:
  • Migrants arrive to applause, welcome signs as they arrive in Germany
  • Austrian chancellor says emergency measures will be phased out and calls for emergency European Union meeting to discuss solution
  • Pope calls on religious community to take in migrant families

The group has joined the thousands who have already arrived in what is the continent's worst refugee crisis since World War II.

Many are fleeing war in the Middle East and hope to take refuge in Germany, Europe's richest country, but the EU is divided over how to cope with the influx which has provoked both huge sympathy and anti-Muslim resentment among Europeans.

Austrian chancellor Werner Faymann said the decision to phase out the emergency measures, a day after the measures were put in place, followed "intensive talks" with German chancellor Angela Merkel and a telephone call with Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban.

"We have always said this is an emergency situation in which we must act quickly and humanely. We have helped more than 12,000 people in an acute situation," he said.

"Now we have to move step-by-step away from emergency measures towards normality, in conformity with the law and dignity."

Migrants walk along a railway station platform in Vienna 

Photo: A special train service and buses helped transport migrants from the border to Vienna, Austria. (Reuters: Dominic Ebenbichler)

Thousands of migrants and refugees arrived at Budapest's Keleti train station after travelling from Syria through the Balkans and Greece.

Hungary laid on over 100 buses to the border on Saturday night after Austria said it had agreed steps with Germany to waive the normal rules requiring refugees to apply for asylum wherever they enter the EU.

Others set off from the station to make the 170-kilometre journey on foot. The platforms filled up again on Sunday.

Bavarian authorities said 6,800 asylum seekers had arrived in the state's capital, Munich, on Saturday, and Sunday's total was about 13,000. Close to 11,000 are expected today.

In moving scenes, the newcomers, clutching their children and sparse belongings, stepped off trains in Munich, Frankfurt and elsewhere to cheers from well-wishers who held balloons, snapped photos and gave them water and food.

"The people here treat us so well, they treat us like real human beings, not like in Syria," said Mohammad, a 32-year-old from the devastated town of Qusayr.

"We are happy in Germany but we are very tired because it is very dangerous — one month Turkey and Greece," another said.

At the scene: Munich train station
Europe correspondent Barbara Miller reports from Munich's train station.
Some of the asylum seekers arriving in Munich are being escorted straight onto other trains so cordons of police block their way. They're not allowed, I guess, to come into Munich but they're taken onto another train and the idea there is to distribute these asylum seekers on to other parts of Germany.
Some are being given medical assistance. There are some tents and some health workers just outside the station — some people are being given some help there. I saw one man badly limping, he was getting some care.
Over the past few hours, I have not seen the kind of wild jubilant scenes that we saw over the weekend in Germany.
Just about an hour or so ago a group, maybe 100, 150 asylum seekers came off the train there. They were one of those groups who were escorted onto another train.
There was clapping at the station. People waiting there for them. It was also really a sense of people just very curious, wanting to see this incredible phenomenon that was going on in their city.
There are people turning up, there are some men turning up with soft animal toys for children and a woman turning up saying she was qualified medically and could she help out.
So people are here, they are offering help and they are very curious. Certainly no hostile reaction that I have seen here.

Audio: Listen to Barbara Miller's report (AM)

As asylum seekers got off trains, police directed them to waiting buses bound for temporary shelters, which have been set up in public buildings, hotels and army barracks across the country.

"Say it loud, say it clear, refugees are welcome here," crowds chanted at the Frankfurt railway station throughout Saturday night.

Germany has said it expects 800,000 asylum seekers this year at a cost of 10 billion euros ($16.1 billion) and urged EU members to open their doors.

While Germany has seen a spate of ugly xenophobic rallies and attacks against foreigners, it has also seen an outpouring of support, donations and volunteer efforts by people who believe the country, given its dark history and current wealth, has a special obligation to help refugees.

Meanwhile, Austrian authorities are continuing to send buses to the Hungarian border to collect more than 1,000 asylum seekers who have spent days stranded there.

While half of the migrants had shelter and camp beds, the rest were forced to sleep out in the open, the BBC reported.

Many were also treated by the Red Cross for various ailments, including exhaustion.

On Sunday they were being taken to reception centres, along with hundreds more who chose to travel from Budapest by train.

Asylum seekers Germany's problem: Hungary

Donated clothes for asylum seekers Photo: Asylum seekers search through donated clothes at a distribution centre in Dortmund, Germany after arriving by train. (Reuters: Ina Fassbender)

Politicians in Germany and elsewhere in Europe voiced growing concern about the record numbers, and warned the influx would spell both logistical and political problems.

In Austria, chancellor Faymann said Vienna's assistance was a temporary manifestation of the nation's "goodwill" in the face of a humanitarian emergency.

"There is no alternative to a common European solution," he said, as he called for the EU meeting.


Jordan's refuge of 600,000 Syrians

Jordan has given refuge to more than 600,000 Syrians. But life there is difficult and as Middle East correspondent Sophie McNeill reports, many families have pinned their hopes on making it to Australia.

German chancellor Angela Merkel on Saturday spoke by phone with Hungary's prime minister Viktor Orban, who called the asylum seeker wave a "German problem" caused by Berlin's public statement saying it would welcome Syrians.

"Both sides agreed that both Hungary and Germany must meet their European obligations, including their obligations under the Dublin agreement," Ms Merkel's spokesman Georg Streiter said.

Under the EU's so-called Dublin rules, asylum applications must be processed by the country where a person first arrives.

Mr Orban and Ms Merkel agreed the weekend's influx was exceptional, due to the emergency situation in Budapest, Mr Streiter said.

Ms Merkel also faces political pressure at home, where her Bavarian sister party CSU criticised the eased travel rules as "a wrong decision", according to its party secretary Andreas Scheuer.

Members warned this had created "an additional pull-factor", aside from push factors such as war, poverty and repression in their home countries.

Ms Merkel was set to hold a crisis meeting on the refugee issue later on Sunday (local time) with her coalition partners.

Pope urges religious community to take in families

Thousands gather to hear Pope address Photo: Crowds in St Peter's Square applauded Pope Francis as he called for the community to help migrant families in need. (AFP: Filippo Monteforte)

Hungary's and other eastern European nations' hard line is in contrast with a show of solidarity elsewhere in Europe.

Today Pope Francis, who is himself the grandson of Italian emigrants to Argentina, called for "every parish, every religious community, every monastery, [and] every sanctuary in Europe take in a family".

There are more than 25,000 parishes in Italy alone, and more than 12,000 in Germany.

The Vatican's two parishes will also take in a family of asylum seekers each in the coming days, Pope Francis said.

He said taking in migrant families was a "concrete gesture" to prepare for the extraordinary Holy Year on the theme of mercy which was due to begin in December

On Saturday, Finnish prime minister Juha Sipila also offered to put up asylum seeker families in his country home.

Under intensifying pressure at home and abroad, British prime minister David Cameron is set to admit 15,000 refugees from Syria, the Sunday Times reported.

European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker proposed relocating 120,000 refugees from overstretched Italy, Greece and Hungary, a European source told AFP.

The plan, which comes on top of a Commission proposal in May for the relocation of 40,000 migrants, is expected to be formally unveiled by Mr Juncker on Wednesday after being approved by commissioners, the source said.

Germany's Welt am Sonntag newspaper reported that under the plan, Germany would take in about 31,000 people, followed by France with 24,000 and Spain with almost 15,000.

The political debate continued as rescuers in Cyprus saved 114 people, including 54 women and children, after their boat ran into trouble off the Mediterranean island, authorities said.

The boat was mainly carrying Syrian asylum seekers, but also some Lebanese and Palestinians from Syria, interior minister Socrates Hasikos said. He said there were no serious injuries.

Cyprus, a member of the European Union, lies just 100 kilometres off the Syrian coast but has so far avoided a mass influx of asylum seekers from the country's conflict.

'I said to myself: Dear God I hope he's alive'

Dead toddler carried from water Photo: Turkish police officer Mehmet Ciplak said he thought of his own son when he saw the toddler on the beach. (AFP: Dogan News Agency)

On Saturday, the UN refugee agency UNHCR said 366,402 asylum seekers had crossed the Mediterranean to Europe this year, with 2,800 dying or going missing en route.

The crisis was personified on Wednesday when twelve refugees drowned after two boats sank on the short crossing to Greece, including three-year-old Syrian asylum seeker Aylan Kurdi.

Words cannot describe what a sad and tragic sight it was.

Mehmet Ciplak

A distressing photograph of the toddler's lifeless body, washed ashore in Bodrum in southwest Turkey, pricked the world's conscience.

Turkish police officer Mehmet Ciplak, who was pictured picking up the body said he thought of his own son when he saw the toddler on the beach.

"When I approached the baby, I said to myself, 'Dear God I hope he's alive.' But he showed no signs of life. I was crushed," he told Turkey's Dogan news agency.

"I have a six-year-old son. The moment I saw the baby, I thought about my own son and put myself into his father's place. Words cannot describe what a sad and tragic sight it was."

Aylan was buried on Friday in the Syrian town of Kobane, itself now a symbol of resistance by Syrian Kurds against Islamic State (IS) extremists.

European migrant crisis: Hundreds arrive to applause in Germany as Austria announces plan to phase out emergency measures - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Sunday, September 6, 2015

Cheering German crowds greet refugees after long trek from Budapest to Munich

Emma Graham-Harrison in Budapest and Munich, Patrick Kingsley in Nickelsdorf, Rosie Waites in Vienna and Tracy McVeigh in London Sunday 6 September 2015

As Europe’s politicians continue to bicker, desperate travellers are welcomed and fed as they arrive at German city

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Refugees welcomed warmly in Germany

In pouring rain, they crossed the last few metres into Austria in the early hours of Saturday morning. The waiting Austrian police in their heavy waterproofs were taken aback by the refusal of the Hungarian bus drivers to take their passengers the last two kilometres over the border and on to the Nickelsdorf train station where they were expected, and where a Vienna-bound train was waiting.

Instead, the officers had to guide the way with torches, helpless to offer shelter to the tired clusters of men, women and children coming through the puddles at the side of the motorway in the darkness.

From 3am until early afternoon, some 120 blue buses had been and gone, disgorging an estimated 4,000 refugees. Some residents of the small border town of Nickelsdorf were at their windows, others out on the streets with blankets and umbrellas, offering hot drinks.

A Red Cross tent offered respite from the rain, with medics and volunteers working shifts while people waited for their turn to board special half-hourly bus and train services, laid on by the Austrian Federal Railway, to Vienna and Salzburg, and from there to Munich.

“We have treated a two-day-old gunshot wound. We’ve seen eye injuries caused by stun grenades. We’ve seen children with severe bruises,” Red Cross spokesman Andreas Zenker said.

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A boy who had arrived on a train from Hungary gets a kiss from a volunteer worker in Munich. Photograph: Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Several people were sent on to nearby hospitals, but Zenker said that most were “gritting their teeth” to continue their journey, despite some walking for almost eight hours through the night.

By midday on Saturday, a total of 3,000 people had arrived, said Colin Turner, volunteers’ spokesman at Munich railway station. German officials expected up to 7,000 to reach the city by the end of the day.

This, said the UN high commissioner for refugees, António Guterres, was a “defining moment” for the 28-nation European Union. Already the heroes and villains of the piece were being laid out – with condemnation of the response of the Hungarian prime minister, Viktor Orbán, and praise for Germany’s Angela Merkel and the Austrian chancellor, Werner Faymann, who announced they were opening their doors to refugees in the early hours of Saturday.

Around the same time, Hungary unexpectedly decided to provide buses for those who had simply walked out of Budapest on foot, heading for the Austrian border, after being prevented for several days from catching trains out of the capital. Some had been taken to a refugee camp.

In what the Hungarian media called a “day of uprisings”, 350 people had broken through a police cordon on Friday and begun heading to Austria, 85 miles (137km) away, on tracks leading away from the railway station. By late afternoon on Friday, a day after Orbán had warned of a “Muslim threat” to a Christian culture, up to 2,000 people – most from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan – were walking towards the border in chaotic scenes.

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Refugee children play at the Austrian-Hungarian border near the village of Nickelsdorf. Photograph: Joe Klamar/AFP/Getty Images

The sudden appearance of blue public buses was a staggering about-turn – and an unexpected rejection of the Dublin regulation, which says refugees seeking asylum should have their application assessed in the first EU country they enter, and which Hungary had insisted on upholding. The country is already under fire for its plans to close and wire-fence its borders, saying it will effectively seal the frontier to migrants as of next week, in the face of EU Schengen rules. The European Council president, Donald Tusk, warned that divisions between western member states and their newer eastern partners were complicating efforts to solve the deepening refugee crisis. “There is a divide … between the east and the west of the EU. Some member states are thinking about containing the wave of migration, symbolised by the Hungarian [border] fence,” Tusk said.

The buses triggered alarm. Many refugees distrusted the Hungarian authorities after some of those camped at Budapest railway station had earlier boarded buses that they were told were heading for the Austrian border, only to end up in a refugee camp in Hungary. Many feared a similar ploy this time. “Who’s organising it, the Hungarians?” asked Ali, a Syrian on the march, after seeing the buses were coming. “Forget it, I’m walking.”

But by the time the last buses arrived at 4.45am, almost everyone was too sodden and tired to worry about politicians’ motives. They squeezed on to the buses, standing in the aisles, sitting on the steps crushed against the doors. Within minutes, most were asleep. In Budapest, a handful of those who remained were reluctant to be processed in Germany because they wanted to join family members elsewhere. “I’m going to London on my own, my brother lives there and you can get a good job,” said Khan Mohammad, who comes from northern Baghlan province. Others had simply missed the convoy to the border.

On Saturday a column of several hundred new arrivals stormed through the station and on to the metro, saying they were heading for Germany. They piled back up the escalators when it emerged they had the wrong train system and on to the mainline platforms where warnings that international trains were not running had now been removed, although without any signs of the trains themselves.

“We must get to Germany,” said Suleiman, 23, from Gaza.

On the road to the border, there were tailbacks for eight kilometres, but many, like Marwan, didn’t mind. His view through the bus window was mainly of drizzle. He had walked for much of Friday in the rain, and he hadn’t slept all night. But by the time dawn rose on Saturday, he had cause to be cheerful. “Finally I’m getting out of Hungary,” he smiled. “I’m happy.”

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Route taken by migrants.

In Austria, the mood was one of pride – for the way the government had responded to the crisis and for the overwhelming response from people ferrying donations of food, water and clothes to train stations in Vienna and Salzburg. By Saturday afternoon, officials in Vienna had to ask people to stay away from the station, which was heavily overcrowded with well-wishers bearing donations.

Hundreds of Austrian rail workers pledged to work overtime for free, to drive special refugee trains. Their boss, Christian Kern, called the situation “a huge challenge, a state of emergency”. He said the refugees’ train tickets would not be checked but that the goal was to take them as quickly as possible to their desired destination.

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Refugees during heavy rain. Photograph: Frank Augstein/AP

Some Austrians have been driving to the border in private cars and buses with the aim of giving refugees a lift to Vienna, but have been warned by the police not to cross into Hungary as they could be prosecuted there for people-smuggling. Austria’s foreign minister, Sebastian Kurz, said this weekend was a wake-up call for Europe. “This has to be an eye-opener as to how messed up the situation in Europe

Stories such as the discovery of 71 decomposing bodies in a truck near Nickelsdorf last month and the tragedy of Aylan Kurdi, the three-year-old Syrian boy whose body was washed up on the Turkish coast on Wednesday along with his five-year-old brother and his mother, have horrified people all over the world. An even younger victim of the crisis emerged on Saturday night when a newborn boy was found dead after his parents reached the shores of a Greek island in a boat from Turkey. The baby boy was taken from the island of Agathonisi to a hospital on the nearby island of Samos, where he was pronounced dead, the Greek coastguard service said.

Chaotic and tragic scenes have been witnessed all over Europe but it was Hungary that became the focus of the refugee crisis with the arrival of about 50,000 migrants last month via the western Balkans, with a record 3,300 arriving on Thursday alone, according to UN figures. Hungary responded with tough anti-immigration measures, including its controversial three-metre razor-wire fence. Poor camp conditions and slow registration for asylum seekers have contributed to rising tensions at Hungary’s refugee facilities, but the country blames Germany, which expects to receive 800,000 asylum seekers this year, for declaring it would accept Syrian requests regardless of where they enter the EU.

“What happened is the consequence of the failed migration policy of the European Union and the irresponsible statements made by European politician,” the Hungarian foreign minister, Péter Szijjártó, said on Saturday.

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A boy reacts as the train departs from Keleti railway station in Budapest. Photograph: Marko Drobnjakovic/AP

Hungary had also insisted there would be no more bus transports. On Saturday morning, in a park near Keleti station, a group of young men fretted about their next move. “We were sent to sleep in a hotel for one night after four nights on the street. I had no idea the government would send buses,” said Rahman, a 26-year-old Syrian from Aleppo, travelling with his wife, sister-in-law and two nephews. “We just wanted a break. Do you know if there will be another coach?” he asked anxiously.

A young Iraqi who had just arrived had not even heard about the coaches. “I just arrived a couple of hours ago. I have no idea about buses,” said Sajad al-Azawi, from Baghdad, who wants to be a computer scientist and is heading to Germany.

On Saturday night at Munich’s main station, dozens of Germans lined up behind police barriers to clap, cheer and distribute sweets to welcome refugees to their new home. A sophisticated official operation provided food and transport to temporary lodging.

“We just wanted them to know that the torture is over,” said Hedy Gupta, a grandmother handing out slabs of chocolate amid welcoming cheers. “I have children and a five-year-old grandchild and when I think what they have been through, these children, it leaves me on the ground.”

Beside her on the barricades of welcome was Waltraud Volger, a legal assistant who lives nearby: “I heard about it on the radio around 1pm today and just gathered what food and clothes I had and came over to donate it and offer to help,” she said. “They have so many volunteers that they haven’t needed me, so I’m just standing here welcoming them with clapping. I’ve never done anything like this before, but when you hear their stories and see the pictures, you can’t just stand by.”

After four hours, she had no plans to leave while the trains were still rolling in.

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A refugee looks out of a train window at the central station in Munich. Photograph: Nicolas Armer/dpa/Corbis

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Refugees wait for the train to Munich at the western railway station in Vienna. Photograph: Jörg Dieckmann/dpa/Corbis

Cheering German crowds greet refugees after long trek from Budapest to Munich | World news | The Guardian