Muslims to conquer the heart and soul of Europe
03.02.2012 11:36
A quiet Danish town of Odense, the
birthplace of the great storyteller Hans Christian Andersen, is close to
becoming the arena for clashes between natives and immigrants from
Muslim countries. Danish websites are full of reports stating that
followers of Islam are particularly aggressively squeezing the Danish
from the local area of Volsmese.
Once Andersen named island Fyn where Odense is located, the "Garden of Denmark." Today, however, the city does not match the romantic description. According to the Internet portal Bt.dk referring to police sources, immigrants from Muslim countries conduct targeted attacks nearly exclusively at the indigenous population. "If your last name is Hansen or Nielsen and you live in Odense, especially in the area of Volsmese, the risk of being robbed is several times higher than that for those with foreign last names," says the Danish website.
"Robberies of ethnic Danes became particularly frequent in the past few months. There is something racist about it. As a result of frequent crimes against local residents, we observe that the indigenous islanders began to leave their homeland. Over the past four months 150 robberies have been officially reported, 90 percent of which were committed against ethnic Danes," said a police officer.
Once Andersen named island Fyn where Odense is located, the "Garden of Denmark." Today, however, the city does not match the romantic description. According to the Internet portal Bt.dk referring to police sources, immigrants from Muslim countries conduct targeted attacks nearly exclusively at the indigenous population. "If your last name is Hansen or Nielsen and you live in Odense, especially in the area of Volsmese, the risk of being robbed is several times higher than that for those with foreign last names," says the Danish website.
"Robberies of ethnic Danes became particularly frequent in the past few months. There is something racist about it. As a result of frequent crimes against local residents, we observe that the indigenous islanders began to leave their homeland. Over the past four months 150 robberies have been officially reported, 90 percent of which were committed against ethnic Danes," said a police officer.
Also read: Germany to be conquered by Islam
"Many young criminals openly admit that
they want to make Volmese their own. Last year there was a case where a
Danish family home was subjected to vandalism and theft several times a
week, until finally, they decided not to come home and left. Many of
robberies resemble vandalism and terrorism, and look like revenge or
threat. Everybody knows about it, although the government continues to
hide it well", the policeman said.
In turn, the newspaper Kristeligt Dagblad reported that particularly observant Muslims chased one of the Iranian immigrants. "Young people told me that I should not drive with a cross in the car. Then our car was smashed and set on fire. We bought another car, but the windows were broken three times already ... My kids do not wear headscarves, as 99 percent of other local children, therefore they attract more attention. It was simply not safe to let them go play. We decided to move as far away from Volsmese as possible," a victim said.
As for the police chiefs of the island, they acknowledge the sharp rise in crime, but are not willing to comment on a possible ethnic or religious background of the incidents. "I have no idea why criminals check the name on the mailbox before they rob a house," said a police spokesman. His subordinates, apparently, are more talkative, albeit they wished to remain anonymous.
In turn, the newspaper Kristeligt Dagblad reported that particularly observant Muslims chased one of the Iranian immigrants. "Young people told me that I should not drive with a cross in the car. Then our car was smashed and set on fire. We bought another car, but the windows were broken three times already ... My kids do not wear headscarves, as 99 percent of other local children, therefore they attract more attention. It was simply not safe to let them go play. We decided to move as far away from Volsmese as possible," a victim said.
As for the police chiefs of the island, they acknowledge the sharp rise in crime, but are not willing to comment on a possible ethnic or religious background of the incidents. "I have no idea why criminals check the name on the mailbox before they rob a house," said a police spokesman. His subordinates, apparently, are more talkative, albeit they wished to remain anonymous.
Hiding the national background of the
crimes, the police leadership of Odense contradicts the actions of the
authorities in Denmark. Folketing (parliament) last year voted to
restore control at the borders of the country. The main reason is openly
talked about: the problem of immigration. Copenhagen fears that a wave
of refugees from North Africa will exacerbate the already difficult
situation that developed in Scandinavia with immigrants from Asia and
Africa.
Danish, Swedish, and Norwegian media
recently were filled with reports of street war between the youth of the
"white" and immigrant areas in the streets of Copenhagen, Malmo and
Oslo. The police claimed that the fights have to do with drug
traffickers arguing over the territory. However, few Danes (as well as
Swedes and Norwegians) believe this.
Current developments in Odense showed
that the problem of the relations between indigenous and immigrant
Danish Muslims growing for half a century has fully matured in Denmark.
When in the early 1960s the country was in need of unskilled labor, and
later showed humanism towards the residents of 'hot spots', hardly
anyone thought that the immigrants would be so ungrateful with respect
to their host country. When today their number has reached 200,000 (out
of five million), things took a nasty turn.
However, we cannot say that Muslims are
the only ones to blame. The Danish government remained silent about this
issue for years and toyed with the Islamists. Former Prime Minister of
Denmark and now NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen has allowed
hosting the "World Chechen Congress" in Copenhagen with militant
emissary Akhmed Zakayev as a guest in the days of the tragedy of the
"Nord-Ost". The Danish authorities also sluggishly reacted to the
preaching of Islamic nature heard from some houses of worship.
The other side of the coin is the
notorious political correctness that at times developed into
permissiveness. On September 30, 2005 the Danish newspaper Jyllands
Posten published cartoons of the prophet Muhammad. Since depicting the
prophet is prohibited in Islam, Muslims rebelled. But Fogh Rasmussen
refused to apologize even when fervent Islam followers broke into the
Danish Embassies and Muslim countries one after another began to curtail
the economic and political ties with Denmark.
Had Rasmussen apologized, there may not
have been riots in the embassies and repeated attempts to kill the
author of the first cartoons Kurt Vestergor. Perhaps the relationship
between the native Danes and immigrants from Muslim countries would not
have strained to the limit. The government also blessed the immigrants
for the idle life on benefits. According to various estimates, up to 40
percent of all benefits in the country are paid to Muslim immigrants.
On the other hand, a significant
proportion of Muslims did not abide by the local rules. Denmark
legalized such questionable from the standpoint of religion (and not
just Islam) things like same sex marriage, abortion, and recreational
drugs. The existence of Christiania district in Copenhagen area, known
for its particularly frivolous nature, is not to the liking of many
Danes either. However, it is up to the Danes to decide how to run their
own country. No one likes it when the guest drives the host of the
house. The hosts in this case are the Danes, no matter how immoral.
When it comes to outright driving of the
Danes out of the city where an object of their national pride was born,
things take a very nasty turn. Incompatibility of the two mentalities
and ideologies threaten to grow into an open confrontation. The
authorities of Denmark are ignoring the issue at their own peril.
Vadim Trukhachev
Pravda.Ru
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