Markus Salzmann
Like the ruling elites in the West, the governments of Eastern European states are deliberately using the attack on Charlie Hebdo
to restrict democratic rights and persecute refugees. Muslims in
particular have been declared the enemy, strengthening extreme
right-wing forces.
The Bulgarian government is planning new
measures against refugees. The barriers on the existing 33-kilometre
border with Turkey, which was constructed some time ago to prevent
immigration from the neighbouring country, are being expanded by 82
kilometres at a cost of €46 million for this year alone.
To secure
the Turkish-Bulgarian border, the right-wing government has increased
its border police to more than 1,400. The regime in EU’s poorest country
is also using the costs involved in its deployment at the border as a
pretext for involving the army, thereby creating a precedent for
military intervention in domestic affairs. Interior Minister Veselin
Vutchkov demanded this explicitly. Defence minister Nikolai Nenchev made
vehicles and weaponry available to the police units.
The
government intends to shut down the border with Turkey for refugees
under all conditions, since in neighbouring Turkey there are currently 2
million refugees, mostly from Syria. According to official statistics,
around 38,500 refugees attempted last year to illegally cross the
Turkish-Bulgarian border. Figures from Bulgaria’s state migration agency
(DAB) suggest that 10,000 of these have applied for asylum.
Most
of these people come from Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq, countries where
the Western powers are responsible for wars, civil wars and catastrophic
living conditions. Compared to 2013, the number of refugees has risen
by 200 percent. Many refugees have been forced to spend the freezing
winter in the border region in tents under horrendous hygienic
conditions.
The Bulgarian government has justified its draconian
new measures against refugees by claiming they are necessary in the
“struggle against terror”. Former interior minister Svetan Svetanov, who
is a member of the governing GERB party and acts as a domestic adviser
to Prime Minister Boiko Borisov, bluntly declared that an increase in
the flow of refugees inevitably increases the risk of a terrorist
attack.
The United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR)
and some NGOs have criticised the border barrier, because it forces
refugees to pursue more dangerous routes, such as crossing the
Mediterranean Sea, to reach the EU.
Hungary’s right-wing Fidesz
government is already well known for its inhumane treatment of refugees
and minorities. Hungary has no need for any economic migrants, Fidesz
parliamentary fraction head Antal Rogan told the state radio
broadcaster. It had been “proven that the presence of Islamic
communities in Christian countries in Western Europe disturbs domestic
order, for example in the United Kingdom, France and Germany.”
Interior
Minister Laszlo Trocsanyi explained the necessity of a European-wide
terrorist database that should also include Hungary. At the same time,
he announced further measures at the national level. According to
previous reports, an action plan already announced by Prime Minister
Viktor Orban will be adopted, and includes a range of measures to grant
the police, army and intelligence agencies comprehensive powers.
Terrorism
as a daily reality, according to the Hungarian regime, was forcing
Hungary and Europe to reconsider its anti-terrorist strategy and
immigration, and more. “I think the United States could serve as an
example here, including its anti-terror laws,” said Rogan. Rogan’s
suggestion was met with enthusiasm from the right-wing party Jobbik, the
third-largest party in parliament. The neo-fascists have been
conducting a campaign of hate propaganda against foreigners for years.
In
the Czech Republic, the utterly discredited and unscrupulous political
elite is using the attacks in Paris to conduct a disgusting campaign
against Muslims. State President Milos Zeman declared publicly that
immigrants have a “genetic dependency” that they could not deny. Muslims
had only themselves to blame for having to live in ghettos in Europe’s
major cities, Zeman claimed.
Zeman is already well known for his
anti-Islamic comments. In 2011, he told a conference that Islam was “the
anti-civilisation that stretches from North Africa to Indonesia, the
enemy of NATO,” and that these countries, populated by around 2 billion
people, were “financed partly by drugs, partly by oil.” He told a news
magazine in the same year that the idea that there was a moderate Islam
was just as wrong as the claim that there were moderate Nazis.
Zeman
and other leading politicians have incited the dregs of society with
their tirades. A crowd numbering about 600 participated in an anti-Islam
demonstration two weeks ago. In front of Prague Castle, the main
residence of the Czech president in the capital, they chanted racist
slogans and held up placards stating, “Wake up, Europe” and “Stop
Islam.” The group “No Islam in the Czech Republic” intends to
collaborate with the German Pegida movement in Dresden, 150 kilometres
away.
The attacks on immigrants, which go hand in hand with
restrictions on democratic rights and the adoption of police state
measures, are directed against the entire population. The unstable
governments in Eastern Europe fear that repeated protests could turn
into a mass movement in the face of worsening economic conditions.
The
recently announced removal of the link between the Swiss franc and the
euro threw thousands of families into poverty in Southern and Eastern
Europe. The free floating of the franc will result in a sharp rise in
mortgage costs. The exchange rate of the franc rose massively overnight,
thereby increasing repayment rates by 20 percent. In Hungary, Poland,
France, Greece, Croatia and Serbia, the majority of mortgages are
denominated in foreign currencies, particularly Swiss francs.
In
Poland, central bank governor Marek Belka has already announced
extraordinary measures. According to the Polish financial supervisory
authority, outstanding loans in Poland amounted to €31 billion.
In Croatia, the government announced it would peg the exchange rate of
its currency, the Kuna, with the franc for a year. Prime Minister Zoran
Milanovic announced his plan earlier this week to fix the Swiss franc
exchange rate at 6.39 kuna. The official exchange rate is more than
7.60. Since the free floating of the franc, the kuna has been devalued
by 18 percent. While there are strong doubts among analysts that this
measure will be effective, it is definitely politically motivated. After
the governing Social Democrats suffered a painful loss in the
presidential elections, “Milanovic is considering the forcible
transformation of the franc loans into kuna so as to win back the
allegiance of supporters,” opined the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.
Hungary was thrown into a similar crisis in 2008-2009. There, around 90
percent of loans were denominated in francs. “The credit rating for
Hungary exploded, many of those affected could no longer service their
debts, losing their houses and apartments,” Die Welt reported.
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