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+22 +1
Syrian hurls kids out window 'because wife wants freedom'
The trial begins in Bonn this week of a Syrian man who threw his three children from a first-floor window, allegedly because he disliked his wife’s desire to enjoy the same freedoms as German women. The 36-year-old refugee is suspected of attempted murder after hurling the children out the window of the asylum centre where the family lived. His seven-year-old daughter and five-year-old son suffered broken bones and skull fractures in the fall.
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+22 +1
Tony Abbott Likens Europe's Migrant Crisis To 'A Peaceful Invasion'
Former Prime Minister Tony Abbott has called on Europe to tighten its border control, warning the migrant crisis affecting the continent "has the look of a peaceful invasion". In his speech to The Alliance of European Conservatives and Reformists on Saturday night, Abbott addressed issues surrounding a post-Brexit world, urging Europeans to stand guard on their borders. Speaking in Prague, he held up Australia's strict boat turn-back policy as a model of successful border protection.
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+2 +1
Woman ‘found tied up and gagged after being raped and beaten by Algerian migrants under Paris landmark’
Three illegal immigrants were in custody in Paris today after a teenager was found tied up and gagged after allegedly being gang raped underneath the Eiffel Tower. The horrifying attack is said to have taken place after the 19-year-old was lured on a Facebook ‘date’ in the French capital.
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+11 +1
Refugees arrivals from Greece DOUBLE to 1,000 in one week
Violent clashes between refugees and locals have broken out in Greece - as the number of migrants arriving from Turkey has doubled to 1,000 in just one week. On Chios, local residents were sprayed with tear gas by police after hundreds marched through the main square demanding the removal of the island's huge refugee camp. On Lesbos, migrants have lead two demonstrations through the capital Mytilene demanding the right to leave the island and travel to mainland Greece having been stranded there for months.
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+27 +1
UN reveals 235,000 migrants are waiting to cross the Mediterranean
Some 235,000 migrants in Libya are ready to make the dangerous Mediterranean crossing to Italy as soon as the opportunity arises, UN envoy Martin Kobler said in an interview published Thursday. According to Italy's interior ministry, nearly 128,400 migrants have arrived via the Mediterranean since the start of the year - which is a five percent jump over the same period in 2015.
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+28 +1
Number of potential terrorists in Germany is higher than ever – German interior minister
There are more people in Germany who could potentially commit terrorist acts than ever in the past, German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere told German daily Bild in an interview, adding that the terrorist threat in Germany is “very real.” More than 520 people in Germany are capable of committing “unexpected” and potentially “high-profile” terrorist attacks inspired by Islamism, de Maiziere said in the interview, published on the eve of the 15th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks in the US.
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+16 +1
Almost 1,500 underage refugees arrived in Germany married, one fourth 14yo – report
Some 1,475 minor refugees, mostly girls, have arrived in Germany already married, the majority of whom come from Syria, Afghanistan, and Iraq, an official report cited by German media says. Almost one in four are reportedly less than 14 years old. The numbers from the government migration office were released in the Westdeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung (WAZ) newspaper on Friday.
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+24 +1
Syrians begin returning home, two weeks into Turkish offensive
A group of 292 Syrians went back to the Syrian town of Jarablus from Turkey on Wednesday, marking the first formal return of civilians since Ankara launched a military incursion two weeks ago to try to secure the border region, a Turkish official said. Jarablus, which had been held by Islamic State, was the first town captured by Turkey's army and its Syrian rebel allies in an offensive launched on Aug. 24 that aims to sweep away jihadists and Syrian Kurdish militias from the frontier.
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+17 +1
Over 11,000 asylum seekers listed as crime suspects in Austria
While the number asylum seekers arriving in Austria has significantly dropped, the number having trouble with the law is on the rise. Some 11,158 were suspected of committing offences in the first half of 2016, compared to 15,236 in the whole of 2015. The staggering figures were revealed by the Austrian newspaper, Krone, which referenced data received by the right-wing Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ) from the Ministry of Interior as the result of an information request. The statistics are to be officially published on Tuesday.
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+8 +1
Up to 40% of asylum seekers in Switzerland ‘disappear’– report
Up to 40 percent of refugees who asked for asylum in Switzerland over the past three months reportedly disappeared from Swiss reception centers shortly afterwards, with their whereabouts unknown to the authorities. The country’s State Secretariat for Migration (SEM) confirmed that within the last quarter some 20 to 40 percent of refugees who have been assigned to reception centers have vanished from the monitoring system completely, Swiss newspaper SonntagsZeitung reports.
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+11 +1
Almost all asylum seekers relocated to Latvia have left the country; state institutions have no information, continue to pay benefits
Of 23 asylum seekers that have been relocated to Latvia as part of the European Union's refugee relocation program, 21 persons are already in Germany, as Latvian Television has found out. For instance, a Syrian mother of three, who at the end of July said she was planning to settle in Latvia and had already learned some Latvian, told the television that she had left Latvia as the mentor provided by the state was unable to help her family solve various practical day-to-day problems.
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+29 +1
Germany opened its doors to refugees a year ago, but some residents have had enough
Anti-refugee activists clad in black quickly scaled the 85-foot-high Brandenburg Gate in the heart of Germany’s capital and attached a giant banner atop the monument reading: “Secure the borders — Secure the future.” The early-morning takeover of the country’s best-known landmark a week ago didn’t last long: Dozens of heavily armed police brought down the 15 activists after less than an hour. And Berlin Mayor Michael Mueller later called the protest “despicable.”
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+1 +1
Muslim refugee, 20, says he thought it was OK to rape boy, 10
A refugee who raped a ten-year-old boy has claimed he did not know sexually assaulting the child was wrong as it was 'culturally acceptable' in his homeland. Mufiz Rahaman told Sydney's Downing Centre Court raping children was not seen as morally wrong in his native Myanmar when he pleaded guilty to the aggravated sexual assault of a 10-year-old refugee on Wednesday, the Daily Telegraph reported.
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+35 +1
Italy, Germany signal tougher stance on asylum seekers
Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi and German Chancellor Angela Merkel have agreed to step up efforts to send asylum seekers with no right to asylum in Europe back to their homelands. "All of us in Europe must work for the repatriation of those who do not have rights [to stay]," Mr Renzi said after a meeting with Ms Merkel.
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+1 +1
Germany expects a whopping 300,000 asylum seekers this year
Germany expects up to 300,000 asylum seekers to arrive this year, less than one-third of the total during 2015's record influx, the Federal Office for Migrants and Refugees (BAMF) said Sunday. BAMF chief Frank-Juergen Weise told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper that Germany's healthy economy and improvements to refugee services meant that the country was well-placed to absorb new arrivals, particularly as their numbers have dropped off.
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+20 +1
Nigerian air force says kills top Boko Haram militants, leader believed wounded
Nigeria’s air force said it had killed some senior Boko Haram militants and possibly fatally wounded their overall leader in a raid on the Islamists' northeast heartland.
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+28 +1
Merkel says refugees didn't bring Islamist terrorism to Germany
Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Wednesday refugees had not brought terrorism to Germany, adding that Islam belonged in the country as long as it was practiced in a way that respected the constitution. More than a million people fleeing war and poverty in the Middle East, Africa and elsewhere arrived in Germany last year. The mood towards them has soured after a spate of attacks on civilians last month, including three carried out by migrants. Two of those attacks were claimed by the Islamic State militant group.
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+26 +1
German police have 410 leads on possible terrorists among refugees: newspaper
Germany's federal criminal police have 410 leads on possible terrorists among refugees here, a local newspaper reported on Monday. The Neue Osnabruecker Zeitung newspaper said that compared with 369 leads in mid-May since the beginning of the migrant crisis last year. Investigations have been launched in 60 cases, the newspaper said. It cited federal BKA police as saying they did not currently have any concrete indications of attack plans. "In view of continuing migration to Germany we must assume that there could be active and former members, supporters and sympathizers of terrorist organizations...
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+41 +1
European Terror Deaths More Newsworthy Than Middle Eastern Ones
A new report has uncovered a gross discrepancy in U.S. media coverage of European deaths versus Muslim deaths in terror attacks. Media watchdog group FAIR published a quantitative survey Saturday which documents U.S. media coverage of Islamic State group-inspired attacks in Europe and the Middle East, revealing that European deaths are around 1,800 percent more newsworthy compared to deaths in the Middle East.
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+27 +1
Germany faces self-radicalization among frustrated young refugees
The Würzburg attacker seems to have been a young, lonely, unaccompanied refugee who had radicalized himself. De-radicalization experts in Germany say such people can be particularly vulnerable. Few details are known about the attacker who seriously injured four people on a train near Würzburg on Monday night. According to Bavarian Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann, he was a 17-year-old asylum seeker from Afghanistan, who had been living in the Würzburg area since March 2015 - first in a home, and more recently with a foster family.
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