According to Deputy Prime Minister Zsolt Semjén, there is a need for a national consultation because the Government’s position is not enough in this battle on its own; it is also necessary for the Hungarian people to back it up.
Mr Semjén said this on the programme Sunday Paper of Kossuth Rádió in response to the fact that European Commissioner for Education, Culture, Youth and Sport Tibor Navracsics claimed: the European Commission formulates its migration policy on the basis of its own logic, and "the Soros plan is not on the Commission’s agenda”.
The Deputy Prime Minister drew attention to the fact that European leaders, including Jean-Claude Juncker, President of the European Commission, all listen to György Soros outlining his programme in the EU before them. The situation is that György Soros "holds in his hands and pockets the world” in which Mr Navracsics performs his daily work, he said.
Mr Semjén stressed: one is faithful to one’s country, while one is loyal to the organisation one belongs to and to one’s employer. He therefore asked Mr Navracsics to reconsider the concept of fidelity in the context of his nation and an international organisation. He added: he sincerely hopes that this comment is "the consequence of a journalistic misrepresentation”.
Hungary never signed an agreement with the EU that anyone should have the authority to tell us who should live in Hungary, he highlighted. In his view, the root cause of the migration crisis is Freemasonry which had its "Jacobinic and Bolshevik version”, and "this Soros-led far liberal thing is the umpteenth offshoot of that”. It "hates the very guts of Christian traditions”, and if possible, it hates the nation states even more. It wants to eliminate them and seeks to create a United States of Europe. This would be led by "an impersonal, unaccountable” bureaucracy from Brussels, which would hand over the actual power to non-governmental organisations, Mr Semjén added.
He continued: left-wing, liberal parties are quite evidently unable to conquer national forces, and this is why it is necessary to import millions of people who are not tied to any one nation. They may rely on these Islamic immigrant masses against the European nations. He stressed: while Islam is a great culture, it is not part of the European civilisation, in particular, not of Hungarian culture which "defines itself in the face of Islam as the protective shield of Christian Europe”.
The Christian democratic politician said: there is a need for a national consultation because the Government’s position is not enough in this battle on its own; it is also necessary for the Hungarian people to back it up. “The difference is that we ask the people”, he stressed.
He mentioned as an example that, in his view, the German policy which invited migrants to Europe was firstly “unlawful” as they failed to observe the Dublin Regulations, and secondly “anti-democratic” as Chancellor Angela Merkel did not ask the German people whether they wanted to live together with Islamic people in masses, while it was also “unfair” towards Hungary, among others, as well as towards the migrants themselves. In consequence, “these unfortunate people” sold everything they had in order to make their way to Europe, and now they would send back a great many of them. He said: what Hungary stands for is a much fairer solution, namely that help should be taken there, rather than trouble being brought here.
According to Mr Semjén, this will eventually lead to the development of parallel societies. These people are becoming increasingly frustrated because they have no jobs and do not speak the language, and crime rates will increase in consequence. He said: if such a frustrated migrant “rapes a little ten-year-old German girl, her father will shoot the migrant dead, which will then lead to riots among the immigrants”, they will attack a German village and it will be compelled to defend itself. “This is what the people will see everywhere, from Malmö to Marseilles, and the suburbs will be on fire”, he added.
The borders must be protected, and humanitarian help must be taken to the native countries of these people, the Deputy Prime Minister highlighted.