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Far-right leaders want no EU in future Europe

by Compiled from Wire Services

ISTANBUL Dec 18, 2017 - 12:00 am GMT+3
by Compiled from Wire Services Dec 18, 2017 12:00 am

Far-right populists in Europe vowed to work together to create a new model of intercontinental cooperation that is far removed from the European Union. Leaders of parties from France, the Netherlands, Italy, Austria, Britain and other countries met in Prague to discuss ideas for Europe's future under the headline "For a Europe of Sovereign Nations." They attacked the EU for its migrant policies, accused its leader of trying to create a super state run by Brussels and praised U.S. President Donald Trump's approach to migration. Marine Le Pen, leader of France's far-right National Front, blamed the EU for getting "everything wrong," as reported by the AP.

"Because we love Europe, we accuse the EU of killing Europe," Le Pen told reporters. She said parties like hers want to save Europe "by preserving nation-states."

"We are not xenophobes, we are opponents of the European Union," Le Pen said. "I think this is something we have in common, because the European Union is a disastrous organization which is leading our continent to destruction through dilution by drowning it in migrants, by the negation of our respective countries, by the draining of our diversity."

Geert Wilders, founder of the Dutch anti-Islam Party for Freedom, followed suit.

"My party is convinced that the Netherlands would be better off outside the European Union, and it will be better for our economy, for our security," Wilders said. Wilders singled out immigration and "Islamization" of Europe as the most pressing issues.

"We must have the courage, to introduce travel bans as President Trump has done in the United States," he said. "We must have the courage to restrict legal immigration instead of expanding it. We must have the courage to repatriate the illegal immigrants."

Parties with anti-immigration platforms have been making gains at the polls in Europe, although Wilders and Le Pen both ran unsuccessfully this year for the top political posts in their countries.

More recently, Austria's far-right Freedom Party became a partner in a new coalition government after receiving more than a quarter of the vote in a parliamentary election. Le Pen, who lost the second round of France's presidential election to Emmanuel Macron in May, welcomed the confirmation that Austria had set up a coalition government with a right-wing populist party.The meeting was hosted by the most anti-migrant, anti-Muslim, anti-EU party in the Czech Republic, Freedom and Direct Democracy. It finished fourth in October's parliamentary election, winning 22 seats in the 200-seat lower house of Parliament.

The party wants to ban Islam, which it calls an ideology of hate. Its chairman, Tomio Okamura, is currently a deputy speaker of the house. Okamura, the son of a Czech mother and a Japanese father, warned of the threat of the "Muslim colonization of Europe." He has previously demanded a zero-tolerance policy against illegal immigration and Islam.

Meanwhile, several hundred demonstrators held a peaceful protest in front of the hotel where the conference was being held. They shouted, "Shame," and held up banners that read, "Social justice instead of racism, nationalism and xenophobia," according to DPA.

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