BRATISLAVA, July 4, (WEBNOVINY) — Chairman of the opposition Slovak National Party (SNS) Jan Slota and the leader of the opposition Austrian Freedom Party (FPO) Heinz-Christian Strache signed a memorandum on Monday on mutual cooperation and understanding, in which they reject the philosophy of multiculturalism and declared unacceptable the accession of Turkey to the European Union.
„Our political parties have already been in contact in the past, but our relations have now intensified,“ Slota said after meeting with representatives of the party, which in neighboring Austria enjoys support by about 25 percent of the electorate. According to Slota, both political parties support democracy, but in particular its national and patriotic aspect. „Both parties will instruct their members in the European Parliament to call for a change of the EU migration policy,“ said Slota, according to who uncontrolled immigration from Africa and Asia is the way to hell. „It has absolutely nothing to do with Christian principles of European civilization,“ he said.
„For both our political parties, Turkey’s accession to the EU is unacceptable, and neither of the parties will support it,“ said Slota, who subsequently rejected the philosophy of multiculturalism. „We do not see the future of Europe in building hundreds of mosques and minarets across the EU,“ he said.
FPO leader Strache sees a huge problem in migration and the spread of Islam in Europe. „We represent a Europe of nations which will be more driven by those western Christian roots, which we need to protect on the one hand, on the other hand, revive them,“ Strache told a news conference. He said the FPO and the SNS will defend these values and do not want an EU that would be European-African-Asiatic. „We do not want to let non-European countries such as Turkey became part of the EU,“ said Strache, a fact that in his view would mean an end the EU. „It is with respect to the current financial and monetary crisis in Europe, I think that specifically our parties will be determining the future direction in Europe,“ said Strache.
SITA