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NEWS AND VIEWS THAT IMPACT LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT

"There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with
power to endanger the public liberty." - - - - John Adams

Monday, February 15, 2016

Police tear gas anti-Islam protesters


Tear gas is fired as people protesting against the so-called "hotspot" being built for Muslim
illegal aliens
on the Aegean island of Kos, on February 14, 2015. © Stringer / AFP

A World Turned Upside Down

  • Police gas Greek citizens protesting the invasion by hundreds of thousands of illegal alien Muslims while the welcome mat is put out for law breakers.


(RT News)  -  Police have fired tear gas at protesters on the Greek island of Kos, where several thousand people rallied against the construction of a refugee facility.
Kos is a tourist hub that found itself on the frontline of Europe’s migrant crisis last year. Locals fear that migrants will deter holiday makers from visiting the island.
“Some 2,000 people have turned up to the protest on Sunday,” RT’s Nikki Aaron reported from Kos.
Turkey is flooding Greece with illegal alien Muslims

“We want them to come, pass by, make their papers, and go away wherever they want to go. Here is a tourist place; we have people that come here for holidays – they can’t stay together [with refugees],”one of the demonstrators explained.
Waving Greek national flags, the people marched from the center of the island to the abandoned army base outside the village of Pylio where the migrant “hotspot” is to be erected.
The construction site was guarded by riot police, who were fully geared and carrying shields.
According to Aaron, six or seven rounds of tear gas were fired by the police to disperse the crowd, which included “women, children and elderly people.”
“The riot police, they weren’t holding back as soon as any protester started to push forward, they retaliated,” RT’s correspondent said.
It was the second such rally against the new migrant center, with around 1,000 gathering in protest at the island’s port on Wednesday.
Kos is situated just a few kilometers from the Turkish coast and has a population of just over 33,000 people.
Read More . . . .

Police tear-gas anti-refugee protesters








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