Extreme right leaders criticise EU for immigration

The far-right leaders from several European countries have met in the capital Prague of Czechia, with whom the European Union has been criticised, for what they have called the policy of the massive “igration”. Saturday's conference of the right-wing group at the European Parliament, the Movement for Europe of States and Freedom, of [...]
Saturday's conference of the right-wing group in the European Parliament, the Movement for Europe of State and Freedom, has brought together, among others, Marine Le Pen, from France, the Austrian vice-kancerian, Heinz-Christian Strache, and Dutch politician Geert Wilders.
The host of this meeting was Czech Party for Freedom and Direct Democracy (SPD), which has won nearly 11% of the vote in parliamentary elections organised in October, with the anti-Muslim platform and against migrants.
“Brussels is an existential threat to our states”, Wilders said, during criticism at the European Union's address and added he hopes the “ches will keep the door shut for mass migration”, said Heinz-Christian Strache.
The leader of France's National Front, Marine Le Pen, has welcomed the announcement, under which the government has been established in Austria, including an extreme right-wing party led by Heinz-Christian Strache.
She estimated that this “is very good news, excellent news for Europe” and has supported Mr. Wilders' harsh criticism of the European Union.
“We are not xenophobe, we are opponents of the European Union”, said Marine Le Pen, who was a presidential candidate in France in the May elections when Emmanuel Macron won.
I think this is something in common with the extreme right in the Czech Republic, since the European Union is a devastating organization which leads our continent into destruction, through weakening, then by bringing in immigrants, denying the culture of the respective states, depleting our diversity, as we love diversity”, Marine Le Pen said.
I like the fact that the Dutch are Dutch, the Czechs are Czechs, that the French are French and that the Italians are”, is expressed by Le Pen, who was sitting next to the leader of the far-right SPD Czech party, Tomio Okamura, whose father is Japanese.
“We want a Europe that respects national individuality, national identity and freedom”, Okamura said.
Near the hall in Pryfer, Prague, where this conference of far-right European leaders was held, nearly 200 have protested.
We want to show that the Czech Republic is not indifferent to the manifestations of hatred, the spread of disinformation, which the party is conducting, said protest organiser Jan Cemper.
The other far-right leaders who attended the Prague conference were from Italy, Belgium, Poland, Germany and Great Britain.











