Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
August 22, 2015
Crowds of migrants and refugees were building on Greece’s border with Macedonia on Saturday after a cold, wet night spent in the open, their entry slowly rationed by Macedonian police and soldiers.
Most of them Syrian refugees, the crowd of several thousand shouted “Help us!” at lines of riot police behind razor wire, stationed on the border since Thursday when Macedonia declared a state of emergency and sealed the frontier.
Some 600 were allowed through overnight, packed onto a 5 a.m. train at the Gevgelija railway station and sent north to Serbia, the last stop en route to Hungary and Europe’s borderless Schengen zone.
On Friday, Macedonian police fired tear gas and stun grenades to drive back angry crowds of Syrians, Afghans, Iraqis and others seeking passage through the impoverished Balkan country, the latest flashpoint in a crisis that has dragged the conflicts of the Middle East to Europe’s doorstep.
Families gathered around open fires in fields soaked by rain overnight. They had no access to shelter and little food or water.
“It’s really cold here,” said 30-year-old Faroq Awais, from Pakistan, waiting for a train in Gevgelija. “Last night it was raining and we couldn’t go anywhere inside. We were sleeping against the walls of a building but it didn’t help.”
Obviously, this crisis is not going away, and it is going to increase tensions in Athens and on the islands as these people are going to be staying there instead of traveling north to deal with the Holocaust of tear gas and cold rain.
Tension right on schedule.
As the Dawn begins to break.