Italy Getting a Healthy Dose of Nigerians and Eritreans

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
August 14, 2016

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Yo muffugguh dat sabel wer in dem siryuh be da muffuggen muffuggeh dat shiiiiiiieeet.

One of the greatest benefits of the brutal civil war in Syria is that so many Nigerians and Eritreans are arriving in Italy.

Truly, a beautiful sight to behold, as Italy becomes a stronger, better country, with all of these Black Africans escaping the Syrian war.

Wow.

Daily Express:

More than 25,000 migrants arrived at Italy’s borders in July alone, shocking new statistics have revealed.

The huge influx makes a 12 per cent increase on the same period last year, according to European Union border agency Frontex. 

Most who made the trip across the Mediterranean Sea, often in flimsy dinghies, were Nigerians and Eritreans.

With migrants now facing tougher measures in Greece, many have changed tack this year and used Italy as an entry point into Europe.

Because before, these Nigerians and Eritreans were going through Turkey.

To escape Syria.

Because, goyim: there is a brutal civil war in Syria.

Subsequently, just 1,800 migrants attempted to illegally cross Greece’s borders last month, down 97 per cent from July 2015.

However, this change is placing an increasing strain on Italy – especially it’s southern islands of Sicily and Sardinia.

These Nigerians and Eritreans are Syrians.

More than 140,000 migrants are now housed in Italian shelters, a seven-fold increase on 2013, with the migrant now crisis in its third year.

David Miliband, a former British foreign minister who now heads the International Rescue Committee, added: “This is not a blip.

“The forces that are driving more and more people from their homes – weak states, big tumults within the Islamic world, a divided international system. None of these things are likely to abate soon.”

Nigerians and Eritreans are victims of an international system.

With migrants blocked from travelling further north into central Europe, Italian officials are now concerned about a growing bottleneck in its northern border towns.

Nigerians and Eritreans didn’t land on the bottleneck – the bottle neck landed on Nigerians and Eritreans.

With a growing number now gathering at the town of Ventimiglia, a town by the French border, the interior minister Angelino Alfano vowed to avoid a similar situation to Calais.

Nigerians and Eritreans have so much to offer Italy.

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Italians are like a kid in a candy store as they struggle to cope with all of these improvements to their society.

It is truly shocking that no one ever thought to bring the entire population of Africa to Italy before this brutal civil war in Syria forced them to flee their homes.