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Magyarország
2015. X. 18. Este nyolc óráig összesen 41 illegális bevándorlóval szemben kellett intézkednie a magyar rendőröknek a szerb határszakaszon, Horvátország irányából pedig nem volt elfogás.Sem a két tranzitzónában - Letenyén és Beremenden -, sem pedig Tompán és Röszkén nem jelentkeztek migránsok menedékkérelem benyújtására. (Forrás: MTI)
Ausztria
2015. X. 18. Délelőtt ezer, Szlovéniából érkezett menekültet regisztráltak Ausztria déli határrészén. A burgenlandi határátkelőnél ez idő alatt nem érkeztek menekültek az országba. (Forrás: MTI)
Turkey
October 18, 2015 Merkel discusses refugee crisis, Turkish-EU relations during Turkey visit. Naming four main topics discussed during the meeting, Davutoğlu said: "The first topic is the fair share of the refugee burden. Turkey has been left alone in the last four years on the issue of sharing [this] burden. The process hereafter should be carried out together irrespective of the possible financial aid to Ankara from the EU of 3 billion euros." Davutoğlu cited visa liberalization as the second topic. Stressing that the EU drew a new framework on the visa issue that has been ongoing for decades, Davutoğlu said: "For us to sign the readmission agreement, the Schengen visa must be secured for Turkish citizens. We are performing serious collaboration with the EU to realize this issue by 2016 rather than as planned in 2017. We hope that from July 2016 both readmission and Schengen agreements will go into effect." "The third topic is about whether Turkish-EU relations can gain new momentum following this refugee crisis. The EU has produced a new vision out of every crisis. We have a mutual perspective in Turkish-EU relations gaining new momentum," Davutoğlu said. For the fourth topic, Davutoğlu said that Turkey joining EU summits is a significant point, which he hoped would continue in the upcoming years. Underscoring that the last Turkish politician to have been present at an EU summit was President Erdoğan when he was prime minister, Davutoğlu said: "We hope that Turkey appears in the EU picture." After Davutoğlu's speech, Merkel reflected her views following the meeting. Emphasizing that Germany and the EU will provide support of any kind to Ankara on four topics, she said: "New meetings will be held on the visa issue. We [Germany and the EU] have some expectations from Turkey regarding the refugee crisis." Acknowledging that Turkey has carried the burden of refugees financially, Merkel said: "We know that Turkey has not received much aid for this issue. In fact, Turkey has undertaken a great task. I can also say that the EU will work on legal migration." Labeling Turkey's accession to the EU as an open-ended issue, Merkel said that the EU is ready to negotiate Chapter 17 while Davutoğlu said both parties agreed on the same terms to accelerate efforts on Chapters 17, 23 and 24. Feeling alone due to the heavy burden of the refugee crisis, Turkey has spent over $7 billion and has failed to make itself heard in the international area. For now, the EU seems to be listening to Ankara, which could ease the burden of the refugee crisis of which Turkey has been most affected. (Source: TheDailySabah): http://tinyurl.com/oks2xxv
United States
18 Oct, 2015 'America is a bomb waiting to explode' The number of farms in the country has fallen by some 4 million from more than 6 million in 1935 to roughly 2 million in 2012. And according to the College of Agriculture & Life Sciences, only about 2 percent of the . US population live on farms. That means that around 4.6 million people currently have the means to feed themselves. Food supply logistics are extended, sometimes stretching thousands of miles. The shops have nothing more than a few days’ stock. A simple break in that supply line would clear the shops out in days. The US currency came off the gold standard in 1933 and severed any link with gold in 1971. Since then, the currency has been essentially linked to oil, the value of which has been protected and held together by wars. In the past, people were in rural communities. They could grow food. They had real communities. They also had self-control and a conception of morality. Today, if the supply lines go down, you are stuck in a house you can’t heat surrounded by millions of FDA-approved drug addicts who are going psycho because they have run out of juice and people who would murder their own grandmother to get a cut-price iPhone. The right shock event – or combination of shock events – will detonate the explosive. There was one such potential detonator – which presently has not gone off – in the UK just last week. The UK’s Independent reported on October 16 that experts were ‘staggered’ after Cafferkey – who had been brought to London of all places – rapidly declined after being declared cured from Ebola. This woman had been allowed out into the community – still sick with Ebola – and managed to visited Mossneuk Primary School in East Kilbride, South Lanarkshire, on October 12 to thank children for their fund-raising efforts. Johnson, the current Mayor of London, primed the British public for the possibility of Ebola in London just last week. Perhaps he knows something we don’t. What do you think will happen if people start dying from Ebola in London or New York? The natural response will be to get out of the urban centre as quickly as possible. The poor people who are left in the cities will run out of food in short order as suppliers refuse to enter the city. (Source: RT): http://tinyurl.com/ob9b3ye
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