Europe’s refugee crisis: the last time round it was much, much worse
As train after train of refugees arrives in Germany, swamping the railway stations and stretching the capacities of welfare organizations, a senior Berlin-based administrator protests against the strain the newcomers are placing on the countrys resources.
Germany, he warns, cannot go on indefinitely being treated as a waste-paper basket with a limitless capacity for the unwanted waste of the world.
More importantly, the scale of the influx is in danger of giving rise to a toxic brew of resentment on the part of the indigenous population that might well lead to neo-Nazism and ultra-nationalism once again becoming significant forces.
Do we not now, he asks, tend to compress that mixture to the point of detonation?
Crassly worded though his protest may be, the speakers concerns are widely shared by those responsible for Germanys, and Europes, governance. Yet he is not himself a German, nor is he referring to the refugees coming from Syria or Libya in the summer and autumn of 2015.
His name is Colonel Ralph Thicknesse, a migration specialist in the British army of occupation after the Second World War, and he is expressing his alarm in the summer of 1946 over the worst refugee crisis in Europes history one deliberately created by the victorious Allies themselves.
http://theconversation.com/europes-refugee-crisis-the-last-time-round-it-was-much-much-worse-47621