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Last week I reported Germans lost their jobs at the four star Hotel Maritim so that it could house Muslim migrants. The workers and shop owners in this hotel, some of whom had worked there for over 25 years, were told a few weeks ago that they would no longer have jobs, because the hotel would be converted into migrant housing.
That was just the beginning. Next on the chopping block (no pun intended) is the Ramada Hotel Frankfurt/Oder in Germany and the Lapland Ski Complex in Sweden.
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Post-war Europe has come full circle. They’ve gone from the liberation of The Marshall Plan to its polar opposite, ‘The Muhammad Plan.’
The Marshall Plan (officially the European Recovery Program, ERP) was an American initiative to aid Western Europe, in which the United States gave $13 billion (approximately $130 billion in current dollar value as of August 2015) in economic support to help rebuild Western European economies after the end of World War II. The plan was in operation for four years beginning in April 1947. The goals of the United States were to rebuild war-devastated regions, remove trade barriers, modernize industry, make Europe prosperous again, and prevent the spread of communism (statism). (source)
Fast forward to the ‘The Muhammad’ Plan aka Euro-Med partnership – an Islamic initiative to conquer Europe in which Europe gives billions to Muslim invaders from the Middle East and Africa in order to destroy European culture and dismantle the European modal. The goal is to conquer and impose Islam.
Title: Ramada Hotel Frankfurt/Oder shall be turned into a permanent refugee accommodation
October 25, 2015
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Since the end of September, about 400 refugees are staying here. Now the state of Brandenburg wants to permanently rent or buy the former Ramada Hotel in Frankfurt/Oder (150 rooms). The current lease only runs until the beginning of January. Originally, the house had been rented for three years. Negotiations are ongoing. The operating agency H-Hotels takes care of the guests for about 20,000 euros per day for board and lodging. With a longer-term lease, a change of operator would likely take place, regional media cited the Ministry of the Interior.
And in Sweden, they plan to house Muslim migrants at the Lapland Ski Resort while Swedes suffer under as housing shortage.
“Lapland ski complex to become refugee hub,” The Local, October 26, 2015
Riksgränsen, which sits 200 kilometres above the Arctic Circle close to Sweden’s border with Norway, is set to welcome the refugees following a deal between the resort’s owner and the Swedish Migration Agency, Migrationsverket.“As everyone knows, there is a refugee crisis in the world. Now asylum seekers are arriving in Sweden and Migrationsverket has a major urgent need to find temporary housing to accommodate all those who need help. We at Lapland Resorts AB are very pleased to be able to help,” Sven Kuldkepp, CEO of Lapland Resorts, told Swedish newspaper Norrbottenskuriren via email on Wednesday.“Why leave it empty and cold when it can be quite full and warm,” he added in a separate comment.Kuldepp explained that the refugees would be allowed to stay in Riksgränsen until February 2016, when the main tourist ski season would get under way.He said that the plan would “not affect our ordinary activities” but added that he hoped that his resort would also be able to create jobs for some of the asylum seekers.The move comes amid a push from Sweden’s Social Democrat-led government to encourage municipalities across Sweden to take in more refugees.At the moment, the vast majority of asylum seekers end up in either Stockholm, Gothenburg or Malmö.But Northern Sweden is becoming a more common base for asylum seekers. On Friday a group of 19 Eritreans landed in Luleå and were taken to Östersund as part of the first phase of a programme to relocate tens of thousands of refugees within the EU.However some campaigners have raised concerns about people raised in Africa or the Middle East adapting to the dark and freezing conditions in the region.In January, a group of refugees taken to a housing centre near Östersund initially refused to get off a bus after claiming that they had been told by officials that they would be living close to Stockholm and instead finding themselves driven 15 hours north.“We were coming to an area in the middle of the forest we know nothing about, just snow and wind and nothing else,” Esam Taha, 36, from Syria, told The Local this week, reflecting on the chaos.“It was terrible, just wind and snow, and the roads were slippery. The moment we got out of the bus we slipped and fell down,” he explained.But the asylum seeker says he now expects to settle in the area and argues that other refugees might not find it too tricky to adapt to the frozen north.“If I find an apartment in Östersund, of course I will stay here, because all my friends are here, all my Swedish friends are here. This city is a small city and a quiet city, and the people here are really really nice and I like it, but it’s a big problem to find an apartment,” he said.Taha added that he was studying at a riding and hunting centre and volunteering at a school while he waited for his residency to be approved.More refugees have sought asylum in Sweden so far in 2015 than in any other year in the Nordic nation’s history, new figures released by the country’s Migration Agency revealed on Monday.86,223 people have launched cases, surpassing a previous record set in 1992 when 84,016 people sought asylum following fighting in the Balkans.Officials in the Swedish capital announced on Monday that they were planning to build a new refugee reception zone around the city’s central station, while Prime Minister Stefan Löfven said last week that tent camps would likely be needed in order to provide enough shelter for new arrivals reaching Sweden as the winter sets in.
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