The New Normal - Austria
Austria's Chancellor Sebastian Kurz (L) and Vice Chancellor Heinz-Christian Strache in Seggau, Austria, on January 5, 2018. © Heinz-Peter Bader / Reuters
The number of crimes committed by “foreigners” in Austria increased to 40 percent of the total in 2016, a new government report says. Interior Minister Herbert Kickl says a “strict asylum policy” is needed to tackle the issue.
In 2016, some 500,000 offenses were registered in Austria, with 40 percent of them being committed by “foreigners,” a new security report presented by the Interior Ministry says. According to Kickl, the number of foreign offenders increased by 13 percent.
Unfortunately, this article does not articulate what exactly is meant by the term 'foreigner', but Wikipedia identifies 10% of the Austrian population as 'foreigners', as of 2006. Half of them are from the former Yugoslavia and Turkey. It is probably safe to assume that at least 11% of the current population is 'foreign'.
This means that about 11% of the population is responsible for 40% of crime. Also, it means that 89% of the population is responsible for 60% of crime. So, out of a pop of 8.75m, less approximately 1 million foreigners, that leaves 7.75m non-foreigners to commit 300,000 crimes. That is a crime rate of less than 0.04%.
The other side of the coin reveals approximately 1 million people responsible for 200,000 crimes which results in a crime rate of 0.2% - 5 times the rate of non-foreigners.
The Austrian vice chancellor and head of the right-wing populist Freedom Party (FPO), Heinz-Christian Strache, also told journalists following the government meeting that asylum seekers accounted for almost 46 percent of foreign offenders. He described the figure as “significant” and called for a stricter refugee policy.
Here, also is a staggering statistic. At most, there are 150,000 asylum seekers in the country, and probably considerably less than that. So, that makes up 15% of the foreign population, or less, but account for almost half of the offenses committed by foreigners. So the issue is getting much worse and will continue to unless significant measures are taken.
“This shows that those who come to us to allegedly seek protection are also those from whom we then have to protect the Austrian people,” Strache said, as cited by the Kronen Zeitung daily. Kickl and Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, the head of the conservative People’s Party (OVP), have both called for a “tough” and “restrictive” asylum policy.
Ahead of the government meeting, Kickl told the Austrian ORF broadcaster that “a restrictive asylum policy is absolutely necessary” in the view of the latest security data. He went on to say that it should be particularly aimed at “preventing large masses of people from coming into [our] country in an uncontrollable manner.”
Kickl particularly called for accelerated asylum proceedings and deportation of failed asylum seekers. Other measures proposed by the minister include allowing the authorities to access refugees’ smartphones as well as introducing mandatory age checks for asylum seekers.
Following the government meeting on Wednesday, Kurz and Strache also said that they would stick to their election promises and enhance security in Austria. The new government was sworn in last month, swaying sharply to the right of the political spectrum with the inclusion of the FPO in the coalition.
In October’s parliamentary election, the FPO, known for its hardline anti-immigrant stance, came in third with 26 percent of the vote. Strache’s party clinched a deal to form a coalition with the OVP led by Kurz, who also took a more hardline stance on immigration.
Anti-immigrant sentiment appeared to grow in Austria after it was overwhelmed by a wave of asylum seekers fleeing war and persecution during the refugee crisis. Since 2015, the country has taken in some 150,000 asylum seekers, which accounts for over 1 percent of its population, one of the largest shares per capita alongside Sweden.
Austria's serious swing to the right of the political spectrum should be a warning call to Sweden, Holland and other left-leaning governments in Europe who hide statistics like these from their people in order to protect the growing criminal element invading Europe. Of course most migrants are not criminals, but governments need to do a much, much better job at removing those who are from the incoming migration. The alternative is to watch their country lurch sharply to the right.
Strache has previously offered controversial proposals concerning asylum policy. He recently suggested housing asylum seekers in barracks, adding that a curfew could be imposed to keep them there. Later, he clarified that the government so far had no such plans and that his idea was currently off the table.
No comments:
Post a Comment