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Slovakia has become the third country to refuse implementation of the controversial EU Pact on Migration and Asylum, which threatens to inject countless numbers of immigrants from the Middle East and Africa into Europe. The prime minister of Slovakia, Robert Fico, declared that his country will not implement the new EU directive. “We say unequivocally that a country cannot be ordered to accept migrants that it knows nothing about or to pay 20,000 euros for each of them. This is not solidarity, it is a dictate.”
The Slovak prime minister’s statement comes after Poland and Hungary announced that they will not adopt the new migration pact. Even Poland’s globalist prime minister Donald Tusk declared that “We will find ways so that, even if the pact on migration enters into force in a generally unchanged form, we will protect Poland in the face of the resettlement mechanism.”
The Hungarian government also announced that it will refuse to accept the EU pact on migration voted by the European Parliament on Wednesday and rejects both the migrant redistribution system included in this pact and the alternative financial contributions for the refusal to receive the migrants redistributed from the countries in the front line of the migratory wave.
“The European Parliament made a bad decision. We do not accept mandatory relocation or fines for refusing to accept migrants,” Gergely Gulyas, chief of staff of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, told the media in Budapest, adding that Hungary joins Poland’s position.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán declared on X, “The Migration Pact is another nail in the coffin of the European Union. Unity is dead, secure borders are no more. Hungary will never give in to the mass migration frenzy!”
The Migration and Asylum Pact, adopted by the pro-globalist European Parliament, tightens the rules regarding the right to asylum, but includes mandatory quotas of refugees for the member states, or alternatively a contribution of around 20,000 euros for each refused migrant, to help frontline countries, as is the case of Italy.