Good news from the Mediterranean region – People traffickers give up and go home

The logo for the Doctors Without Borders organisation, an entity that has been accused of people trafficking across the Med

 

I used to support Doctors without Borders when they were providing healthcare to places that didn’t have any, or where the health infrastructure in a country was disrupted by war or conflict. However I rapidly withdrew my support for them on discovering the extent of this group’s involvement in the people trafficking that has been going on in the area around the Mediterranean Sea.

What was once a useful NGO, helped to sustain and probably worsen the problem of people trafficking across the Mediterranean Sea by picking up those migrants allegedly in trouble on the water and dumping the migrants in Italy. This activity by Doctors Without Borders, which it undertook with similar NGO’s, has not worked out well for the nations receiving these cargoes of migrants, especially Italy. The ordinary Italian citizen has had to put up with an enormous amount of problems brought to their shores by the mostly Muslim and mostly male migrants that Doctors Without Borders landed in Italian ports. The migrants have brought to Italy the usual mix of sex crime, anti social behaviour, property crime, violence and of course Jihad.

However unlike other nations, such as the UK for example, whose government’s, no matter what their political stripe, tell their subjects to put up with the unwanted ‘enrichment’ even though it is often deadly, the Italians have a government that has said ‘enough is enough’. The Italian government has quite rightly gone after the entities that are making a bad problem, that of third world immigration, so much worse, in this case the Doctors without Borders organisation.

According to a report in the London Daily Telegraph dated 6th December 2018, the Doctors Without Borders group is withdrawing from the business of people trafficking across the Med after suffering much pressure from the Italian government. The final straw for the people traffickers of Doctors Without Borders was the Italian government’s seizure of the trafficking boat ‘The Aquarius’ on the grounds that DWB had dishonestly claimed that dangerous waste from the ship was safe refuse. It turns out that DWB, as well as dumping a whole lot of unwanted and potentially burdensome and dangerous migrants on Italy, also declared that the filth that the migrants had produced en route to Italy was ‘normal ship waste’.

Because of this ship impounding, along with the fact that the Panamanians have refused to register the Aquarius under their flag any longer, the Doctors Without Borders group is packing up and going home. This is good news for the average Italian citizen as well as being good news for the Italian government. No more will the Aquarius discharge on Italian shores shiploads of migrants intent on poncing off of the generosity of the Italian welfare system and making the lives of ordinary Italian citizens a complete misery.

Of course the spokespersons for Doctors Without Borders are whining loudly about the position they are in. They are bleating about ‘human rights’, ‘humanitarianism’ and ‘international law’. But, I say, let them bleat as loud and as often as they like, because the Italian government has a moral right to do whatever is necessary in order to protect their citizens from assault and exploitation. This defence can and should include saying ‘no’ to the cargoes of actual and ambulant human sewage that the Doctors Without Borders ship the Aquarius has been dumping on Italy and Italians.

This is one people trafficking NGO down, but there are still many more to go. Let’s hope the Italians and other European governments start to crack down on these groups more robustly. These groups are doing nothing but importing misery to a continent that increasingly wants no more of the sort of scum that Doctors Without Borders and similar groups have been delivering to European shores. So it’s goodbye to the Mediterranean Sea for Doctors Without Borders and many of us are saying ‘good riddance’ to them as well. This is the shutdown of a major ratline for the sort of bipedal rats that have been plaguing Italy for too many years now. This is a brilliant achievement by the Italian government a government that appears to put the security of their own people way ahead of any international law considerations.