Proof of the complicity of the multi-billion euro migrant NGOs in the facilitation of illegal migration into Europe may have been found according to a report on documents detailing the activities of the EU border force, Frontex.
The EU Observer news site submitted a “freedom of access” – the same as a Freedom of Information request here – to Frontex which revealed that 1,058 documents related to the investigation of human trafficking include references to named NGOs.
Frontex is not releasing the documents due to the sensitivity of the information which they reveal, including the identification of smuggling routes, as well as “the involvement of facilitators and traffickers in human beings.”
The facilitators presumably include the NGOs who are named.
Frontex told EU Observer that the intelligence gathered will form the basis of criminal investigations in member states, but would not confirm or deny whether NGOs named in the documents would be among the targets of such a criminal inquiry.
Gript will attempt to discover whether the Irish authorities have been asked to take part in the investigation, and whether NGOs based in Ireland will be investigated.
A spokesperson for Europol, when asked about the NGOs named in the Frontex documents, said that they did not have a category under the term “non governmental organisations”, but that they did gather intelligence on “non-commercial organisations,” which would appear to be the term which they use to describe NGOs.
If that is the case, then the NGOs named may well be subject to criminal investigation, as Europol stated that they “cannot rule out that Europol have in the past received information via Frontex in which migrants had clearly link (sic) entities with criminal activities.”
That implies that some NGOs have been directly assisting in the illegal transportation of migrants.
Some European states like Italy and Greece which are in the frontline of human trafficking of illegal migrants have already taken steps to tackle the involvement of the NGOs. The authorities in those countries and elsewhere have expressed considerable anger over the effective co-operation by the NGO “rescue” vessels and the criminal gangs who control human trafficking in north Africa and elsewhere.
People here will be familiar with the case of Seán Binder, who was living in Castlegregory, County Kerry, and who was charged in Greece with being part of a human trafficking operation. He has been acquitted of another charge of espionage, but another trial on the trafficking charge is expected to be held despite enormous pressure on the Greeks to drop the charges.
Binder was working with the former Emergency Response Centre International and it was his actions as a member on the Greek island of Lesbos that landed him in trouble. The ERCI was part of Global First Responders who no longer allow access to their list of donors, but it is a sector popular with wealthy liberals who of course do not have to live with the consequences of illegal immigration. A ship funded by wealthy graffiti artist Banksy was detained by Italian authorities on Lampedusa at the end of March.
The hard reality of the situation is that those enticing or facilitating illegal migrants into Europe, including by the utter madness of our own state in pretty much sending out invitations, are an indispensable element in the criminal world of trafficking. The naïve NGO “rescuers” are effectively acting as an unpaid element in the supply chain.
The nexus between the NGOs and the human traffickers has been openly stated by the Italians as well as the Greeks, and there is evidence of how that operates from groups which are monitoring all of this in the Mediterranean.
This appears to show how the criminal gangs make contact with the “rescue” ships which take on the people carried by the gangs from north Africa, and in particular from Libya, and thus attempt to avoid immigration and other legal controls by providing the sordid operation with the cover of “humanitarianism.”
So the NGO “volunteers” are only unpaid that is in the sense that they do not receive any money – as far as we know, although perhaps this will come under scrutiny in the Interpol investigation – from the gangs themselves, but they do get huge amounts of money from billionaire leftists like Soros who seem intent on destroying a society they clearly despise. And they also rake in enormous sums from European states and directly from the EU Commission.
The hatred of Soros for western society is shared for ideological reasons by the far left which sees mass immigration as a means to destabilise and destroy. Others appear motivated by a kind of Cluster B personality disorder which has led them to hate those they have grown up with, and embrace people who they do not know, and are unlikely to ever get to know, simply because the represent an idealised “other” who can be the means for dysfunctional people to get their own back on families and communities who did not appreciate their mediocrity.
Some of them here clearly ignore the reality that there are illegal immigrants who prey on innocent people such as the young girl murdered in France. This much was apparent in much of the response to the Kellie Harrington witch hunt.
Hopefully the information from Frontex that has led to the Europol investigation will blow the cover on this shameful trade in human beings. It is also to be hoped that governments other than those in Italy and Greece will refuse to be browbeaten into ignoring NGO complicity.
That, of course, includes our own government should it be discovered that any NGO operating from this country is engaged in any of this, either directly or through funding.