[troll mode/on]Leporello έγραψε: 12 Δεκ 2018, 22:07 Ολοι οι ψεκασμένοι τα ίδια λένε:
http://katehon.com/article/george-soros ... d-identity
Κάτω τα χέρια από το Γκρουέφσκι!
Αυτόν που στήριζε το κίνημα Stop Soros!!
Βέβαια το αναφέρει εδώ και καιρό και το ρωσικό πρακτορείο Sputnik!Brussels, 23 February, 2017 - 14:40 (META)
On February the 15th, MEPs Elmar Brok and Andrey Kovatchev, who are members of the European People’s Party, sent a letter of protest to the President of VMRO-DPMNE, Nikola Gruevski, regarding the attacks by “Stop Operation Soros” (SOS), which the initiative say are close to the government of “the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia”.
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Έτσι λοιπόν ο Γκρουέφσκι τώρα βρίσκεται στην Ουγγαρία και ζητά άσυλο!Ex-Macedonian PM Gruevski Accuses Soros of Formenting Country's Political Crisis
12.02.2017
Former Macedonian Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski said the Open Society Foundations of the US-Hungarian billionaire George Soros and other foreign actors are responsible for the ongoing political crisis in the country.
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Ορμπάν-Γκρουέφσκι ενωμένοι, ποτέ νικημένοι!
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ΥΓ. ακολουθεί μία σχετική είδηση η οποία δε προβλήθηκε από τα ελληνικά ΜΜΕ τόσο, ούτε έχει γίνει αντικείμενο περαιτέρω σχολιασμού:
Και επειδή μπορεί να θεωρηθεί η παραπάνω πηγή κάπως φιλοσορική, ας δούμε τι ακολούθησε, σύμφωνα με τη σελίδα του Euronews:Asylum for Macedonia's ex-PM puts Orban on spot
Hungary's government on Wednesday (14 November) confirmed that Macedonia's convicted former prime minister, Nikola Gruevski, has submitted an asylum request with authorities there, with a hearing to be granted for "security reasons."
The issue has put the spotlight again on hardline prime minister Viktor Orban, who has championed an anti-immigration policy - but has now allowed a convicted politician, and pro-Kremlin ally, to seek refuge in the country.
It is also another indication that Orban is prone to side with the Kremlin against the EU when it comes to foreign policy issues.Gruevski on Tuesday announced on Facebook that he had arrived in Budapest and sought asylum in Hungary after receiving "countless threats" on his life in the previous days.
Gruevski had been supposed to show up in jail to start a two-year sentence for abuse of office.
The ex-PM, who served from 2006-2016, has several other ongoing cases against him, including a wiretapping scandal and election fraud, which he claims to be politically motivated. Macedonian authorities had ordered his arrest on Monday.
Hungarian authorities had initially refused to comment on the issue. But on Wednesday, the government issued a statement confirming that Gruevski filed for asylum.
"The former prime minister of Macedonia has made a declaration of his intention to submit a request for refugee status in Hungary. […] Given that he was prime minister of his country for ten years, for security reasons the Hungarian authorities have allowed Mr Gruevski to have his asylum request submitted and heard at the headquarters of the Immigration and asylum office in Budapest," the statement said.
It added that Macedonia is "a strategic partner and an important ally" of Hungary, and said the assessment of the asylum request is "solely a legal issue".
Hungary has erected a fence on its southern border and introduced strict migration policies, including creating so-called transit zones at the border, where asylum seekers could file their request.
What makes Hungary's sudden openness to asylum requests unique is that Gruevski had reported that he had his passport confiscated to prevent him fleeing Macedonia.
It theoretically means he had to enter Hungary illegally, and he would have needed to file his requests at one of the two transit sites.
Hungary has also deemed Macedonia and Serbia – which lays between the two countries – 'safe countries', and 'safe countries of origins', terms that mean asylum seekers from there have to prove that the country has become unsafe for them, virtually making it impossible to claim asylum.
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Fugitive ex-FYROM prime minister Gruevski granted asylum in Hungary
By Michael-Ross Fiorentino with Reuters• last updated: 20/11/2018
Former prime minister of the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), Nikola Gruevski, has been granted asylum in Hungary, the Magyar Idok newspaper reported on Tuesday.
"Today the Republic of Hungary, and EU and NATO member states, responded positively to my previously submitted request to obtain political asylum," Gruevski wrote on his Facebook page earlier today. He cited "political persecution" in the FYROM as the reason for his request.
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