Anonymous ID: 3e798d Nov. 27, 2018, 12:12 p.m. No.4050674   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0683 >>0693 >>0848

Human Sacrifices in Greece

 

Greek diplomats were issuing visas to unaccompanied children in order to facilitate illegal removal of their organs, "but the press did not write about them." — Nikos Kotzias, Greece's former Minister of Foreign Affairs, in an interview on November 20, 2018.

 

There are currently 3,050 unaccompanied children in Greece, and 1,272 of them (42%) are either homeless, or they live in a non-permanent residence or in an unknown location, according to the newspaper Kathimerini. They all face the risks of sexual exploitation and illicit organ removal.

 

"The Trafficking in Persons Protocol states that if the victim is a child, that is a person below the age of 18, consent is irrelevant regardless of whether any improper means (such as deception, force, abuse of a position of vulnerability) have been used." — United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.

 

https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13346/greece-organ-trafficking

Anonymous ID: 3e798d Nov. 27, 2018, 1:09 p.m. No.4051335   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Try to not laught at this anons

 

https://edition.cnn.com/interactive/2018/11/europe/antisemitism-poll-2018-intl/

 

CNN : A Shadow Over Europe

 

nti-Semitic stereotypes are alive and well in Europe, while the memory of the Holocaust is starting to fade, a sweeping new survey by CNN reveals. More than a quarter of Europeans polled believe Jews have too much influence in business and finance. Nearly one in four said Jews have too much influence in conflict and wars across the world.

 

One in five said they have too much influence in the media and the same number believe they have too much influence in politics.

 

Meanwhile, a third of Europeans in the poll said they knew just a little or nothing at all about the Holocaust, the mass murder of some six million Jews in lands controlled by Adolf Hitler’s Nazi regime in the 1930s and 1940s.

 

Those are among the key findings of a survey carried out by pollster ComRes for CNN. The CNN/ComRes poll interviewed more than 7,000 people across Europe, with more than 1,000 respondents each in Austria, France, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, Poland and Sweden.