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Russia wanted to deport the Muslims in Eastern Europe but was confronted and stopped by the United Kingdom and others.

 

After the Russo-Turkish War, Russia wanted to deport the Muslim Albanians (they had historically referred to themselves as Turks) and take back Constantinople. During the Congress of Berlin - Russia presented 61 articles. At this time, Russia was in a weakened state militarily after the long war with the Ottoman Empire. Britain secretly agreed with the Ottoman Empire that it would militarily protect it from Russia and receives Cyprus in exchange. Disraeli therefore reversed article 16 to 61.

3. The Beneš decrees – The deportation of Germans from Czechoslovakia (1940-45)[2]

 

It is possible that those Western countries where the infidels are strong enough will copy the Benes Decrees from Czechoslovakia in 1946, when most of the so-called Sudeten Germans, some 3.5 million people, had shown themselves to be a dangerous fifth column without any loyalty to the state. The Czech government thus expelled them from its land. As Hugh Fitzgerald of Jihad Watch has demonstrated, there is a much better case for a Benes Decree for parts of the Muslim population in the West now than there ever was for the Sudeten Germans.

 

 

4. The Bărăgan deportations[3]

 

The Bărăgan deportations were a large-scale action of penal transportation, undertaken during the 1950s by the Romanian Communist regime. Their aim was to forcibly relocate individuals who lived within approximately 25 km of the Yugoslav border (in present-day Timiş, Caraş-Severin, and Mehedinţi counties) to the Bărăgan Plain.

 

The plans involved, as was later discovered in a document written in Timişoara in 1956, the "purification of the Banat": the ethnic cleansing of Germans, Serbs and Aromanians. Additionally, the plans involved the expulsion of members of several social categories considered dangerous by the Romanian Communist Party. Among the targets were farmers with large holdings (known as chiaburi, and roughly equivalent to the Soviet kulaks), wealthy landowners, industrialists, innkeepers and restaurant owners, Bessarabian and Macedonian refugees, former members of the Wehrmacht, foreign citizens, relatives of the refugees, Titoist sympathisers, wartime collaborators of Nazi Germany (see Romania during World War II), Romanian Army employees, fired civil servants, relatives of counter-revolutionaries and all who had supported them, political and civic rights activists, former businessmen with Western ties, and leaders of the ethnic German community.

 

 

Further studies on deportations:

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Deportation

 

1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Population_transfer_in_the_Soviet_Union

2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benes_Decrees

3. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baragan_deportations

 

5. Expulsion of the Moriscos from Spain[1] (Muslim converts to Christianity)

 

Spain deported approximately 315 000 Moriscos to Northern Africa in the period 1609-1614.



 

I would strongly recommend anyone to study the Morisco expulsion at it covers many essential issues.

 

1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expulsion_of_the_Moriscos

 


Date: 2015-12-17; view: 599


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