A Swedish countess whose mother is Hungarian has decided to relocate to Hungary because the flood of migrants was made life unsafe in Sweden, particularly for women. After she explained her decision in a TV interview, Countess Natalie was doxxed and her life was threatened. Now she has former soldiers as bodyguards.

Many thanks to CrossWare for the translation, and to Vlad Tepes for the subtitling:

An article on the same topic, also translated by CrossWare, was published by the Hungarian news site 888.hu:

Video transcript:

00:00 You moved back to Hungary after how long?

00:04 Or more accurately, you were born in Sweden but after a long time you decided

00:08 to move to Hungary. How much time passed? —40 years.

00:12 Why? …

00:16 Because of the circumstances. The things happening in Sweden.

00:20 There is no safety at all.

00:24 With all those migrants they let into the country,

00:28 unfortunately the situation got worse.

00:32 So now it is in an unfortunate state.

00:36 For example, you can’t travel during the daytime on the metro in Stockholm,

00:40 where I lived, because the migrants sexually molest the women,

00:44 and nobody helps, the police do not come out.

00:48 You might sit in a coffee house during the daytime, and suddenly

00:52 five or six migrants run in, about 15 or 16 years old,

00:56 young boys, and threaten you with a knife.

01:00 They take your mobile phone and your bag.

01:04 The opportunity for work is becoming problematic, too.

01:08 There is no longer as much potential

01:12 as there was before. A lot of Swedes do not get jobs,

01:16 because they were given to them [the migrants].

01:20 I had a hard time finding a job in a hospital

01:24 last year in Stockholm, to be a student to become a medical doctor.

01:28 Finally I was lucky, and I got an opportunity, but

01:32 about 80% of my colleagues are migrants, Muslims,

01:36 from the doctor to the nurse, everyone. — Is this Stockholm?

01:40 Yes, in Stockholm, and this is a very famous university hospital,

01:44 the Karolinska and the Danderyds [hospitals], and a lot of

01:48 Swedish doctors can’t get a job in Sweden — they have to go

01:52 to Norway. A lot of Swedish nurses who

01:56 work in the hospital leave their jobs, because

02:00 they get sexually molested, even in the workplace,

02:04 so they leave their job. —These are confirmed cases? Yes, they are.

02:08 That is what is so sad and outrageous in Sweden. And that is the reason I am sitting here today.

02:12 Because these facts are not allowed to come out, but kept quiet.

02:16 These facts are only known there, locally.

02:20 On the television or in the newspapers, but not

02:24 reaching anyone outside. —What you mean, kept quiet?

02:28 It’s not coming out, so that other countries like yours,

02:32 the Hungarians, would be able to see

02:36 what is happening daily in Sweden.

02:40 This information never gets out, and they restrict

02:44 what can come out and what cannot.

02:48 When something happens every day in Stockholm,

02:52 more than 50% of the cases are not even mentioned in the news,

02:56 not printed in the newspapers, and this is a fact.

03:00 What kind of negative experiences did you have there?

03:04 Would you be able to share a couple with us? —Well, I am very sad,

03:08 because I grew up there, I am half Hungarian on my mother’s side.

03:12 I visited Hungary often, because I look at this country

03:16 as my homeland, too; I always loved to come here.

03:20 I was planning to come here to live next year, but my plans were accelerated.

03:24 And that is why I am here now, and why I moved home permanently.

03:28 The main reason is safety; that is why I am here.

03:32 It is sad when someone must leave a country

03:36 because they are not protected.

03:40 That is very sad, and I am not the only one

03:44 who had to leave Sweden. Many of my friends and acquaintances who left

03:48 Sweden — at the moment, there are some [friends]

03:52 who are planning to leave: families with children,

03:56 because in the schools the teachers are threatened with knives.

04:00 This is a daily thing, what is happening. It is not safe

04:04 for kids to enter the schools; they are not safe on the streets;

04:08 they are being robbed in broad daylight. They [migrants] threw

04:12 [Molotov] cocktails into houses and burned them down.

04:16 There were some families who died in circumstances like that;

04:20 that is a daily occurrence.

04:24 In Europe, and in Hungary, we only heard about

04:28 one actual case, and that is the Stockholm terror attack.

04:32 That was only a single attack, but there are more happening in the whole

04:36 country. There is Gothenburg:

04:40 yesterday they shot two men in broad daylight

04:44 on the street. You know nothing about that.

04:48 Malmö: shootings happen there every day.

04:52 You do not hear about that, either.

04:56 Yes, the only one you officially know about is what happened in Stockholm, but

05:00 you do not know what the people who live there go through every day,

05:04 in the workplace, in school, on the street.

05:08 If you go into a mall,

05:12 they come in and they [migrants] shoot… they hit you,

05:16 they threaten you. —For how long have you experienced such things?

05:20 Well… in the

05:24 last two to three years, drastically

05:28 more and more.

05:32 Things like this started happening. Before that, I did not see

05:36 or experience them. Yes, over the last two to three years.

05:40 —Is this a topic of conversations among the locals,

05:44 between Swedes? What they say to one another?

05:48 The problem is, nobody says anything, because they are afraid;

05:52 the people are afraid of them. Because if I

05:56 say something to a man who tries to sexually molest me…

06:00 On one morning it happened, when I was going…

06:04 I wanted to take the metro [subway] to the hospital,

06:08 and a man attacked me —

06:12 that was an immigrant man — and

06:16 I called out for help and nobody came, everybody was afraid.

06:20 That’s the problem. —But obviously there were some other men around you? —Yes, there were,

06:24 but they were just standing there looking, because there was a case where

06:28 they tried to intervene, and got stabbed for it.

06:32 They are afraid for their own lives. If someone calls the police,

06:36 the police say they will not come out, because they do not have the time for this.

06:40 I was able to run away from the place;

06:44 the problem was “solved”, but… I got lucky, but

06:48 there were girls, who were attacked and raped.

06:52 I got lucky, but the situation is that

06:56 the police are NOT COMING OUT!

07:00 Not too long ago, when a couple of [migrant] youngsters were riding around on their motorbikes

07:04 in a city and started throwing

07:08 explosives in the streets, people got scared,

07:12 and it also could have caused injury, if one of them hits you. People called the police

07:16 to come and they said:

07:20 We must understand them, because they come from a war-torn country,

07:24 and they are not mentally healthy, so just leave them be,

07:28 while the people should just go into a store or coffeehouse and ask for protection.

07:32 They do not come out. —Who said that to you? —The police.

07:36 The police are not coming out.

07:40 And police officers are leaving their jobs; this is a huge problem in Sweden now.

07:44 But in the media, in the newspapers in Sweden,

07:48 in the local news they say that they are leaving

07:52 their jobs because they are not protected, either.

07:56 Now they are building mosques in every city.

08:00 That is one thing, but next they want to broadcast

08:04 the imam’s call on huge loudspeakers

08:08 in their… how you say it…

08:12 the calls of their Islamic faith.

08:16 And they want everybody to listen to that every single morning.

08:20 You’re talking about the mosques, right? The mosques?

08:24 I do not know. I have never been a racist, and I am still

08:28 not a racist, but this is about forcing on us

08:32 people whose behavior is not acceptable.

08:36 Because they [migrants] terrorize and threaten us;

08:40 they take away our jobs.

08:44 There is no public safety. We live in fear.

08:48 This is not normal behavior; this is what it is all about.

08:52 This does not match with our

08:56 life [meaning culture], into our life.

09:00 They get everything from apartments to money, and

09:04 they have no honor;

09:08 moreover they turn against those who helped them. —Does Sweden help the refugees?

09:12 For example, with social accommodations? Yes, of course.

09:16 Sweden is still a rich country, and they have the potential to help

09:20 and in the past they had to accept them,

09:24 because they could place them. They were given apartments;

09:28 they were given money to live on,

09:32 until they could be placed in jobs.

09:36 The children were able to go to schools, but even then

09:40 they did not appreciate all that, and turned against us.

09:44 You suddenly decided to come home, but did you leave everybody else in your family there,

09:48 and why? And what is their opinion?

09:52 Some of my family are still in Sweden;

09:56 others have already left the country, so I am not the only one.

10:00 I have two family members who

10:04 moved to Australia; there is one

10:08 who moved to the USA. Among my friends,

10:12 most of them are moving abroad, too.

10:16 Not many of my family and friends who

10:20 will be staying in Sweden. Why did you decide

10:24 on Hungary? —Hungary today

10:28 is the safest.

10:32 Still… still. What is your basis for that?

10:36 Because the laws are different.

10:40 You did not let them in, into the country,

10:44 not like other countries. They are not here,

10:48 like in Sweden or Germany, or like we could see Vienna,

10:52 in Austria, what kind of things are happening.

10:56 That is why Hungary is safe, because they [migrants] are not here.

11:00 And as long as I am alive, I would like to live in peace.

11:04 I do not have to be afraid and look left, right and behind me

11:08 in my workplace, and can travel on the metro

11:12 without fear. I could go into my workplace and feel safe,

11:16 … how to say it…

11:20 The situation has changed so much,

11:24 because a lot of people are thinking: we will go there,

11:28 where the country is rich, where there are job opportunities,

11:32 where there is a lot of money, I can get a better income, my life will be better,

11:36 but when you have no protection… no protection —

11:40 there is no safety, how much