Sven Longshanks

Daily Stormer

October 23, 2014

Riot Police in Calais are demanding live ammunition to deal with the enemy troops that are stationed there waiting to invade England.

The savages are not just fighting with the locals, but have now started warring among each other, with tribes from Ethiopia battling against those from Eritrea for the most coveted turf that has the easiest route to the lorries they wish to hijack.

They are using sticks and rocks to attack each other with today, but it will be machetes and burning tyre necklaces tomorrow, with the losers being eaten for breakfast.

Daily Mail:

In the dune area of Calais, a small piece of land near the Channel Tunnel which is home to up to 2,000 migrants, violent clashes between rival ethnic groups have become an everyday occurrence. Eritreans and Ethiopians fighting over various routes into the ferry port appeared to be the principal reason for the fights, a police spokesman said. It is thought that rows with people-smugglers who charge up to £1,000 cash for passage to Britain have also contributed to the trouble. Yesterday, one Ethiopian man, who asked not to be named, said that Eritrean people smugglers were charging money for access to coveted areas for sneaking aboard lorries.

‘They are trying to charge us 500 euro (£395) to get on a lorry and they will not let us wait in the good areas where the lorries are parked,’ he said. ‘It is not fair that one group of people get access and another don’t. They cannot keep it to themselves.’ After winning control of the situation, riot police went through the motions and frisked the young men, who are mostly in their 20s, recovering various knives, sticks and rocks. The situation is becoming unbearable for local police who say that they are stretched to breaking point by the constant fights. They have demanded live ammunition rather than rubber bullets to defend themselves against the migrant gangs who they claim are becoming increasingly ‘violent’. Yesterday’s clash involved at least 200 young men. ‘We struggled for six hours to stop them fighting last night [Monday] and today there are more disturbances,’ said police union spokesman Gilles Debove. He said that ten injured youths were taken to hospital. Last summer, violent clashes between Eritrean and Sudanese migrants led to more than 70 people being injured. Gangs of young men fought running battles with police who fired tear gas and brandished shields and batons in an attempt to disperse them. The disagreement was again over access to prized areas where it is easier to board lorries.

They don’t just need live ammunition, they need people there specifically trained in defending their country.

This is an invasion and it needs to be treated like one, the savages would soon stop coming if they were being drone bombed or picked-off by army snipers.