GETTY Violent gangs of migrants have turned Linz Station into place of fear

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Migrants rejected at Germany are now gathering in nearby Linz Station where they can enjoy cheap food and booze, warm passenger lounges and free wifi before they plan their next move to cross the borders into Britain. But now it has been dubbed the "Terminus of fear” because women have claimed they are subjected to sickening assaults which echo the New Year’s Eve Cologne sex attacks. The rowdy men are said to fight amongst each other, fall and vomit while toileting in the bushes outside the station entrance.

GETTY Migrants are allegedly grabbing and attacking women at the station

One woman fumed “how dare they make my station a place of fear?”

Come here at night? I would rather order a taxi straight to hell Austrian woman

Describing the migrants as "predators", she went on: “Come here at night? I would rather order a taxi straight to hell. “What's it like? It is terrible. Fearful. I would say shameful. They are predators, they are drunk and they are all over the place. “ I hate what they have turned this into. I am a decent person, I am not a Nazi, not a hater of people. But they have no right to behave the way they do in my city. Or anywhere.

GETTY Police have now stepped up their presence at the station

“How dare they make my station a place of fear.” A 16-year-old added: “Come down here at night? You must be joking. We have heard how women have to be escorted on to trains, how migrants are raping people. "I don't want that to happen to me.” Police officials have described the men as North African citizens from countries including Tunisia, Morocco and Algeria. The father of a 16-year-old girl has also written a concerned letter to the local governor Josef Puehringer.

GETTY Passengers and commuters now fear the station dubbing it as a 'Terminus of fear'

He wrote: “My daughter is 16 and is terrified when she has to come through Linz train station in the evening. “As a result, we have now arranged a travel group with other parents. My wife and I went to see it for ourselves. We travelled the same route that our daughter did and we found out that it was even worse than she described. “There was not a policeman in sight and in a country like Austria it cannot be the case that our children are scared going to and from work.” Police have now stepped up their presence at the station.

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