Third World migrants are a “poison” which will destroy Europe, and the European Union (EU) is a bigger threat to European survival than Mecca, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has announced.

“Migration is a threat, and will increase crime and terrorism. On a mass scale it is changing the face of Europe’s culture and will destroy all national cultures,” he said.

During a press conference with Austrian chancellor Christian Kern, Orbán declared that “migrants are poison” and “not needed.”

“Hungary does not need a single migrant for the economy to work, or the population to sustain itself, or for the country to have a future,” Orbán said.

“This is why there is no need for a common European migration policy: whoever needs migrants can take them, but don’t force them on us, we don’t need them.”

Referring to the string of refugee-terrorist attacks in western Europe, Orbán added that “every single migrant means a public safety and terror risk.”

He also revealed that over 8,000 Hungarian policemen are continuously deployed in the Hungarian-Serbian border, at great expense, to “protect Europe.”

Orbán’s comments are bound to further exacerbate tensions between the Visegrad 4 nations and the liberal western European leaders, and come only three days after he gave a lecture at the 27th Bálványos Summer University, which also dealt with the Third World invasion and the European Union (EU).

In that speech, Orbán linked the refugee-terrorist attacks in Germany and France to the “march of thousands of migrants” last year to Germany.

“Migration is a threat, and will increase crime and terrorism. On a mass scale it is changing the face of Europe’s culture and will destroy all national cultures,” he said.

Orbán said that “steel resolve” was going to be needed to defend Europe’s borders, given the population growth in the Third World.

“Egypt’s population will grow from 90 million to 138 million by 2050, Nigeria from 186 million to 390 million, Uganda from 38 million to 93 million, and Ethiopia from 102 million to 228 million,” he said.

“The real pressure will reach Europe from Africa,” he said. “Today we are talking about Syria, Libya, but in reality we should expect pressure from the population of the region behind Libya, and its magnitude is much greater than what has been experienced to date.

“This warns us that we must steel our wills with regard to border protection. This thing must be faced down because migration on this scale will kill us.”

On this issue, he said, Europe’s current political leadership has failed. “We should be clear that our problem is not in Mecca, but in Brussels. The bureaucrats in Brussels are the obstacles, not Islam.”

Even if the EU considered a policy of “slowing down” the immigration flows, this would not be good enough. “It has to be stopped,” he said.

Orbán also laid down fierce criticism of the EU, its structure, and the leadership of western Europe.

He said that the “European dream” of the previous fifty years was that “young people, who go to school, respect the laws, respect their parents, and work diligently, can be assured that they would be better off than their parents.”

“What is the experience today? If I tell young English, German, or French young people that if they obey the law, honor their parents, go to school and work, they will be better off than their parents, then they will laugh at you.”

“This promise of a European way of life has been shattered and lost, and there are serious consequences.”

However, in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, and Poland there is no economic crisis, he continued. “For the young people in those countries, the old European dream is still valid: if they obey the law, if they honor their parents, if they work diligently, they will definitely live better than their parents and get ahead.

“This European dream, and this new Europe, is still valid in Central Europe.”

He also condemned the EU for increasing the power of the European Parliament, and said that the European Commission, “contrary to what the European treaty specifies,” now acts in a political manner to replace the work of the European Council, which is the body made up of European prime ministers.

Orbán said that the European Commission had overridden decisions taken by the European Council, particularly with regard to the “mandatory quota policy”—the plan to force EU member states to accept the “distribution” of the invaders Merkel invited into Germany.

Orbán said the powers taken by the European Commission—“which no one elected”—creates “a democratic legitimacy crisis within the body of the European Union.”

He then went on to endorse Donald Trump’s suggestions for combating the problem, saying that Trump’s ideas “could hardly be better worded by any European [politician].”

These suggestions were to beef up the intelligence services, and stop “exporting democracy” to the Third World.

He pointed out that interference in Libya, Syria, and Iraq, by the West and the EU, had just caused chaos—and that the collapse of orderly government in Libya had precipitated the mass invasion of Europe from over the Mediterranean Sea.