Abascal advocates for "putting down all the desolators who bring hatred”

The president of Vox, Santiago Abascal, advocated this Tuesday to kill "all the heartless people who bring hatred, pain and death" after the Brussels police killed the alleged perpetrator of the attack that yesterday cost the lives of two people in the Belgian capital.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
16 October 2023 Monday 22:24
3 Reads
Abascal advocates for "putting down all the desolators who bring hatred”

The president of Vox, Santiago Abascal, advocated this Tuesday to kill "all the heartless people who bring hatred, pain and death" after the Brussels police killed the alleged perpetrator of the attack that yesterday cost the lives of two people in the Belgian capital.

"We must bring down, yes, all the heartless people who bring hatred, pain and death," Abascal wrote on the social network X, formerly Twitter, in response to the police action. "And if possible, they must be killed before they kill a single innocent person. In Barcelona, ​​in Brussels or in Israel," added the far-right leader, who has warned that "first they must be prevented from entering, and they must be held responsible." who have opened the doors to them".

Following these events, Vox has demanded this Tuesday the suspension of all procedures for granting Spanish nationality to foreigners from Islamic cultures "due to the high risk in which the safety of Spaniards and of Europeans in general".

"It is unbearable," Abascal wrote when the Brussels attacks became known. "Not one more fundamentalist immigrant in Europe. Not one more radical mosque. Not one more euro to the human trafficking mafias. Not one more lesson from those who bring them. Not one more ghetto," insisted the president of Vox, who called his followers to "defend Europe now from this scourge". "Multiculturalism is suicide," he declared.

This Tuesday, Vox spokesperson in Congress, Pepa Millán, who has called the media to announce that her group has presented a non-legal proposal to paralyze nationality files, has assured that yesterday's attack in Brussels can be repeated in Spain, because "the conditions are in place for this", since the Government is allowing people with expulsion orders to "free range". According to Millán, the Brussels attack is a "natural consequence" of "what happens when all mechanisms fail" and of the "open door" policies that have turned European capitals into "ghettos" where Islamic law prevails.

He stressed that the terrorist who killed the two Swedish tourists had been residing illegally in the Belgian capital for five years, had an expulsion order and entered Europe by "the same illegal means that 23,000 people have entered so far this year." in the Canary Islands".