Elon Musk Warns of 'Inevitable Civil War in Europe'

© AP Photo / Zurab TsertsvadzeGeorgian opponents of gay rights burn LGBT and EU flags as they try to interfere a pride party in Tbilisi, Georgia, Saturday, July 8, 2023. Hundreds of opponents of gay rights on Saturday swarmed the site of an LGBT festival in the capital of the country of Georgia, vandalizing the stage, setting fires and looting the event's bar.
Georgian opponents of gay rights burn LGBT and EU flags as they try to interfere a pride party in Tbilisi, Georgia, Saturday, July 8, 2023. Hundreds of opponents of gay rights on Saturday swarmed the site of an LGBT festival in the capital of the country of Georgia, vandalizing the stage, setting fires and looting the event's bar. - Sputnik Africa, 1920, 11.10.2023
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MOSCOW (Sputnik) - In June, after years of negotiations, the EU reached an agreement to reform its migration policy. Under the proposed system, member states that refuse to take in qualified migrants would be required to pay 20,000 euros ($21,700) per person into an EU refugee fund.
US billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk on Tuesday warned of "inevitable civil war in Europe" if the European Union does not change its migration policies.
"If current trends continue, civil war in Europe is inevitable," Musk replied on X (formerly known as Twitter) to a post by a user on the topic.
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has earlier said that all EU countries had agreed on the need to fight illegal migration at Europe's external borders.
In early October, the Council of the European Union said it had sealed a deal on a new common asylum and migration policy aimed at resolving crisis situations related to migration.
The new law establishes a framework that would allow the bloc's member states to adjust certain rules, including those concerning asylum registration or applications, in the event of an unexpected influx of asylum seekers.
The regulation includes, among other things, a clause on solidarity with EU member states facing a migration crisis, which involves the relocation of asylum seekers from a country in a crisis situation to other EU member states, the council's statement added.
In June, after years of negotiations, the EU reached an agreement to reform its migration policy. Under the proposed system, member states that refuse to take in qualified migrants would be required to pay 20,000 euros ($21,700) per person into an EU refugee fund.
Poland was one of two nations to vote against the plan.
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