Hordes
of drunk, predatory migrants have turned an Austrian train station into
a 'no-go zone' for local women, who dub the station 'The Terminus of
Fear'.
Linz
Station has become a gathering point for migrants rejected by Germany
at the border a few miles away - drawn to its free internet, cheap
drink, fast-food joints and heated passenger halls as they calculate
their next move.
But
pack mentality has set in, creating a 'Cologne-light' mentality, which
sees women subjected to having their breasts and buttocks grabbed and
the alcohol-fuelled men try to steal kisses, all the while slurring lewd
sexual insults in pidgin German.
The
men fight, they fall down, the vomit, they defecate in the bushes on
the greensward outside the station entrance, women told MailOnline.
No-go: Hordes of
drunk, predatory migrants have turned an Austrian train station into a
'no-go zone' for local women, who dub the station 'The Terminus of Fear'
Threat: Linz station is a gathering
point for migrants rejected by Germany at the border a few miles away -
drawn to its free internet, cheap drink, fast-food joints as they
calculate their next move
Defiant: Young mother Vanessa Zellner,
22, hugs her daughter Caitlyn, four, outside the station as she waited
to collect a friend. She said she would not risk going to Linz at night
but has not had a bad experience herself
One
woman interviewed by MailOnline outside was too frightened to give her
name. But in terse sentences, delivered in the staccato of a firing
machine gun, she said: '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. How dare they make my station a place
of fear.'
Police
or any other local authority have refused to identify the troublesome
migrants. They are collectively referred to as North Africans, citizens
of countries like Algeria, Tunisia and Morocco that are now no longer
considered danger zones by Germany.
But
one senior lawman told MailOnline that the majority of the
troublemakers turning the concourse into a no-go zone for females at
night are from one country; Morocco.
The
Linz problem was highlighted in an embarrassing - for the bureaucrats
at least - letter by a father of a 16-year-old girl to the local
governor Josef Puehringer.
Identified only as Franz H., he said: 'My
daughter is 16 and is terrified when she has to come through Linz train
station in the evening.
Letter: The Linz
problem was highlighted in a letter by a father girl, 16, to local
governor Josef Puehringer. 'My daughter is 16 and is terrified when she
has to come through Linz train station in the evening,' he wrote
Lockdown: As a result of the letter
and reports of increases in the number of migrants at the station,
police patrols have been stepped up to prevent crime
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