"Slovakia as a Christian nation can truly help Christians from Syria to locate another home in Slovakia," said Ivan Netik, the Inside Service representative, as refered to by Reuters.
"In Slovakia we have truly little group of Muslims. We even don't have mosques," he included.
The representative focused on that Roman Catholic Slovakia would not acknowledge haven seekers, who have no arrangements to settle there and who view it as "just a travel nation."
As indicated by the representative, Slovakia will have a hundred individuals from displaced person camps in Turkey and pretty much the same number of from Italian camps.
"It would be a false, contemptible solidarity on the off chance that we took people...who would prefer not to live in Slovakia," he said.
Netik focused on that the Slovakian powers "don't victimize any religion," including that Muslim displaced people wouldn't be mistreated in any capacity on the off chance that they choose to move to the nation.
His words have by the by incited a reaction among EU government officials and authorities.
"We act all in the letter and the soul of the settlement, which keeps any type of segregation," Annika Breidthardt, European Commission representative, answered when requested that remark on Slovakia's position.
The Board of Europe Secretary-General, Thorbjorn Jagland, required the Slovakian government's approach to be switched.
"Denying outcasts on the grounds of their religion would be a glaring segregation. Particularly, amid this phenomenal outcast emergency, there must be no spot for xenophobia and separation. Europe must show solidarity with these defenseless individuals," Jagland said in an announcement.

The 200 evacuees that Slovakia is prepared take are a drop in the sea contrasted with the 60,000 individuals that are to be settled in the EU as a major aspect of European Commission arrangement.
There were at that point fierce challenges in Slovakia against the EU arrangements to settle evacuees in the nation, with a hundred individuals captured after hostile to movement nonconformists burnt squad cars in capital Bratislava in June.
Slovakia's position is shared by neighbors from Czech Republic, with its leader, Milos Zeman, likewise saying that he would lean toward Christian transients over Muslims.


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