Spain in uproar after illegal immigrants assault pensioner

Last week’s assault by Moroccans on 68-year-old Spaniard Domingo Tomás (above) will remind many H&D readers of the infamous assault by Asians in 2001 on 75-year-old Walter Chamberlain (below). The latest incident in Spain, like the Oldham attack 24 years ago, has led to riots between locals and immigrants.

Already facing a political crisis over allegations of widespread government corruption, Spain is now confronted by an epidemic of immigrant crime.

Following last week’s riots in the historic city of Alcalá de Henares, where a 22-year-old Spanish woman was raped by an African from Mali who lives at a gigantic processing centre for illegal immigrants, the latest outrage was in Torre Pacheco, near Murcia on the south-east coast.

This small town of about 35,000 inhabitants now comprises about one-third illegal immigrants, mainly from North Africa.

Moroccans in Torre Pacheco recently attacked 68-year-old local man, Domingo Tomás. The incident will remind many H&D readers of the brutal assault by Asians in 2001 on the Oldham pensioner Walter Chamberlain – a crime which within weeks contributed to the most serious race riots of the 21st century.

Similarly there have already been two nights of rioting in Torre Pacheco – and just as in Oldham, liberals and leftists have blamed local Whites rather than the real criminals.

Against the background of these two nights of rioting, H&D correspondent Isabel Peralta addressed a meeting in central Madrid which launched the new headquarters of Núcleo Nacional, a movement which aims to unite disparate factions of Spanish patriots in the common cause of defending their people at this time of crisis.

Calling for a determined response to the present threats to the identity of the Spanish nation and the identity of Europe, Isabel affirmed that Spain and Europe now need young people of unbreakable will and souls ardent to do their duty for their homeland’s future.
“That’s why I ask you for more than enthusiasm – for dedication. More than words, actions. To plough a furrow rather than follow a trend. Let each of us ask ourselves at the end of each day, whether that day has contributed to the eternal cause of our people.
“And if one day you feel tired, or alone, or misunderstood, remember that we shall be judged by the eternal tribunal of history, and that all who have done something worthy of being remembered had to fight against the world, even when they were fighting in the interests of the world”.

Heritage and Destiny is proud to present this latest speech by our great comrade Isabel Peralta, with English subtitles so as best to reach our readers in the Anglosphere.
Isabel is fighting for the true European cause: the cause that unites not only European nations, but also Europeans in the worldwide diaspora.

Spain is this month at the forefront of the battle for European identity against alien invaders. Arriba España! Arriba Europa!

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