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    Don't let Muslim migrants in, says Bulgaria's Orthodox Church

    AFP•September 26, 2015
    Syrian refugees and migrants gather near the highway on their way to the border between Turkey and Bulgaria in the northwestern Turkish city of Edirne on September 15, 2015
    Syrian refugees and migrants gather near the highway on their way to the border between Turkey and Bulgaria in the northwestern Turkish city of Edirne on September 15, 2015 (AFP Photo/Bulent Kilic)

    Sofia (AFP) - Bulgaria's Orthodox Church has called on its government not to let any more Muslim refugees into the country to prevent an "invasion".

    The Balkan EU member has largely been bypassed by the hundreds of thousands of refugees fleeing conflict and poverty, many of whom set off from Greece through neighbouring Macedonia and Serbia towards northern Europe.

    But Bulgaria has still seen Syrians, Afghans and Iraqis cross its southeastern border from Turkey.

    "We help refugees who have already arrived in our motherland, but the government must absolutely not let more refugees in," the church -- which claims 80 percent of the population as its followers -- said late Friday on its website.

    "This is a wave that looks like an invasion."

    It added that the problems in the refugees' countries of origin "must be resolved by those who created them and the Bulgarian people must not pay the price by disappearing."

    About 13 percent of Bulgaria's population are Muslims, including ethnic Turks, Bulgarians who converted to Islam during five centuries of Ottoman rule, and some Roma.

    Bulgaria was accused of trying to ethnically cleanse its Muslims shortly before communism fell in 1989, when around 360,000 Muslim Bulgarians fled to Turkey. Nearly half later returned when the country embraced democracy.

    Europe's worst migration crisis since World War II has sparked concern in some quarters, as many of those taking the perilous journey are Muslim.

    In France, several mayors said they would only take in Christian refugees, earning them a rebuke from the government.

    The issue has played into the hands of the far-right across Europe, which hopes to turn fears of an "invasion" into electoral success.

    Bulgaria's Prime Minister Boyko Borisov said Friday he was "concerned" over a potential massive influx of migrants in the coming months.

    "I'm scared and the Bulgarian people are scared, if only where religions are concerned. We are Christian, they are Muslim."


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