Spanish police fear Islamist terrorists are taking advantage of left-wing PM’s decision to open the door to 500,000 migrants and creating fake identities

Spanish police fear Islamist terrorists are taking advantage of left-wing PM’s decision to open the door to 500,000 migrants and creating fake identities

Spanish police have warned that Islamist terrorists could exploit the government’s mass migrant legalisation programme, as reports of lost passports and identity documents surge among applicants.

Spain’s socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez approved a major initiative last month to grant legal status to half a million undocumented individuals, causing significant political backlash and triggering a ‘collapse’ in social services across the country.

And now, an internal memo from the National Police’s General Commissariat for Immigration and Borders revealed that complaints over missing documents have continued to rise sharply among migrants seeking to benefit from the scheme.

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The Reconquista Reversed

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, whose wife has recently been charged with corruption, is having his way with the destiny of his homeland. A socialist and social engineer at heart, he reserves the right to legalize a civilian invasion by Muslims.

So far, the Muslim population has swollen to an estimated 2.4 to 2.5 million souls—roughly 5% of the nation’s total—fueled overwhelmingly by immigration from North Africa, above all Morocco, which accounts for 65% of the Muslim immigrant cohort. These communities cluster with ominous symbolic precision in the ancient strongholds of al-Andalus: Andalusia and Granada alone shelter some 400,000 Muslims, while Madrid, that later-born capital, now harbors 100,000. Fertility differentials compound the shift; children born to at least one Muslim parent represented 11% of all Spanish births in 2024, a rate that mocks the anemic native birth figures.

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No 10 says Falklands sovereignty rests with UK after report of US ‘review’ … No means to expel Spain from NATO

No 10 says Falklands sovereignty rests with UK after report of US ‘review’ … No means to expel Spain from NATO

Sovereignty of the Falkland Islands “rests with the UK”, Downing Street has said, following a report the US could review its position on Britain’s claim to the territory.

An internal Pentagon email reported by Reuters suggested the US was considering options to punish Nato allies it believed failed to support its war on Iran.

The options discussed also included seeking Spain’s suspension from Nato over its opposition to war.

Asked about the report, a No 10 spokesman said: “The Falkland Islands have hugely voted overwhelmingly in favour of remaining a UK overseas territory, and we’ve always stood behind the islanders’ right to self-determination and the fact that sovereignty rests with the UK.”

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Spain’s Pedro Sánchez and His Extremist Problem

When the United States and Israel launched their joint operation against the Iranian regime this month, the geopolitical map of the Middle East shifted within hours. Iran’s leadership, strategic targets, command centers of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, ballistic missile launchers and nuclear facilities have been targeted in coordinated strikes aimed at dismantling Tehran’s terror machine.

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“Starmer is No Churchill”: Trump Ramps Up Attack on PM

Donald Trump tonight launched an extraordinary attack on Sir Keir Starmer, saying: ‘This is not Winston Churchill we are dealing with.’

The US President delivered a withering verdict on the Prime Minister as he continued to fume at Sir Keir for failing to back US and Israeli strikes on Iran.

In comments that immediately plunged the so-called ‘special relationship’ into an unprecedented crisis, Mr Trump declared that he was ‘not happy’ with the PM and accused him of being ‘very, very uncooperative’.


Spain is on the outs …

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Spain’s Government: Spinning Out of Control

Between corruption and radicalization, Spain’s government seems to be spinning out of control.

In 1936, Spain plunged into civil war. A proud nation collapsed into violence, fire, and devastation. The Spanish Civil War, which set a communist-dominated Republican left against an authoritarian nationalist right, claimed roughly half a million lives. Priests were dragged through the streets, beaten, and mutilated — ears, noses, even genitals cut off — before being shot or having their throats slit. Nuns were raped prior to execution, in cases documented across several regions. Churches were set ablaze with priests still inside. In many towns, militiamen forced clergy to drink motor oil or gasoline before burning them alive. Spain’s right wing, not to be outdone, killed just as many.

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Spain has just flung open Europe’s borders

In 2015, Europe experienced its most significant wave of inward migration since the Second World War. German chancellor Angela Merkel responded by unilaterally opening her nation’s borders, without consulting her own people or her European neighbours. More than a decade on, the impact of that migrant crisis has yet to subside. EU countries, from Germany to the Nordics, are still struggling to integrate new arrivals and process asylum claims. Support for populist and right-wing parties has spread like wildfire across the continent.

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Spanish plan to give 500,000 migrants residency prompts backlash

Muslims Invade Spain Redux

The Socialist government defends the move to allow undocumented immigrants to work but the right-wing opposition says the policy will accelerate ‘invasion’

A political row has erupted in Spain over the government’s decision to grant residency to about 500,000 undocumented migrants.

The move sharply diverges from tougher immigration policies taking hold elsewhere in Europe and the United States.

Scheduled to be approved by decree, as Spain’s minority Socialist-led coalition lacks a majority in parliament, the plan will allow eligible migrants to obtain up to one year of residency and a work permit.

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Spain gives 500,000 undocumented migrants legal status as left-wing government is accused of ‘hating’ Spaniards and ‘accelerating an invasion’

Spain’s left-wing government has approved a plan to grant legal status to around 500,000 undocumented migrants – a move that has sparked fury on the right – marking a sharp break with tougher policies elsewhere in Europe.

Migration Minister Elma Saiz said the beneficiaries would be allowed to work ‘in any sector, in any part of the country’, hailing what she described as the ‘positive impact’ of migration.

‘We are talking about estimations – probably more or less the figures may be around half a million people,’ Saiz told public broadcaster RTVE.

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Spain Without Spaniards: The Unprecedented Decline of the National Population

Spain keeps breaking population records, quarter after quarter. As of October 1, 2025, the country had 49,442,844 residents, according to the Continuous Population Statistics of the National Statistics Institute (INE). On paper, Spain is thriving with nearly half a million more people in a year and over 100,000 added in just three months.

Spain grows, yet Spaniards fade. Behind the headline figure lies a demographic paradox. The expansion is driven by immigration. Foreign-born residents now exceed 9.8 million, close to one-fifth of the total population. Meanwhile, the number of people born in Spain continues to shrink, dragged down by a decade-long negative natural balance. Births can no longer compensate for deaths and have not since 2017.

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The Spanish town that ‘banned’ Islamic festivals … usual suspects cry “racism”

The historic town of Jumilla was on the frontline of conflict between Muslims and Christians when the Moors were kicked out of southern Spain in the 13th century.

Muslim migrants may have felt more welcome in recent years when they have lived largely happily alongside their Spanish neighbours, and enjoyed freedom to worship.

But a decision by Jumilla town council to effectively ban religious events from being held at public sports’ facilities has threatened to ignite community tensions.

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Spain dismantles smuggling ring moving migrants to Canada with fake passports: police

Spanish police say they have dismantled a criminal network that facilitated illegal entry into Canada and the U.K. using forged passports and travel documents.

In a press release by Spain’s National Police, the smuggling operation primarily targeted Yemeni nationals and involved more than 40 migration attempts.

The network allegedly charged each migrant up to C$4,400.

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Tourists tackle migrants fleeing boat on Spanish beach

Spain – Beachgoers tackle illegal alien invaders

Migrants attempting to land on a beach in Spain were tackled to the ground by locals and tourists before being taken into custody by police.

Footage showed 13 men diving off a boat and swimming to the shore, where they were immediately met with fierce resistance from beachgoers in a tourist town in Andalusia, in the south of the country.

The incident took place at Sotillo beach in Castell de Ferro on Sunday afternoon.

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Report: Spain Now EU’s Top Asylum Destination

Spain has overtaken Germany as the main destination for asylum seekers in the European Union, following the sudden collapse of Syria’s Assad regime and a steep decline in Syrian migration to Europe, according to an unpublished report by the EU Agency for Asylum (EUAA).

The report, seen by the Financial Times, says the agency recorded 64,000 asylum applications across the EU in May 2025—a 24% decrease compared to the same month last year. The sharpest fall came from Syrians, whose claims plummeted from around 16,000 in October 2024 to just 3,100 in May. For the first time in over a decade, Germany no longer tops the list, with its monthly claims halving to 9,900. Spain now leads with 12,800 applications, fuelled in part by rising numbers from Venezuela amid that country’s economic collapse.

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Spanish voters are embracing remigration

Spain has long lagged behind its neighbours when it comes to Europe’s Right-wing populist shift, but that may be about to change. New polling has Right-wing party Vox rising to 18.9% of the vote — a gain of 5.7 percentage points since last month. It is no coincidence that, earlier this month, Vox vowed to deport eight million foreigners from Spain should it win the next election. This tougher stance echoes the embrace of “remigration” policies by parties such as Germany’s AfD, marking a sharp shift in Spain’s debate over immigration.

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