Dutch right winger demands Islamic male refugees should be locked in asylum centres to 'protect women from testosterone bombs waging sexual jihad'

Geert Wilders believes measure is necessary to stop recent 'rape epidemic'

Said 'hundreds of thousands of Islamic men engaged in sexual terrorism'

Comes days after he handed out protection spray to women in Spijkenisse

Wilders' Freedom Party is currently top of the opinion polls in Holland

A right-wing Dutch politician has called for male Islamic refugees to be locked in asylum centres to protect women from 'testosterone bombs' unleashing 'sexual terrorism' on Europe.

Geert Wilders, leader of the extremist Freedom Party, claims the measure is necessary to stem the 'rape epidemic' as Muslim refugees wage 'a sexual Jihad' on European women.

The right-wing politician blamed the 'open-door policy' of leaders in Europe for endangering women, and branded Islamic men arriving 'a testosterone bomb'.

He said: ‘All women are fair game. I call the perpetrators testosterone bombs. We have seen what they are capable of and it's sexual terrorism and sexual jihad.'

'It’s happening everywhere where they let in hundreds of thousands of mostly single men from a culture of oppression of women,' he said on a YouTube video he released about his proposal.

He goes on to say: 'The pereptrators come from a culture where women are inferior beings, a culture of honour killings and humiliation of women, a culture established by a so-called profit who had sex slaves and raped a nine year old girl called Aisha.

'It is time to face that truth about Islam as well, and anyone who looks away is guilty.'

The politician has also been handing out self-defence canisters of spray laced with red paint to women to protect themselves from attack by 'Islamic testosterone bombs'.

He delivered the spray to the blue-collar town of Spijkenisse where he was surrounded by a large crowd, flanked by bodyguards and police.

Wilders, whose party has 12 members in the Dutch parliament, claimed women in Holland were afraid of being attacked following the mass assaults on New Year's Eve in Cologne, Germany.

However, a small group of protesters greeted Wilders' 'publicity stunt with chants and banners proclaiming 'refugees welcome, racism is not.

Wilders shook hands with supporters before offering an impromptu speech. He said if he was elected Prime Minister next year, he would 'close the borders immediately and have no more asylum seekers'.

He added: 'We just cannot afford to have more. The Dutch people in a big majority don't want it and we cannot afford it and it makes our people and women only more unsafe.'

Wilders' party currently holds 12 seats in the 150-member lower house, but a poll by Ipsos on Thursday suggested the Freedom Party would win 32 seats now.

The Prime Minister Mark Rutte's Liberals were second with 26 seats, down from its current tally of 40. The online survey of 1,061 voters had a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 percent. Other polls have Wilders even further ahead.

Wilders is known for his anti Islamic rhetoric which has been far more extreme than US presidential hopeful Donald Trump.

In his video suggesting asylum seekers should be locked up, he added: 'As long as our women are endangered by the Islamic testosterone bombs, I propose that we lock the male asylum seekers up in the asylum centres.

'For them, they have to be closed institutions so that not a single male asylum seeker can still go on the streets and our women are finally protected.'

Dutch authorities prosecuted Wilders in 2011 on hate speech charges after comparing Islam to fascism and demanding a ban on the Koran. He was acquitted at the time, but he is still facing further charges over his highly controversial comments.

Wilders extreme views are being replicated in other European nations, with Marine Le Pen's National Front in France also receiving a surge in popularity.

Leontine Maris was one of the first women to get a spray from Wilders on Saturday.

The 53-year-old said she votes for him though she disagrees with some of his more extreme comments. She said she was afraid not just of migrants, but also Dutch men.

She said: 'The whole society is going down the drain.'

University of Amsterdam political science professor Wouter van der Brug: 'The tendencies across Europe are very similar. Across Europe, right-wing populist parties are picking up support as a result of the asylum crisis that we're facing now, and also as a result of terrorist attacks.

'Wilders is getting support across different layers of society.'

However, Wilders' opponents are confident the controversial politician's support will collapse when the Dutch people cast their ballots next year.

Lodewijk Asscher, Deputy Prime Minister and a Labor Party member said: 'It is hard to talk about a tipping point because we have seen this phenomenon in the polls before. Geert Wilders has lost the last three elections. That is something we tend to forget.'


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