Ms Fubbs agreed that in general the incident raised international concern and offered several reasons that could have contributed to the situation, ie unemployment, economic crises, immigration and dysfunctional social systems. Mr Davidson pointed out that the incident allowed one to reflect on two issues, ie the rise of the right in the context of socio-economic development in Europe and the rise of smaller parties throughout Europe. He indicated that within that framework, challenges such as immigration and xenophobic tension exacerbated political conditions. The inadequacy of political and social institutions to deal with that resulted in manifestations of sporadic terrorism. Ms Hajaig reiterated that the trend was worrisome for all in the North and South. She indicated that countries should guard against religious fundamentalism. She advocated for the education of young people before fundamentalism becomes an accepted practice. She gave the example of the essential ethos of all religions being the same but right-wing fundamentalism focusing on divisive perceptions of each other.