Critics say the cover is akin to Nazi propaganda
The cover shows a blonde woman wearing a European Union flag.
She is grabbed by the hair and arms by men as they try to drag the flag off her body.
The magazine promises readers "a report about what the media and Brussels elite are hiding from the citizens of the European Union".
Inside an article refers to the rape and sexual assault of hundreds of women in the German city of Cologne on New Year's Eve.
The author of the article has denied it was spreading fear
Most of those arrested were recent migrants from north Africa.“This is not a freedom of speech. This is a hate speech towards muslims”Hasnaa Waked
TellMamaUK, a British charity that helps people who have been the victims of Islamophobic attacks, tweeted: "Appalling front cover by wSieci. Inflammatory and very offensive as though 'Muslims' cannot be trusted."
Hasnaa Waked tweeted: "This is not a freedom of speech. This is a hate speech towards muslims and also black people which makes you look nothing but stupid."
But some people defended the magazine.
The magazine's headline is 'The Islamic rape of Europe'
Alessandra Rybinska, who wrote the article, denied the cover was trying to whip up fear but was instead trying to discuss issues which were being brushed under the carpet.
She said: "The people of old Europe after the events of New Year's Eve in Cologne painfully realised the problems arising from the massive influx of immigrants.
"The first signs that things were going wrong, however, were there a lot earlier. They were still ignored or were minimised in significance in the name of tolerance and political correctness."
Policing the migrants
Tuesday, 2nd February 2016
As migrants clash with each other in over crowded camps across Europe, we take a look through the hard task of policing the migrant crisis in Europe.
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The Polish government has resisted EU efforts to increase its quota of migrants.
The Beata Szydlo rejected an EU quota of 4,500 refugees in November, and said after the terror attacks in France: "After Paris, the situation has changed”.
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