Studying Medicine in Europe

Hm, going to a country in a the middle of a civil war, or to a non-democratic country for your studies would not be a smart move in my opinion.
In France, everyone can enroll in the 1st year of medical school. Of course you need to speak French. You must then spend about 12 to 14 hours a day memorizing textbooks (going to class is not necessary, only tutorial time is. Best medical tutorials are in Poitiers according to the latest rankings.) Students who ranked in the top 50% but didn’t make the final cut are allowed to repeat. They are the bane of freshmen’s existence since they try to make it impossible for freshmen to study or succeed (the fewer 1st years still standing at the end of the year, the more spots for them.This abstract point was driven home reading an article where they’d thrown hundreds of live crickets at the new students, while in a lecture hall.)
Your odds are about 10% and depend solely on your ability to have memorized thousands and thousands of pages accurately. First cut is at the end of first semester (about 15% from those remaining after the grueling first months) and then in May the 80% remaining take the final exam, 10-15% of whom are then officially admitted to med school and can stay.
In Ireland, there’s tuition and admission will depend on AP 5s in calculus, biology, chemistry, physics, and English, plus serious shadowing and experience (EMT, Red Cross…)
Poland may be a good compromise in terms of costs and ease of admission.
In Belgium, non Belgian students are entered in a lottery for spots.