British
National
Party
UK Immigration News Bulletin w/c August 20th, 2007
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1. ASYLUM SEEKERS GET NEW PRIVILEGES
The contempt Labour government has for native Britons is
unbelievable. There are a lot of poor people in the UK that
need help and can only dream to receive a share of what
asylum seekers get at the expense of UK taxpayers.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=476289&in_page_id=1770
Asylum seekers at one of Britain's biggest detention centres
have won the right to eat custard cream and bourbon biscuits
after complaining they did not like the chocolate variety
provided. The bizarre victory for hundreds of detainees
at the Yarl's Wood immigration removal centre in Bedfordshire
came after private sector managers caved in to a series
of demands. These included the provision of extra TV channels,
among them the dance music channel MTV Base and religious
channels, DVD players with the technology to play discs
originating in Africa and better-quality, "Tilda"
brand rice. Five years ago, the centre was burned down in
a riot by detainees complaining about poor conditions and
it has since been rebuilt. The extended "shopping list"
includes a request from female detainees for specialised
glue for their hair extensions and hair relaxer a
lotion used to straighten curly hair. Women at the centre
have also demanded more comfortable mattresses, more than
one pillow and towel, and better-quality flip-flops. They
also want to be able to buy Body Shop and Avon cosmetics
from the centre's shop. Detainees have asked for bigger
meal portions and for food contents to be displayed in case
detainees have allergies, for pork to be added to the menu
and more varied salads. They have also requested the reintroduction
of tea bags, claiming the usual tea was "disgusting."
Their long list of demands has come under fire from opposition
MPs, who have criticised Serco the security and tagging
firm that runs the centre on behalf of the Home Office
for its handling of the situation. Confidential minutes
of meetings between female detainees at Yarl's Wood and
managers from Serco reveal that management has already agreed
to provide music systems in every dining room, better-quality
"Tilda" rice, more arts and craft materials and
new coffee machines after complaints about the taste of
the beverage, plus hair straighteners for people with curly
hair. The minutes from the meetings on May 31 and
July 3 this year disclose that the 405 residents,
made up of women and families awaiting deportation, have
access to acupuncture treatments and to a "sensory
room" where they can relax. The May meeting disclosed:
"There was also a request for a variation to the chocolate
biscuits that are distributed every day, and could they
possibly have a change like the packets they were given
a couple of weeks ago (custard creams, bourbons etc)."
Under "Any other business", the minutes say: "Residents
requested more TV channels to include MTV Base and religious
channels." Shadow Home Secretary, David Davis said
last night: "The public will wonder if detainees are
being put up in an immigration centre or the Ritz. "This
is happening because of the utter shambles the asylum and
immigration system is in under this Government. "Instead
of being dealt with quickly and efficiently, detainees are
kept for months on end in removal centres. "This costs
the taxpayer millions, diverts urgently needed resources
from other areas like the removal of foreign prisoners and
leads to the kind of ludicrous situations we see here."
A Serco spokesman said last night: "None of these changes
has cost the taxpayer any money. We signed a contract with
the Home Office and we get paid a contract fee. So, if we
improve things, it will have come from our own budget. "Management
at Yarl's Wood went back to their supplier and now custard
creams and bourbon biscuits will be available on some days.
"We make no apology for listening to the concerns of
detainees and doing what we can to ensure they are held
decently with humanity and dignity." A spokesman for
the Home Office quango, the Borders and Immigration Agency,
said: "Detention is an essential element in the effective
enforcement of immigration control. "Detention centre
rules recognise that detainees are not prisoners and we
provide a wide range of activities and facilities to help
them use their time constructively."
2. 450,000 ASYLUM SEEKERS TO BE
ALLOWED TO REMAIN IN UK
http://www.pressdispensary.co.uk/releases/c991300.php
It has come to the attention of leading immigration consultancy
www.globalvisas.com that the Home Office is preparing to
grant over 450,000 asylum seekers 'Indefinite Leave to Remain
in the UK (ILR)'. All cases that were pending in the system
before the Immigration and Nationality Directorate obtained
agency status in April 2007 are to be considered for ILR
to clear the backlog. The Home Office will begin with families,
many of whom have had children since arriving in the UK,
increasing the exact numbers to an unknown figure. Director
Liam Clifford, says: "The Borders and Immigration Agency
or BIA simply does not have the resources to tackle the
problem and cannot investigate each case properly so it
is going to grant all the applications it can in order to
clear the backlog. "In another admission of its inability
to cope, the Home Office has given current instructions
to prosecute anyone claiming NAS (National Asylum Support)
benefits and working illegally earning over £4,000.
However, this cannot be achieved because of a lack of resources.
In our experience, and from what we are being told, officers
now only deal with cases where people are illegally earning
in excess of £20,000 p.a. Even in these cases, the
Home Office and Department of Work and Pensions can only
afford to slap the person on the wrist as no other options
are available to them. "While the UK Home Office talks
tough and claims that biometrics and joint agency co-operation
will reduce immigration of low skilled migrants and terrorists,
they are preparing for one of the UKs biggest mass
grants of Leave to Remain for asylum seekers in history.
The Home Office has said that this will not be called an
amnesty as it may create the wrong impression. However,
the word is out at street level that completing the questionnaire
which the Home Office is about to send out to 450,000 people
and families will result in the right to stay in the UK.
With a record number of people emigrating overseas
and UK PLC unable to attract the right skills it desperately
requires, why does the government continue to present barriers
for highly skilled people to come here, while being lenient
on those immigrants who are of no benefit to our economy,
and may actually burden the public purse and local council
resources? In recent years, many of our corporate
clients have been finding it more difficult to deal with
the immigration process for highly skilled workers and work
permits, which is about to get worse with commercial partnerships,
biometrics, compliance audits and off-shore visa processing.
In spite of this asylum seekers can arrive with no checks
or controls and receive benefits and Leave to Remain."
3. SOAMES CALLS FOR IMMIGRATION
CUT
If the Conservatives were serious on this issue they would
have opposed Labour immigration policy but they didn't.
A Conservative government will do nothing to reverse this
situation.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/6903222.stm
Immigration levels to the UK need to be cut to avoid "profound
changes" in British society, MPs have been told. Senior
Conservative MP Nicholas Soames warned there were "dangerous
shoals ahead" unless the UK took action. In response
the government said it was "phasing out" low-skilled
migration from countries outside Europe. For the Lib Dems
Nick Clegg called for a process to be established so the
estimated 600,000 illegal immigrants in the UK could earn
legal residence. 'Change tack' Mid-Sussex MP Mr Soames,
who initiated the debate, said numbers of immigrants entering
the UK each year had quadrupled since 1997. He added: "The
present scale of immigration is absolutely without precedent
in our history. "This rate of migration cannot be sustained
without the most profound changes taking place in our society."
He accused the government of failing to "get a grip"
on the asylum system, trebling the number of work permits
it issued since 1997, and changing the rules to make it
easier for people to bring their husbands and wives in.
Mr Soames, a grandson of Winston Churchill and longtime
friend of Prince Charles, said immigration from outside
the EU should be limited to the numbers leaving the UK -
about 100,000 a year. He disputed government claims about
the benefits to the general economy from immigration and
said the public could "sense the falsehoods" in
government claims. Mr Soames proposed cutting work permits,
tightening family reunion rules and also asylum applications.
He said any immigration system was only as good as its power
to remove people, and if necessary human rights rules needed
to be looked at again. He said access to the welfare state
should only come after people had contributed to it for
five years to "defuse the very strong sense of grievance".
'Political classes' "Muddling on" would risk adding
to the pressure building in society, he said. Mr Soames
stressed that his proposals were not racist, saying they
would apply as much, say, to the US as to Uganda. He said
free movement of people within the EU would continue but
he did not think that would be a long term problem as living
standards rose in new member states. During the Westminster
Hall debate, ex-Labour minister Frank Field, said the "political
classes" had failed to listen to people's legitimate
concerns about the level of immigration. He added: "If
we do not change tack very quickly, very smartly on this
issue then the sense of our national identity may be lost."
He questioned the free movement of people around Europe
and said one million people coming in from eastern Europe
was "unsustainable". 'Without precedent' But Lib
Dem home affairs spokesman Nick Clegg said he did not see
how it was possible to "turn off the tap" of people
coming in to the UK. He added that there should be a process
for illegal immigrants to earn legal residence - saying
it was "fanciful" to think that the estimated
600,000 illegal immigrants in the UK could be deported.
For the Tories, shadow immigration minister Damian Green
said his party would set an annual limit on the number of
immigrants which would change with the country's economic
requirements, and urged the government to set up a border
police. Immigration minister Liam Byrne said world migration
had increased hugely, and said there were many other countries
who have had more immigrants than the UK. He accepted there
was a "social impact" as well as an economic one
and said the new points based work permit system was being
brought into force. He also highlighted new government systems
that he said would track the majority of migrants by 2009.
4. AMNESTY URGED FOR 500,000 ILLEGAL
IMMIGRANTS
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/07/15/nmigrants115.xml
Half a million immigrants working illegally in Britain should
be allowed to stay, according to a thinktank with close
links to Downing Street. A report published today by the
influential Institute for Public Policy Research argues
that finding and forcibly deporting all Britain's illegal
workers would cost £4.7 billion and take 30 years.
The study says if these migrants were allowed to stay they
would pay £1 billion a year in tax to the Treasury.
The number living illegally in the UK is thought to have
soared in recent years, with the Government accused of failing
to police borders adequately. The pressure group MigrationWatch
UK calculates that there are up to 870,000 illegal immigrants
in Britain, but the Government believes there are no more
than 570,000. The IPPR's report threatens to divide ministers.
Last week, Liam Byrne, the immigration minister, repeated
earlier Government pledges not to allow an amnesty for illegal
migrants, but some Cabinet ministers back the idea. Danny
Sriskandarajah, the IPPR's head of migration and equalities,
called on Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary, to support it.
"Our economy would shrink and we would notice it in
uncleaned offices, dirty streets and unstaffed pubs and
clubs if we tried to deport hundreds of thousands of people,"
he said. "So we have a choice: make people live in
the shadows, exploited and fearful of the future... or bring
them into the mainstream, to pay taxes and live an honest
life." The report also recommends that unauthorised
migrants who can show they have been working and contributing
to the UK should be given a two-year work permit, with their
families allowed to remain. A spokesman for the Home Office
said: "An amnesty for immigrants illegally would simply
create a strong pull for waves of illegal migration."
The amnesty call comes as Home Office sources reveal that
since the introduction of a sophisticated fingerprinting
system last September more than 4,000 deported foreigners
have been caught trying to re-enter Britain illegally. Officials
are "astonished" by the number of failed asylum
seekers and bogus work permit applicants caught using the
"biometric" visas system. But Damian Green, shadow
immigration minister, fears they represent the "tip
of the iceberg". The £39 million system has been
introduced at British embassies and consulates in only 80
of the 150 countries intended to be involved. The biometrics
programme requires all UK visa applicants to provide fingerprints
before leaving their home country. Immigration officials
check the prints against those taken from failed asylum
seekers who have already been deported. A spokesman for
the Home Office said: "Biometric visas will be rolled
out to all countries by March next year."
5. RURAL MIGRANT WORKERS 'DRIVE
OUT YOUNG'
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/07/17/nrural117.xml
Migrant workers from Eastern Europe are flooding the rural
labour market and forcing young people to leave the countryside
in search of work, a Government advisory body warns today.
The number of migrants working in the countryside has increased
by 200 per cent in three years, with many seeking employment
in agriculture, manufacturing, hotels and retail, according
to a major report by the Commission for Rural Communities.
This comes amid a long-term decline in the number of young
people living in rural areas. In the last two decades the
number of people aged between 15 and 29 in the countryside
has dropped by 400,000. The report, entitled State of the
Countryside 2007, found much to commend country life over
urban life including full employment, less pollution, better
diet and fewer cases of stress and mental illness. But the
researchers raised concerns that the influx of foreign workers,
following the accession of eight former Soviet-bloc countries
to the European Union, was placing a great strain on local
schools and transport and posing problems for young country
people. About 120,000 migrant workers registered to work
in rural areas between May 2004 and Sept 2006. "Urban
areas are used to dealing with large numbers of migrants
but rural areas are not," said a spokesman for the
commission. "Young people expect to pick up fruit-picking
jobs but these are taken by 'A8' migrant workers. There
are certainly fewer job opportunities available for young
people because of very high rates of immigration."
Between 2002/3 and 2005/6 rural local authorities saw a
209 per cent growth in the numbers of non-UK migrant workers,
based on National Insurance registrations. At the same time
there was a 67 per cent increase in their numbers in urban
authorities, although they had four times more migrant workers
in absolute numbers. The biggest rural rise in migrant workers
was in Herefordshire, with a tenfold increase. North Wiltshire
had the smallest with 50 per cent. The commission said the
money the Government gave town halls for supporting immigrants
was based on statistics that were several years out of date.
"We would like to see local authorities given a fairer
deal in terms of their ability to cope," said the spokesman.
Dr Stuart Burgess, chairman of the commission and the Government's
rural advocate, said: "Much more needs to be done to
retain young people and provide them with opportunities
and incentives." A spokesman for the Department for
Food and Rural Affairs said the exodus was due to young
people seeking urban amenities, education and cheaper housing.
6. MYSTERY OF THE MISSING OVERSEAS
STUDENTS
Despite assurances from Labour spin doctors here is another
example on how immigration to Britain is out of control.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/education/article2073157.ece
Thousands of university places were offered last year to
overseas applicants who failed to enrol, raising concerns
that the student visa system is being abused. Twenty-one
out of 100 universities contacted by The Times confirmed
that 11,077 foreign students who accepted places had failed
to turn up. They included the universities of Manchester,
Newcastle, Sheffield, Bristol and Glasgow Caledonian. Eight
institutions said that in the past three years nearly 30,000
foreign students had accepted an offer but had never showed
up. Universities able to provide figures dating back to
2004 included Birmingham, Plymouth and Nottingham. At 8,000,
Northumbria University had the most missing students over
three years. The figures have prompted fears that the system
is being used as a short cut for people wishing to obtain
visas to enter Britain for other reasons. David Davis, the
Shadow Home Secretary, said that The Timess research
shows that the weaknesses in our immigration control
and security do not just apply to doctors, as has been highlighted
in the aftermath of the recent attempted terror attacks,
but that bogus student applications are an even bigger loophole.
Previous home secretaries have all made tough promises
but these figures show they have simply failed to act.
The study follows the news that 3,064 places assigned to
foreign scholars at Portsmouth University since 2004 have
been left unfilled. Universities say that there may be a
number of reasons why students who have agreed to places
fail to materialise. According to academics, it is normal
for applicants to apply to and be accepted by a variety
of institutions before making their final decisions. Some
students may not inform universities that they intend to
study elsewhere. Universities, however, often do not pass
on details of missing students to the Home Office. This
means that neither the Government nor the universities keep
track of absent students. Rebecca Bunting, Pro Vice-Chancellor
at Portsmouth, said that her university informed the Home
Office twice a month about students who did not arrive or
whose status changed. The University of Portsmouth
is one of the few higher education institutions to adopt
this protocol as standard practice, she said. The
Home Office said that some institutions did volunteer information
about students who did not enrol or discontinued their studies
and that this was followed up by officials. Among the missing
students at Portsmouth, 3 are from from Iran, 16 from Saudi
Arabia, 2 from Iraq and 379 from Pakistan. At present, foreigners
wishing to study here may apply for student visas once they
have accepted one or more offers. But the current system
does not automatically record whether they start their courses.
The Government hopes to tackle this problem with a points-based
immigration system that will introduce institution-specific
visas and require universities routinely to submit names
of missing foreign students to the Home Office. But this
will not be until 2009. A spokesman for the Border and Immigration
Agency at the Home Office said: The majority of international
students are genuine and bring substantial economic benefits
to the UK, contributing some £5 billion a year to
our economy. The fact that foreign students choose not to
take up positions at universities is not evidence of substantial
abuse. Statistics from the Home Office show that in
2005-06 nearly 200,000 people were issued with a student
visa. Last year it emerged that that a Chinese gangmaster
convicted of the manslaughter of the cockle pickers who
died in 2004 had enrolled at colleges in London and Manchester
in order to secure an extended student visa. Rather than
study, Lin Liang Ren started renting cheap Liverpool properties
to house Chinese people sent from London.
7. VOTING RESTRICTIONS URGED IN
NORWAY
Just as the BNP in Britain aims to ensure the interests
of native Britons take first place in all policy matters,
the Progress Party is working to preserve the cultural identity
of Norwegians by opposing mass immigration and multiculturalism
and give priority to the interests of native Norwegians.
http://www.aftenposten.no/english/local/article1882019.ece
Only Norwegian citizens are eligible to vote in national
elections, but anyone legally residing in the country for
three years can vote in local elections. The Progress Party,
also known for its restrictive immigration policies, wants
to usher in citizenship requirements for local elections
as well, reports Norwegian Broadcasting (NRK). With local
elections looming in September, the Progress Party also
wants to restrict voting rights to those who can pass written
exams in the Norwegian language and general knowledge of
the country. Per Willy Amundsen, the party's spokesman on
immigration issues, said that proposed exams are meant to
make sure that non-Norwegian voters really understand the
issues at stake. The Socialist Left Party (SV) dismissed
the Progress Party's proposal as "discriminatory."
A party spokesman told NRK that voters not familiar with
Norwegian should rather be given extra information on the
issues, instead of being excluded from participation. Ballots
in Norway are printed only in Norwegian, but SV has prepared
election campaign material in eight different languages
in advance of the September elections. SV also offers both
English and Spanish versions of its web site. Curiously,
the Progress Party also offers foreign-language versions
of its web sitein English, German and French, while several
of its rivals don't. The Labour and Liberal parties offer
an English web site, but neither the Center Party, the Christian
Democrats nor the Conservatives offer information in any
foreign language. The Center Party, best known for championing
support to Norway's farmers and outlying districts at the
expense of its cities, offers a "Sami" link, but
it, too, is in Norwegian.
8. THAI MAN JAILED AFTER TWICE
USING FALSE PASSPORT TO ENTER NEW ZEALAND
If only we had a judge like that in this country.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10452044
A Thai man thrown out of New Zealand as an overstayer twice
returned to the country using a false passport, a court
was told yesterday. Kamphon Singwee, 24, faced two charges
of fraudulently providing a passport and four charges of
providing false information to immigration officers, the
Marlborough Express reported. Singwee, also known as Somdet
Chatae, pleaded guilty to all charges in Blenheim District
Court and was jailed for 16 months. The court was told Singwee
visited New Zealand in March 2002 as a tourist and was allowed
to extend his stay after applying for a work permit. He
then tried to claim refugee status but was returned to Thailand
in November, 2004, as an overstayer. On October 28, 2005,
Singwee returned to New Zealand with a work permit for Somdet
Chatae and a passport under the same name. Returning to
Thailand for a short time, he used the false passport to
return to New Zealand in January 2006. When applying for
work permits he supplied immigration staff on four occasions
with false information about Somdet Chatae. Sam Houliston,
lawyer for the Department of Labour, said Singwee's actions
were an "official challenge" to the integrity
of the country's immigration system. Singwee's lawyer Bryony
Senior said while his offending could not be justified,
she wondered if anyone in the court could comprehend the
poverty Singwee faced in Thailand. In jailing Singwee Judge
David McKegg said "the opportunity to live and work
in New Zealand is a privilege, not a right".
9. ISRAEL GETS TOUGH ON SUDANESE
REFUGEES
Israel already has a lot of problems and an influx of asylum
seekers is the last thing they need.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-refugees12jul12,1,6455044.story
The war in his native Sudan had been hellish, his years
as a refugee in Egypt not much better. So with his 2-year-old
daughter in his arms and his pregnant wife at his side,
William followed Bedouin smugglers on a perilous trek across
the desert border into Israel. Three weeks after crossing
illegally, the family found temporary refuge at this communal
farm overlooking the verdant Carmel mountains. For the first
time in years, William thought, life will be better. "I
know there are human rights in Israel and other countries,"
said the 30-year-old asylum seeker, who asked that his full
name not be used to protect family members in his war-torn
homeland. "In Egypt, there aren't any." But now
William and hundreds like him may be forced to return to
Egypt. In a move that some human rights groups warn could
endanger lives, Israel is cracking down on a recent influx
of illegal immigrants over its 140-mile border with Egypt.
About 2,800 people, mostly from Africa, have crossed illegally
into Israel in recent years, officials say. Sudanese make
up the largest group, which consists of 1,160 asylum seekers
who endured months or years of harassment in Egypt. Large
numbers of Sudanese began reaching Israel in May as word
spread of job opportunities. Of the Sudanese, 220 are Muslims
from the Darfur region, which has been gripped by war since
early 2003. The rest, including William and his family,
come from the predominantly animist and Christian southern
Sudan, where a 21-year conflict that ended in 2005 left
about 2 million dead and twice as many displaced. Israel's
army has been ordered to turn back anyone attempting to
cross the border illegally and to deport to Egypt most of
the border jumpers already in the country. Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert's office said this week that the deportations
would begin as soon as a full list of the refugees was compiled.
The government did not say whether newcomers would be able
to apply for asylum, although it agreed to consider allowing
a small portion of the refugees from Darfur to stay and
receive public assistance. Israeli officials said they had
received assurances from Egypt regarding the safety of those
being sent back. But human rights organizations said such
a pledge does not guarantee that Egypt won't send the refugees
back to Sudan, where their lives are at risk. Some legal
experts said the government's plan to turn back people at
the border without examining their claims went against customary
international law. They also warned that those sent back
could face imprisonment and torture in Egypt for leaving
illegally. Anat Ben-Dor heads a legal aid clinic at Tel
Aviv University that has helped win the release of about
300 Sudanese refugees from Israeli prisons in the last year.
The asylum seekers have little confidence in what Egypt
can offer them, she said. "They don't get work rights,
their children don't get into schools, there are no medical
services," she said. "It's like being in an eternal
limbo and being subject to very racist treatment because
of the color of their skin." The Israeli government
views most of the newcomers as economic migrants. But critics
of the clampdown say they expect more understanding from
a state whose creation was driven by the historic persecution
of Jews that culminated in the Holocaust. Some have pointed
out that Olmert's parents took refuge in China in the early
1900s to escape persecution in Russia. The trickle of Sudanese
into Israel began to accelerate after riot police broke
up a sit-in they staged in Cairo in 2005 to press demands
for asylum. Among the protesters was William, who barely
survived a head injury inflicted by police in the crackdown,
which ended with at least 27 Sudanese dead. That's when
he resolved to leave. William told his story in halting
English, sitting in the shade of pine trees at the kibbutz
on a hot afternoon. In Sudan, William said, he eluded kidnapping
by a militia group that looted his southern village, killed
his father and separated him from the rest of his family.
From there he fled to the capital, Khartoum, and spent years
in a refugee camp before escaping to Egypt in 2000, where
he married. Life in Egypt was less violent but still intolerable,
William said. The $50 he earned monthly from a 12-hour-a-day
job cleaning a restaurant wasn't enough to sustain his family.
There was no money to pay for his pregnant wife's medical
care. He said he was harassed by Egyptians in what he attributes
to racism against darker-skinned Sudanese. Last month, he
and his family tired of waiting for the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees to resettle them
abroad. They took a bus to the Sinai desert, where he paid
smugglers to guide them into Israel. The journey was risky.
Some Sudanese refugees here said Egyptian soldiers shot
at them to try to prevent them from leaving the country
illegally. Some who were caught said the soldiers beat them.
Until May, an average of seven Sudanese immigrants arrived
in Israel a month, according to Hotline for Migrant Workers,
an Israeli volunteer group. Authorities would jail the men
and turn the women and children over to volunteer groups
for shelter while their asylum claims were considered. But
in May and June, more than 700 Sudanese arrived. With no
room in prisons, immigration authorities stopped holding
the men and began depositing them and their families on
the streets of Beersheba in southern Israel. Local volunteers,
mostly university students, helped find them places to stay.
Some have been taken in by communal farms or put up at hotels.
The lucky ones have found work at Red Sea resort hotels
in Eilat. On the grassy poolside of the Desert Inn in Beersheba,
where dozens of Sudanese families have found temporary sanctuary,
Anthony said he was afraid of being forced to return to
Egypt. "They don't like us some of us have been
beaten," said the father of four, who serves as the
unofficial spokesman for the group at the hotel. He declined
to give his last name. "Before we reach Egypt, let
the Israeli government know this: If they take us away,
we will try to come back, even if we die at the border,"
he said.
10. RECOMMENDED READING:
"Overcrowded Britain" by Ashley Mote - an independent
MEP:
Foreword by Lord Stoddart of Swindon Postscript by Trevor
Colman, former police superintendent, Devon and Cornwall
Constabulary Political correctness has hi-jacked our freedom
to discuss one of the burning issues of the day - immigration.
OverCrowded Britain will inevitably be condemned by the
politically-correct, few of whom, Ashley Mote suggests,
will bother to read it first. Which is why he argues for
a full, open and if necessary controversial
debate on immigration.
http://www.bnp.org.uk/shopping/excalibur/item.php?id=691
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