A selection of recent media reports

URGENT 'REVIEWS' AT OLD PEOPLE'S HOME
Southwark Council has instructed social workers to make urgent reviews of people it has placed at the old folks' home wh...
Southwark News (11-Mar-2010)
Leicestershire police hunt for lorry stowaways
Organised criminal gangs which force illegal migrants to work in poor conditions for a few pounds a day could be operati...
This is Leicestershire (11-Mar-2010)
America nears 'tipping point' where babies born to minority parents outnumber whites for first time
America is reaching a tipping point when the babies born to minority parents outnumber whites for the first time. More ...
Daily Mail (11-Mar-2010)
Frosty Welcome For UK Electronic Borders Plan
Government claims over the roll-out of its new electronic border controls are 'not credible', according to opposition pa...
97.4rockfm (11-Mar-2010)
ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT LANDED A JOB IN LORDS
AN illegal immigrant worked in the Houses of Parliament for six months without any security checks, a court was told...
Daily Express (11-Mar-2010)
Gold Service traffickers exposed by The Sun
TODAY The Sun exposes a gang that offers illegal immigrants door-to-door delivery into Britain in a scam which they call...
Online Sun (10-Mar-2010)
Illegal immigrant worked at House of Lords for six months after using fake passport to get kitchen job
An illegal immigrant worked for six months serving lunch at House of Lords after using a fake passport to get the job, a...
Daily Mail (10-Mar-2010)
Fewer asylum seekers to Norway
In February this year 711 asylum seekers arrived in Norway.
The Norway Post (10-Mar-2010)
Brown meets MP over flats deaths
Prime Minister Gordon Brown will meet an MP to hear how a community coped following the apparent suicide of three asylum...
Press Association (10-Mar-2010)
WILLIAM HAGUE: LABOUR HAVE BLED US DRY
THE Shadow Foreign Secretary speaks to Daily Express readers about Gordon Brown s appalling regime and how the Tories pl...
Daily Express (10-Mar-2010)
Lumley named in row over Gurkha charity
Minister attacks campaigner's 'silence' as inquiry is launched into donations solicited in...
The Independent (10-Mar-2010)
Team in war on night crime
WAR has been declared on Newham's night-time crime economy. Police, the council and immigration oficers are working tog...
Newham Recorder (09-Mar-2010)
Homes help for asylum seekers
AN Oldham vicar is helping to lead a campaign to improve housing conditions for asylum seekers in the North-West. Rever...
Oldham Evening Chronicle (09-Mar-2010)
The battle for a Yorkshire marginal
As the Conservative candidate in a marginal seat, I see that while BNP support is a threat, the Labour vote has...
Guardian Unlimited - Comment is Free (09-Mar-2010)
Bates Wells hip hop lawyer wins Snoop Dogg immigration battle
Bates Wells & Braithwaite has paved the way for US rapper Snoop Dogg to enter the UK after a long-running battle wit...
The Lawyer.com (09-Mar-2010)
Social Care: Foreign and destitute
Around 20,000 asylum-seeking families are living in destitution in the UK. Nancy Rowntree asks whether the system needs ...
cypnow (09-Mar-2010)
Boarding Schools Association: 'still has concerns' over Tier 4 system
Despite a relatively smooth rollout of the new Tier 4 system for the immigration of international (non-EEA) students, th...
Politics.co.uk (09-Mar-2010)
Councils attacked for giving too much information on asylum-seeking children to UKBA
Local authorities have been accused of supplying more information on asylum-seeking children than they should to the UK ...
Community Care (09-Mar-2010)
Figures that reveal the cost of life for those with no hiding place
Asylum is protection given by a country to someone who is fleeing persecution in their own country. It is given under th...
Times Online (09-Mar-2010)
Asylum is a complex and emotive issue that will never satisfy everyone
If we can be sure of anything, it is that the mysterious and harrowing tale of the Russian family who jumped from a Glas...
Times Online (09-Mar-2010)

At last, a big idea from the LibDems. Pity it's such a foolish one

Commentary
by Sir Andrew Green,
Chairman, Migration Watch UK
Daily Mail, London, 19 September, 2007


At last the Lib Dems have noticed that we have a problem over immigration. For years they have been in denial but yesterday's conference debate is their first tiny step toward reality. They even have a big idea. Unfortunately, it is an extremely foolish one.

They are calling for 'an earned route to citizenship', beginning with a two year work permit, for people they call 'irregular migrants' who have been in the UK for ten years.

Who exactly are these people the Lib Dems are suddenly championing? They are men and women who entered our country illegally on the back of a truck, or came as visitors or students and stayed on illegally. To these must be added the hundreds of thousands of rejected asylum seekers whom the Government has failed to remove. In total they amount to at least half a million.

So is 'earned citizenship' the answer?

Of course not. The immigration lobby likes to suggest that these people have been doing us a service by 'doing the jobs that the British won't do'. In fact, the opposite is the case: they have been doing us serious harm and in two ways.

First, they have been undercutting the wages of British workers. London is the most expensive city in Britain but unskilled wages are the lowest in the country - for the simple reason that there is a huge supply of illegal immigrants ready to work at, and often below, the minimum wage.

Secondly, these workers are enabling unscrupulous employers to undercut honest employers who provide decent pay and conditions for their staff.

It must be wrong in principle to reward such behaviour - but not in the Alice in Wonderland world of Human Rights. In that world the longer you break the law, the less penalties you face and the more rights you acquire.

And what about the cost to the taxpayer of what would amount, in practice, to an amnesty? The truth is that it would be astronomical.

A Left-leaning think-tank claimed last year that the Treasury would 'net' £1 billion from an amnesty - a claim taken up by a campaign under the banner Strangers into Citizens and supported, naively, by the Roman Catholic church.

The Lib Dems have even made the absurd claim that the Treasury are 'losing out' on up to £3 billion a year in tax revenue - if these migrants earned their citizenship, the Lib Dems argue, they would be paying tax like everyone else.

But surely it is obvious that to admit up to a million low-paid people into the full benefits of our welfare state would be extremely expensive. We, in MigrationWatch, have done a full calculation of the cost to the Treasury based on a cautious estimate of 430,000 illegal migrants earning their citizenship.

Not only would there be no financial benefit, it would actually cost £1 billion a year just in the early stages. In subsequent years, these people will begin to have families and claim a wider range of benefits. Updating the numbers to a realistic 625,000, their net cost to the taxpayer would then be up to £5 billion a year.

A further consequence is that those granted an amnesty would have the right to go on the lists for council housing. They would also have the right to bring over their families and thus move up the priority list for housing. In England, the housing lists have already increased from a million to one and half million in the past five years, partly as a result of immigration.

What would all this achieve? Would it solve the problem of immigrant workers being exploited? The answer is an emphatic no.

There will always be people from the third world and the poorer parts of Europe who will stay on illegally and replace those granted an amnesty. With wages in Britain between five and twenty five times higher than in their home countries they are bound to give it a try.

The amnesty lobby claims that it would cost £4.7 billion to deport all the illegal workers now in Britain. At the Government's estimate of £11,000 a head, it probably would. But nobody is proposing that.

It is essential that we simplify and streamline the process so that we can remove significant numbers of illegals at a reasonable cost. However, it is hardly feasible to march half a million or more people on to an aircraft and fly them home - they would, in any case, simply be replaced by others.

This is exactly what has happened to other countries which have gone down the amnesty route. Italy has granted five amnesties in the past twenty years and Spain has granted six.

On almost every occasion there have been more applications than the previous time. There could not be clearer evidence that amnesties simple attract more and more illegal immigrants, as common sense suggests.

The answer lies elsewhere - in cracking down on employers of illegal labour. If the jobs are not there people will not stay. It is hard to believe but there have been less than a dozen successful prosecutions of employers in the past five years. The Government has recently strengthened the law and increased the penalties. Now they must actually enforce it.

This action then needs to be reinforced by effective controls on access to the National Health Service and to education, both of which are wide open to people who have no right whatever even to be in this country.

The LibDem home affairs spokesman Nick Clegg says that we should not 'pander to fear'. Indeed we should not. But it would be a good idea if he were to pause to think.

There is now huge concern throughout the country about the impact of mass immigration, legal and illegal, on our society. The major political parties must respond with firm, practical and effective measures. By this yardstick, the Liberal Democrats have a very very long way to go.

© Copyright of Sir Andrew Green

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/