A selection of recent media reports

Smarter immigration controls pledge
Immigration minister Damian Green is expected to promise "smarter" controls on entry to the UK when he releases...
Coleraine Times (06-Sep-2010)
Vicar to be sentenced over sham marriages
A Church of England vicar will be sentenced today for his role in Britain's biggest sham marriage racket.
The Independent (06-Sep-2010)
Student visa crackdown as immigration minister vows to cut number of arrivals
A massive shake-up of the immigration system will slash tens of thousands from the number of foreign students...
The Mail On Sunday (06-Sep-2010)
Foreign student numbers to be cut under new visa regime
Foreign students could be blocked from some educational institutions and courses as part of a plan to reduce...
Telegraph.co.uk (06-Sep-2010)
Earned citizenship scheme faces axe
Moves to make migrants "earn" British citizenship are set to be scrapped by the Coalition Government, the...
Telegraph.co.uk (06-Sep-2010)
Foreign student blitz
BRITAIN must slash the huge number of foreign students coming here if we are to get a proper grip on immigration,...
The Scottish Sun (06-Sep-2010)
One overseas student in five overstays in UK, Home Office report shows
A fifth of the international students who come to Britain to study remain after their visas...
Guardian.co.uk (06-Sep-2010)
What about my human rights, asks woman beaten unconscious by asylum-seeker ex-lover freed by immigration judge
A dangerous criminal who has no legal right to be in Britain has gone on the run after a judge ruled that to detain him...
The Mail On Sunday (05-Sep-2010)
Huge asylum seeker children bill for Birmingham City Council
MIDLAND councils are being forced to pay out MILLIONS of pounds caring for child asylum seekers, the Sunday Mercury can....
SundayMercury.net (05-Sep-2010)
'Socialist' Labour Rivals Call For Change
The five contenders vying to become the next Labour Party leader have all said they want to move on from the Blair-Brown...
Sky News (05-Sep-2010)
Student migration 'unsustainable'
The number of foreign students let into the UK is "unsustainable", minister Damian Green will say in his first major...
Cross Map (05-Sep-2010)
Labour Rivals Debate How To Return To Power
The five Labour leadership candidates have set out their vision for the party and the country at the Sky News debate in....
MetroRadio (05-Sep-2010)
French bid to ban veils worries allies, tourists
ELAINE GANLEY Associated Press Writer= PARIS (AP) Protests in Pakistan, al-Qaida warnings, skittish Muslim tourists:.....
Guardian.co.uk (05-Sep-2010)
PROTEST OVER FRENCH GYPSY CRACKDOWN
Thousands of people all over France have marched to protest at expulsions of gypsies and other security measures adopted...
Scottish Daily Express (05-Sep-2010)
Britains secret child slaves
When she was 12 years old, all Fayola wanted was to go to school, make some new friends and study hard to become a teach...
News of the World (04-Sep-2010)
Racism infects the whole of society
The Metropolitan Police Authority announced recently that the Met is no longer affected by institutional racism. But has...
NewStatesman (04-Sep-2010)
Gardai smash immigration scam
GARDAI have smashed a lucrative scam in which human traffickers were smuggling illegal immigrants into the State. The s...
Irish Independent (04-Sep-2010)
Warning over primary school cuts
A surge in the number of four-year-olds will require primary schools to find an extra 350,000 places over the next four....
Press Association (03-Sep-2010)
Geert Wilders denounces Australian Muslim leader's call for beheading
Geert Wilders, the maverick Dutch politician, denounced a Australian Muslim leaders call for his beheading for denig...
Telegraph.co.uk (03-Sep-2010)
Murderer dubbed 'The Beast' died from heart disease
A serial rapist dubbed "The Beast" died from heart failure while serving a life term for murdering a 12-year-old girl in...
BBC News England (03-Sep-2010)

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Press Releases for February 2005

February 22, 2005
MigrationWatch media response statement to asylum and East European workers figures issued today. Asylum figures for 2004.

February 21, 2005
New proposals provide 'no upper limit' to immigration

February 10, 2005
'Knock on' effect of immigration on the regions

February 7, 2005
Poll shows immigration will be at heart of election campaign


Full Text of Releases : February 2005


February 22, 2005

MigrationWatch media response statement to asylum and East European workers figures issued today. Asylum figures for 2004.


Applications appear to have flattened out at about 10,000 a quarter, or 800 a week including dependants.

88% were refused both asylum and humanitarian protection at initial decision. Most appealed but nearly 80% of appeals were dismissed.

The timeliness of decisions is improving with nearly 2/3rds of cases settled within six months but removals are stuck at 1100 a month. Over the full year they are down 18% on 2003. This is largely because the government inflated the 2003 figures by removing East Europeans despite their impending membership of the EU.

Last year 50,000 claims were finally rejected but only 12,000 were removed; these numbers do not include dependants.

Commenting, Sir Andrew Green, Chairman of Migrationwatch UK said, 'The government have done what they can within the present framework but the problem is very far from resolved. (We are still second only to France and above the United States and Germany in the league table.) And the number of asylum seekers receiving support is, at 61,000, more than half the size of the British army.

‘The Prime Minister has pledged that monthly removals1 will exceed unfounded applications by the end of this year. Over the past two years, failed claims have run at about 70% of applications. If the inflow remains at about 40,000 a year there will be roughly 2,300 unfounded applications a month while removals are still less than half that. This looks like another promise likely to remain unfulfilled. The case for pulling out of the out dated international framework grows ever stronger.’


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February 21, 2005

New proposals provide 'no upper limit' to immigration


The proposals relating to work permits in the “Five year plan” recently announced by Home Secretary Charles Clarke further underline the government’s policy of 'no upper limit to migration,’ says a new report out today. (Read report)

The report - from think-tank Migrationwatch - has concluded that the plan contains a number of changes that should help the system be better managed and less open to abuse. However, much of what is being proposed is simply a ‘repackaging’ of existing schemes and will not affect the central issue of numbers.

‘Numbers are at the heart of this issue. These essentially administrative changes amount to no more than ‘window dressing,’ said Sir Andrew Green, Chairman of Migrationwatch. ‘A points system is pointless without a ceiling on the total.

‘The Prime Minister says that people are fed up with the catalogue of abuses that have been exposed in the immigration system over the past few years. He is right, but the consistent evidence of the polls shows that the public are equally concerned with the scale of immigration and the lack of any consultation.'

Sir Andrew said that the case for such large numbers of migrant workers had simply never been made.

‘Access to cheap, flexible labour is of course good for employers. However it does not take into account the social costs and pressures on the nation’s infrastructure that result from the continuing rise in population. In housing, for example, the latest projections show that nearly one in three of the additional 189,000 households formed each year will be due to international migration.’


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February 10, 2005

'Knock on' effect of immigration on the regions


Record levels of international immigration into London and the South East have created a substantial ‘knock on’ effect across much of the southern half of England and in Wales, says a new paper out today from think tank Migrationwatch.

The report charts population movements between the regions of the UK over the past ten years and compares them with the massive growth in international immigration in that time. (Read Report)

The principal finding is that the white population of the UK and the ethnic minority population are becoming increasingly separated as a result of unprecedented changes in London's population.

There has been substantial migration from areas of high ethnic population in the capital to those parts of the country with predominately white populations. In the period 1993-2002, 606,000 more Londoners moved out of the city than came in from elsewhere in the UK. In the same period a net 726,000 immigrants arrived in London.

‘As international immigration into London and the South East has increased, so the outward migration of Londoners to other regions of the UK has accelerated. Indeed, both the inflow and the outflow have doubled in the last five years,’ said Sir Andrew Green, Chairman of Migrationwatch. Of the outflow from London, almost 300,000 moved to the South West during the decade with a further 181,000 going to the East of England.

‘This has a number of effects. It places enormous stress on housing, education, health and social services in immigrant areas while at the same time the South-West, South-East and East Midlands are having to expand facilities rapidly to cater for the outflow from London. This, in turn, puts strains on their infrastructure, particularly housing, transport, education, health and the environment,’ he said. ‘A related issue is that many of the same people will continue to work in London leading to an even greater volume of commuting – estimated by the Prime Minister’s Strategy Unit to increase by between 10 and 20% in the seven years to 2010.

‘It is self evident that the development of increasingly ‘parallel societies’ in some of our major cities, with self segregation between the various cultures, is an extremely undesirable development in terms of long term community relations. Our study reinforces some of the concerns expressed by the Cohesion Panel which reported to the government in July 2004 that “the pace of change (for a number of reasons) is simply too great in some areas at present.”

Said Sir Andrew: ‘The Panel’s Report was entitled “The End of Parallel Lives” but Government immigration policy (or the lack of it) is exacerbating the trend to parallel living. When the Government encouraged a huge rise in immigration they failed to consider the many consequences that would follow. As our report highlights, our society will be deeply affected by them for many years to come.’

(Please Note: None of the figures in this report make any allowance for illegal immigration, for which the Government has no figure, but is generally thought to run into many hundreds of thousands.)


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February 7, 2005

Poll shows immigration will be at heart of election campaign


A new survey has confirmed that a party’s policy on immigration will play a major role in deciding how people vote in the next general election.

A YouGov poll, for think tank Migrationwatch, taken last week shows that 45% agreed, including 21% who strongly agreed, that a party’s policy on immigration would influence their vote at the next general election. This view was consistently held amongst all age groups, social grades and regions, with slightly less support in Scotland and among the under 30s.
(see attached table).

When asked if they thought the Government ‘has immigration under control’ 77% either disagreed or strongly disagreed while 67% disagreed, including 38% who strongly disagreed, that the Government was listening to the public’s concerns.

When asked if they thought the Government was being ‘open and honest about the scale of immigration into Britain’ 74% disagreed, 41% strongly.

‘It is clear that a very large majority of people see immigration as an issue of real concern; they do not believe that it is being properly managed, nor do they believe what they are being told. Rather, they believe that the Government is simply not listening to them,’ said Sir Andrew Green, chairman of Migrationwatch.

The survey also reinforced the point that it was not the nationality or culture of immigrants that mainly concerned people, but the numbers, as 56% either agreed (37%) or strongly agreed (19%) that it is a good thing that Britain is a multicultural society.

There was however concern that the record level of immigration is contributing to a loss of Britain’s own culture with 61% agreeing (30% strongly) to the proposition.

There was little enthusiasm for further immigration. Only 19% agreed (4% strongly) that immigration is having a positive effect on the quality of life in Britain. 53% disagreed, including 27% strongly. In a related question 67% agreed (37% strongly) that too many immigrants were coming to Britain.

There were also fears about the pressure it was putting on our public services with 75% agreeing (40% strongly) that it was.

Very nearly two thirds rejected one of the government’s main justifications for immigration, namely their claim that immigrants are needed to do jobs that British people don’t want to do (65%, of which 32% strongly disagreed).

‘These results could hardly be clearer. They demonstrate conclusively that the Government’s policy of ignoring public concern and insinuating that anyone who raises the issue has a racist agenda has completely failed. They must now at last address the real issues. Whether they will be believed is another matter,’ said Sir Andrew.


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