A selection of recent media reports

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)
Border officials find 15 stowaways in lorries
BORDER officials have stopped 15 stowaways from illegally entering the country in lorries bound for Yorkshire, including...
Yorkshire Post (03-Sep-2010)
Restaurant booze ban as raid nets illegal workers
A Chinese restaurant has been banned from selling alcohol for six months after a raid by immigration officials, gang-bus...
Evening Times (03-Sep-2010)
Tony Blair has rewritten history without modesty or shame
If he wasn't in charge of the country when it all started to go wrong, then who was, asks Jeff Randall.
Daily Telegraph (03-Sep-2010)
1,000 are paid £800 a week housing benefit
MORE than a THOUSAND families rake in a whopping £800 a week or MORE in housing benefit, The Sun can...
The Scottish Sun (03-Sep-2010)
COLONEL GADDAFI MAY BE PAID BY EU TO STOP IMMIGRATION
SENIOR Eurocrats are considering a demand from Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi for billions of pounds of taxpayers cash to...
Scottish Daily Express (03-Sep-2010)
BBC had "massive bias to left:" director general
The director general of the BBC admitted Thursday that his organisation had been guilty of a "massive bias to the left" ...
Yahoo! News UK & Ireland (03-Sep-2010)
RECORD INCREASE IN IMMIGRATION AS POPULATION SOARS
IMMIGRATION sent the population of England and Wales soaring by a record amount last...
Daily Star (03-Sep-2010)
Why do Finland's schools get the best results?
Last year more than 100 foreign delegations and governments visited Helsinki, hoping to learn the secret of their school...
BBC News Southern Counties (02-Sep-2010)
Illegal migrants caught after restaurant raid in Ely
Immigration officers have found three illegal workers and another two illegal migrants during a raid on a Chinese restau...
BBC News England (02-Sep-2010)
Indian student visas fall by half in Australia
The number of Indians granted student visas in Australia during the last financial year has fallen to 29,721, less than ...
Irish Sun (02-Sep-2010)
Illegal immigrants caught at V
THREE men were arrested in the UK Border Agencys first operation at V Festivals Chelmsford site. Officers arrested two ...
Chelmsford Weekly News (02-Sep-2010)
There was massive left-wing bias at the BBC
In his first major interview since giving the MacTaggart Lecture in Edinburgh, Mark Thompson talks about political press...
New Statesman (02-Sep-2010)
Cannabis factory at industrial unit was UK's biggest
The largest cannabis factory found in the UK last year was in an industrial unit in Haddenham, Cambridgeshire.
Lynn News (02-Sep-2010)
Outraged' MEPs attack France over Roma policy
Political groups in the Parliament ready to recommend a formal condemnation of Nicolas...
European Voice (02-Sep-2010)
BBC 'HAD MASSIVE BIAS TO THE LEFT'
The BBC was guilty of a "massive bias to the left" in the past, director general Mark Thompson has...
Daily Star (02-Sep-2010)

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Press Releases for March 2005

March 22, 2005
MigrationWatch media response to item on 'Today' programme

March 21, 2005
The social impact of immigration

March 7, 2005
Nailing the myth of immigration's economic 'benefits'


Full Text of Releases : March 2005


March 22, 2005

MigrationWatch media response to item on 'Today' programme


On the Today programme on Radio Four on March 22 there was a discussion between Immigration Minister Des Browne MP and Peter Lilley MP on current immigration levels into the UK. Mr Lilley made the point that over the next 30 years, according to the Government’s own figures, the population of the UK would increase by 5 million as a result of immigration. Mr Browne said ‘I do not believe that these figures are going to materialise.’

Commenting on the Minister’s remarks Sir Andrew Green, chairman of Migrationwatch said: ‘It is astonishing that a Government minister should deny the validity of the Government’s own population projections.

‘Having seen the concern with which the present scale of immigration is viewed by all sections of the community it seems they now to want to deny the consequences of their actions as their full extent is becoming more widely understood.

‘A reduction seems most unlikely as Government assumptions about future immigration have consistently been well below the actual outturn. In fact even higher numbers are likely as the government’s policies contribute to continually rising immigration and they have themselves repeatedly said that they ‘see no upper limit’ to legal immigration.


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March 21, 2005

The social impact of immigration


The recent surge in immigration is accelerating change in the nature of communities, particularly in London and some Northern cities. This is revealed in figures issued by the Office of National Statistics and analysed by think-tank Migrationwatch. (Read report)

The statistics show that of the 621,000 births in the whole of the United Kingdom in 2003, nearly one in five (18.6%) were to mothers who were born outside the UK. Nearly half (47%) of the children born in Greater London were born to mothers born abroad.

For inner London the overall figure is 55% but in the London Boroughs of Newham, Tower Hamlets and Westminster this figure rose to 68%. For Outer London as a whole the figure is 41% - but in Brent the figure
was 65%.

Manchester, Bradford, Leicester, Birmingham, Cambridge, Forest Heath (Suffolk), Slough and Oxford recorded more than 30% of births to foreign-born mothers.

The very high proportion of births to foreign-born mothers in some English cities together with the outflow of city dwellers to the regions (see Migrationwatch report: “The effect of Immigration on the Regions”) explains the very rapid changes taking place in parts of our cities. It again raises the question of how satisfactory integration can be achieved in areas where British culture itself is already diminishing.

In the 10 years from 1993 to 2002 there was a net inflow of about 1.65 million foreign-born people to the UK and a net outflow of over 600,000 UK-born people. The majority of the resulting net increase in population through migration is in the younger age groups.

The high-levels of migration, and the young age profile of immigrants, are the main factors behind population growth in the UK. The latest release of ‘Population Trends’ from the ONS confirms that the population is expected to rise by 6.1 million by 2031. Of this, nearly 5.2 million (84%) will be attributable to net migration.

‘These changes are taking place without adequate debate - or consideration of the social, economic and cultural issues that such rapid change is bound to create,’ said Sir Andrew Green, chairman of Migrationwatch. ‘As opinion polls repeatedly tell us there is widespread concern at the rapid increase in immigration into the UK since 1997. Nearly 80% of the people in Britain, including 55% of the ethnic minority communities, want to see much tighter immigration controls. Yet the government makes no serious attempt to explain what purpose is served by immigration on this completely unprecedented scale,’ said Sir Andrew. The Government’s own Cohesion Panel reported in July 2004; “The pace of change (for a variety of reasons) is simply too great in some areas at present” - but the government has failed to respond. Indeed, the Home Secretary continues to say that there should be no limit.’


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March 7, 2005

Nailing the myth of immigration's economic 'benefits'


The government's claims for the economic benefit of the present large scale immigration are, at best, ‘disingenuous,’ says a new report
out today.

In a second paper examining the economic consequences of immigration think tank Migrationwatch says that it is important to nail once and for all the Prime Minister's favourite, but misleading, claim that immigrants contribute 0.5% to trend GDP and the other ‘dodgy’ statistics, such as that migrants contribute £2.5bn more to the Exchequer each year than they cost, which they use to support their case. (Read)

‘There is no doubt that immigrants do add to the size of our economy but they also add to our population. What the Government conveniently fails to mention is that they therefore generate considerable costs in terms of infrastructure – schools, hospitals, housing, transport etc,’ said Sir Andrew Green, chairman of Migrationwatch.

When these costs are added back, says the report, the true economic ‘benefit’ to the host population is likely to be at best + 0.1% of GDP, or about 14p a week per head each year, with the likely true benefit being no better than neutral – as all major studies overseas have also concluded.

‘It is extraordinary that this Government’ principal justification for the current immigration levels is built on such shaky foundations. They seem to believe that, if their supporters repeat false claims often enough then, despite the clear evidence to the contrary, people will believe them and be reassured,’ he said.

Sir Andrew said that, while the current record levels of immigration are attractive to employers because they provide an unlimited source of cheap labour, they are not only extremely expensive for the taxpayer but are also harmful for the less skilled indigenous workforce whose wages are held down and who are rendered more likely to be unemployed. Furthermore, to the extent that immigration holds down wages, it makes it more difficult to attract into the labour force the one million on incapacity benefit who would like to work.

The report also says that the claim that migrants contribute to pensions is dismissed by the UN as requiring “virtually impossible” rates of immigration. The House of Lords economic committee concurs.

Said Sir Andrew: ‘The Government is at best being disingenuous. No wonder 70% of the public simply do not believe what they say on immigration. A range of serious commentators have concluded that the issue cannot, and should not, be decided on economic grounds alone. The government should give the full economic picture and take account of the very strong public opinion on this matter.’


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