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Posted: Sun 29 Feb 2004 23:59 GMT
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- SSue
- Voluntary Moderator
- Joined: 31 Oct 2003
- Posts: 5206
- Location: From Grimsby, Lincolnshire, to Sydney, then Port Macquarie NSW Australia
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There are lots of refugees in UK, Liz, I was told the number, but I can't remember off hand. They are there legally, accepted by the government, and although it would now be safe to send them back, it seems that they will be staying. What is causing a lot of contention, is the fact that they are receiving a lot more hand-outs, than the disadvantaged locals are.
We had about four plane loads here in Sydney, when the trouble was on. Difference being, that as soon as it was safe for them to return, they were flown back home again. Australia had no intention of them staying, and IMHO this is what should have happened in UK too.
SSue 8)
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Posted: Mon 1 Mar 2004 04:04 GMT
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- Audrey
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- Joined: 23 Jan 2003
- Posts: 171
- Location: Abu Dhabi
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Quote:Difference being, that as soon as it was safe for them to return, they were flown back home again. Australia had no intention of them staying, and IMHO this is what should have happened in UK too.
I totally agree Sue. I would not walk around on my own at night in the UK for anything - I feel so vulnerable all the time and even have the car door locked when driving on my own.
At one time we never encountered beggars on the streets of Cardiff where I live but now certain areas I would not go to at all.
But maybe that is not all down to refugees but the general state of play in the Country. The Government has a lot to answer for.
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Posted: Mon 1 Mar 2004 17:30 GMT
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- nooranismith
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- Joined: 06 Feb 2004
- Posts: 452
- Location: Rome, Italy
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I think most people who are vehemently opposed to illegal immigration find it kind of difficult to judge an illegal from a legal immigrant by looking at them. I never realised how hard it was for non-whites in the UK until I started travelling with my wife (Indian).
In the UK now it seems the words 'illegal' and 'immigrant' are irrevocably linked and anyone with a touch of melanin and the misfortune to be out of work are branded as such. Considering our history of traipsing all over the world and busily draining other countries of their resources, it's a little ironic that when the biters start to get bit we introduce passports and immigration controls to protect 'our' stuff, and complain about people crossing borders with impunity.
Given our cross cultural marriage I looked into our shared history. Now walking around Edinburgh it is very evident to me that much of it was built with Indian money, for example. Our history of intrepid entrepreneurs suffering hardships in the face of difficult and unfriendly natives after hard struggled voyages over stormy seas is the stuff of heroes. Make them brown, or off white at least, and suddenly for the media they are essentially spongers and wasters after our precious things.
Now, I'm not suggesting that it is not a problem. But it is a problem that pretty much we have caused for ourselves, but generally we'd rather blame the victim. Given the conditions and hardships often suffered by illegals, we should consider the sobering fact that it is still worth the risks for them to get where they were going. We should certainly try to overcome the difficulties and problems caused, but some sympathy for those who are actually suffering the most is more appropriate than the nonsense spoken by the media.
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Posted: Tue 2 Mar 2004 05:40 GMT
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- Kay
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- Joined: 22 Jan 2003
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Quote:My experience of Brits abroad is the transfer knowledge and skills to indiginous people as well as creating jobs and wealth. It is not to illegally enter a country, collect the benefits and intimidate people.
Maybe that's more the attitude today, but it hasn't always been so. The British Raj are a prime example of how we plundered another country, collected the benefits, and intimidated people.
Mind you, a lot of Indians still think that things were better under British rule considering the corruption going on now.
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Posted: Wed 3 Mar 2004 01:48 GMT
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- SSue
- Voluntary Moderator
- Joined: 31 Oct 2003
- Posts: 5206
- Location: From Grimsby, Lincolnshire, to Sydney, then Port Macquarie NSW Australia
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I'm all for people choosing where they would like to live, and how, as long as they work for it, and don't just expect to land on that countries doorstep, and think it should provide them with all their home comforts, at the expense of an already overstretched government, and taxpayer.
From different reports I've heard, read about, and seen on the news, these are the cases that have caused all the hoo haa, and rightly so. If the legal refugees are given handouts, over and above, what a disadvantaged brit, is given, and then they are also holding out the begging bowl, and accumulating more money, there's no wonder it's caused a stink.
I can't see the sense in bringing people here, (Australia) just to dump them, on the streets, when they can't integrate, because they can't speak a word of english, and most of them don't want to be here in the first place. I am sure that Australia did the right thing by helping these people in their time of need, and when the danger was over, returning them to their homeland, and normal lives.
SSue 8)
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Posted: Wed 3 Mar 2004 18:13 GMT
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- nooranismith
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- Joined: 06 Feb 2004
- Posts: 452
- Location: Rome, Italy
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I don't disagree with you SSue. For example, although Scotland was relatively welcoming to the refugees, printing pages and articles in their newspapers in the various refugee languages, etc., the parties weren't dispersed across various areas but set down in a block in some of the most impoverished areas of Glasgow. The result of this is bound to be local resentment and envy - because I really doubt it would even be legal to place them in the WORST of accomodation available in Glasgow. Not only that, and apologies to my Glaswegian Brethren, such areas aren't known at the best of times to be filled with pious law abiding citizens. The refugees are immediately put into a position where they had to fight to survive and in a strange country. To my knowledge several didn't survive, whereas (and I know I may be wrong) there were no murders of locals by refugees. Th eimpression thus given to people is that Scotland is a place full of murderers, drunks and toughs where you have to keep your wits to live and grab what you can before it is taken from you.
And again, I don't disagree with you, SSue, but it is hardly a criteria that has been applied so strongly to us from the more privileged countries. Our Free Market in our Free World is strongly and tightly controlled by those of us with the wealth that we have taken from the rest - more often with a gun rather than a begging bowl.
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Posted: Wed 3 Mar 2004 18:38 GMT
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- Dave
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- Joined: 21 Jan 2003
- Posts: 8603
- Location: Mostly SE Asia
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HesitationKills wrote:My experience of Brits abroad is the transfer knowledge and skills to indiginous people as well as creating jobs and wealth. It is not to illegally enter a country, collect the benefits and intimidate people.
Just read a quite startling passage in McCarthy's Bar by Pete McCarthy, where he's talking about some of the more exotic (English) denizens of SW Ireland:
Quote:Were they hounded out by Thatcher?... Are they just music fanatics? Inheritors of the bucolic English Wordsworthian rural tradition?
Or is it just easier to get the dole over here, as Bridie, the Irish mother of a friend of mine, insists...? "...Sure, the country's being ruined by the English, going over there to collect the dole and get drunk! They should stay in their own country."
Whether or not that's what they're actually doing, that's what the locals perceive them as doing.
As Ron says, the words "illegal" and "immigrant" are inextricably linked in many people's minds. It's perhaps worth noting that the TUC has absolutely nothing against legal immigrants - in the recent flurry of panic over the impact of ten new EU member states on the UK job markets, the TUC was arguing that the UK shouldn't join the rest of the existing EU member states (apart from Ireland) who are taking up the option to bar jobseekers for up to seven years. And legal immigrants actually contribute a disproportionately high amount to the UK's GDP.
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Posted: Wed 3 Mar 2004 22:41 GMT
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- nooranismith
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- Joined: 06 Feb 2004
- Posts: 452
- Location: Rome, Italy
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NIce point Dave
It had actually just occurred to me I could have used the example of the floods of English economic migrants deciding a parking space was too expensive in London and buying up an estate in Scotland and displacing the locals. You beat me to it with a better analogy.
No-one wants to be threatened in their homes and security, but the fundamental problem in all these examples is the inequity in the world. As inheritors of first world wealth we, in general, are the lucky ones. The refugees, whether migrants due to oppresion, warfare, or even economics are, in general, the unlucky ones. Our society casts aspersions widespread across those unwashed masses instead of focussing on the specific problems and crimes caused by the few and trying to solve them.
BTW it occurs to me I seem like a hippy. Let me say I don't give money to beggars wherever they are from. I do give change to people who clean my windscreen for me, so I am in total agreement with working for your keep. On the other hand, I'm pretty damn sure that most of the people living in a Mumbai shanty town are working a damn sight harder day to day for a hell of a lot less than I get get for doing a hell of a lot less, but I'm welcomed into more places than they are.
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