IMMIGRATION WATCH INTERNATIONAL ARCHIVE 
For SELECTIVE immigration.. 

The primary version of this blog is HERE. The Blogroll. My Home Page. Email John Ray here. Other mirror sites: Political Correctness Watch, Dissecting Leftism, Greenie Watch, Australian Politics, Socialized Medicine, Tongue Tied, Food & Health Skeptic, Education Watch and Gun Watch. For a list of backups viewable in China, see here. (Click "Refresh" on your browser if background colour is missing). The archive for this mirror site is here or here.
****************************************************************************************



30 November, 2007

UK population 'to double in one lifetime'

The UK’s population could almost double within a lifetime to more than 100 million, new figures have shown. A combination of record immigration, high fertility rates and longer life expectancy could push the numbers to 108 million by 2081. The extraordinary estimate issued by the Office for National Statistics yesterday came as a parliamentary committee heard evidence of the growing impact on schools and hospitals. One teachers’ leader said some schools were ''struggling to cope” because they had not been given enough money to deal with the influx.

The most likely forecast based on current trends is that the population will rise to 71m in 2031 and to 85m in 2081, but if birth rates grow more quickly than expected, immigration remains high and people live longer this could reach 108 million - nearly twice today’s 60m. High immigration is also fuelling a baby boom because new arrivals tend to be younger and to have larger families than the indigenous population.

David Davis, the shadow home secretary, said: 'This confirms what we have been telling the Government all along. ''Labour needs to wake up and understand the factors driving population change as well as the solutions.”

Sir Andrew Green, the chairman of Migrationwatch, said: “Our country is already facing massive changes as a result of the government’s failure to control our borders. ''These population projections are a sharp reminder of what could well happen if they continue to fail to take firm and effective action to bring a halt to the mass immigration which they have stimulated.”

Liam Byrne, the immigration minister, said: "These projections show what might happen in 75 years’ time unless we take action now. "Frankly, it underlines the need for the swift and sweeping changes we are bringing to the immigration system in the next 12 months, which will include the introduction of an Australian-style points-based system, so only those that Britain needs can come to work and study.”

The figures were published as representatives of teachers, doctors and nurses spoke of the impact of migration on the public services. In evidence to a House of Lords committee inquiry into the impact of immigration, Steve Sinnott, general secretary of the National Union of Teachers, said a phenomenon once limited to urban areas was now affecting rural primary schools which needed more expert staff and specialist books for pupils who speak no English. "We do have schools where we have had significant, large numbers of youngsters appearing very quickly,” he said. "We have had schools in London where on a Friday afternoon the head has arrived with seven or eight youngsters and taken them to a GCSE English class and none of the youngsters can speak English. '’The teachers have been pulling their hair out,’’ he said.

Mick Brookes, general secretary of the head teachers’ union NAHT, said the education of both migrant and local pupils was at risk in some schools. "Some schools are struggling to cope,’’ he said. "The capacity to do the best they can for the local children - and the children who are coming in - is being stretched.’’

An analysis by the union suggested that extra Government funding for each immigrant child would only pay for about three weeks of a teaching assistant’s time. Josie Irwin of the Royal College of Nursing said there was only anecdotal evidence about the impact of immigration on hospitals but there were ''particular difficulties” in the inner cities.

Prof David Blanchflower, a member of the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee, predicted a second wave of migration from eastern Europe as the current well-educated arrivals gain new skills and get better jobs. He believed the flow from the east was ''inexorable” and probably had not peaked. Prof Blanchflower expected another inflow of Poles and other EU nationals from Ireland, which has seen a greater number of arrivals proportionately than the UK but where work is drying up. There would be a new migration to help London prepare to the Olympics in 2012, he added. Prof Blanchflower said there was evidence that the high levels of immigration were depressing wages among low-skilled workers, something the Government has disputed.

Source




Wow! Glimmerings of sanity in Sweden

And its from a Social Democrat (Leftist) too

People who have been smuggled into Sweden should be deported, a leading Social Democrat politician has said. Allowing those who have paid thousands to people smugglers to stay is not fair on people who can't afford to pay to leave their homelands. Goran Johansson, leader of Gothenburg Council, said he based his views on the fact that many of the 20,000 Iraqis expected to come to Sweden this year came here illegally, often with the help of people smugglers.

"If it is obvious that someone has been smuggled in they should be sent back again," Johansson told newspaper GT. People pay around 100,000 kronor ($16,000) each to be brought to Sweden. "We should never accept this. By not saying anything we are tacitly accepting people smuggling," Johansson said.

Johansson admitted that his idea, if put into practice, would lead to more people being returned directly to their homelands. "Then they can come back by the normal route," he said. He added that it was immoral for money to decide who would make it to Sweden. "There may be those who can't scrape together 100,000 kronor whose need to come here is perhaps greater. But they don't get a chance," he said.

Source




Australian police ready for sweep to deport New Guinea illegals

Note here that it is Melanesians (blacks) calling for the expulsion of Melanesians

FEDERAL officers are preparing an unprecedented sweep through the Torres Strait to deport Papua New Guineans illegally living on some of Australia's most remote territory. Community leaders in the Torres Strait held emergency meetings with immigration officials last week, after a surge in the number of people arriving from PNG, securing a commitment to have them deported. An immigration spokesman yesterday refused to discuss the coming operation, but confirmed meetings with community leaders had recently taken place. "The department has held recent meetings with councils in the Torres Strait. However, we will not discuss operational details," the spokesman said.

Thursday Island Mayor Pedro Stephen said communities including Saibai, Boigu, Iama, Masig, Dauan, Erub and Badu islands were in danger of being annexed by PNG because of the large number of illegal arrivals. "All seem to have more PNG nationals living there than local islanders," Mr Stephen said. "They are coming and taking over all the businesses." The situation has become particularly bad on Saibai Island in northern Torres Strait, where as many as 300 of the immigrants, dubbed "overstayers" by the locals, have strained resources and almost run the islands limited water supply dry.

Mr Stephen said the Torres Strait Treaty, which came into effect in 1985 and allows the movement of people between PNG and the Australian islands, needed to be rewritten to ensure economic development in PNG's Western Province. "There's been nothing built there for decades. What you have is the Third World just a stone's throw from an Australian community," Mr Stephen said. "It's no wonder they travel to access services. They've got nothing at home."

Even the most senior PNG national in Torres Strait, the Reverend Lawes Waia, who lives on Thursday Island, just off the tip of Cape York, has called for the borders to be closed and the Torres Strait Treaty to be torn up. "Whether we drink contaminated water, whether we carry sickness and diseases on our bodies, whether no government services are reaching us, let's stop bothering the Torres Strait Islanders with their island facilities and resources. Please close the border now and put all words into action," Mr Waia said.

Mr Stephen said communities in the northern Torres Strait were concerned the numbers might become so great they would wind up becoming PNG territory. "You have to remember that when the Torres Strait treaty was signed, PNG wanted to basically cut the strait in half and administer the islands north of Badu," Mr Stephen said. "A lot of people remember that and think maybe this is a way of getting those islands."

A senior Saibai Island community member, who asked not to be named, said the PNG nationals ignored local immigration officers, and had built a filthy shanty town on the northern edge of the island. "We are pleased the Department of Immigration is finally going to do something," the local said. "These people have brought diseases which we can not cope with. It is not good for our community."

Source






29 November, 2007

British singer sparks row over immigration

The outspoken former Smiths singer Morrissey has found himself at the centre of a row after alleged comments about immigration and its impact on British identity in a magazine interview. The star, who has enjoyed a highly successful solo career since the band's split, reportedly told the music magazine NME that Britain had suffered an "immigration explosion", adding: "England is a memory now". "The gates are flooded and anybody can have access to England and join in," he was reported as telling NME reporter Tim Jonze.

According to the magazine, the singer - who now lives in Rome - said that while he didn't have anything against people from other countries, "the higher the influx into England the more the British identity disappears". "The British identity is very attractive, I grew up into it and I find it quaint and very amusing," he went on. "Other countries have held on to their basic identity yet it seems to me that England was thrown away."

He said that while immigration does enrich the British identity, it meant saying goodbye to "the Britain you once knew". "The change in England is so rapid compared to the change in any other country. "If you walk through Knightsbridge on any bland day of the week you won't hear an English accent. You'll hear every accent under the sun apart from the British accent."

He was challenged over the comments in a second interview, in which he insisted he did not intend to be "inflammatory". "I find racism very silly," he said. "Almost too silly to discuss. It's beyond reason. And makes no sense and is ludicrous. I've never heard a good argument in favour of racism."

But his alleged comments, published in the magazine today, sparked outrage among some fans who said they would boycott the singer's Best Of album due to be released in the new year. One, named Slimjim, of Bradford, wrote on an internet message board: "It's totally out of order. Morrissey sounds like a Tory MP these days. It's a disgrace. I'll think twice about buying his next album."

It is not the first time he has caused controversy, nor the first time he has fallen out with the magazine's editors. In 1992, he was criticised by NME after he appeared on stage in Finsbury Park to support Madness wrapped in a Union Jack flag. Some of his song titles and lyrics have also attracted criticism, including the tracks Bengali in Platforms and National Front Disco, which included the lyrics: `You've gone to the National Front Disco/Because you want the day to come sooner'.

But his manager responded angrily, accusing NME of a "poorly thought out and terribly executed attempt at character assassination" of the 48-year-old. "Anti-racist songs such as "Irish Blood, English Heart," "America Is Not The World" and "I Will See You In Far-Off Places" tell you the true measure of the man," Merck Mercuriadis wrote on the Morrissey fan website True To You.

Dr Rob Berkeley, deputy director of the Runnymede Trust, which campaigns for equality and justice, said that while he did not agree with Morrissey's comments, his views were not that uncommon.

Source




Blacks too much even for Leftist Spain

Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero called for stronger European Union border defenses to control the influx of illegal immigrants to the continent - the brunt of which is borne by Spain. Zapatero told the European Parliament on Wednesday that the EU border agency, Frontex, must be strengthened and EU cooperation enhanced to fight illegal immigration.

Thousands of Sub-Saharan migrants try to reach Spain by sailing in rickety wooden boats from West Africa to Spain's Canary Islands, just off the coast of Morocco. The dangerous trip can take more than a week and is often deadly. About 24,000 migrants were caught trying to reach Spain last year, compared to less than 10,000 so far this year.

Source






28 November, 2007

Defending illegals is unwise

I wonder if the Democrat Presidential candidates will learn that lesson in time? Best if they don't maybe. There is enough hypocrisy in politics already

Tom Selders is still baffled at how quickly the city he served for years turned on him. The two-term mayor of this conservative farm town had been a political fixture for nearly two decades. A businessman who prided himself on bringing efficiency to city government, Selders infuriated his constituents after jumping into the national debate over illegal immigration. In May he spoke at an open forum in Washington about the effects of last year's immigration raid on a meatpacking plant here, which led to the detention of 262 undocumented workers. "Many families and children were devastated by parents being arrested and detained," Selders said. "Children -- citizens of the United States -- were left without parents."

The reaction in Greeley, whose Latino population has nearly tripled since 1980, was swift and furious. Selders, who was seeking a third term as mayor, was overwhelmed with angry calls. He became a regular target on local talk radio. A mailer linking him to illegal immigrant gang members flooded mailboxes. Earlier this month Selders was ousted from the nonpartisan post, losing to a retired police officer by a 3-2 margin.

"I really feel betrayed by my community," said Selders, 61. "There's a big contingent of people in this community who are just full of anger and hate about illegal immigration, and that anger and hate has been transferred to me."

What happened to Selders, a lifelong Republican, is a cautionary tale of the politics of illegal immigration. To some, it shows how a good man trying to do the right thing was taken down by the forces of intolerance. To others, it shows what can happen to elitist politicians who dismiss voters' frustrations over unchecked illegal immigration. "A lot of people in Weld County remained silent" as people like Selders criticized the December 2006 raid, said County Dist. Atty. Kenneth R. Buck, who supported Selders' opponent. "They don't want to be called racist, they don't want their business to be boycotted. . . . There were a lot of people who were waiting to be heard in their anonymous way." ....

Opponents of illegal immigration are elated to see Selders go. "Now it's going to change," Breuer said. "People who don't want to follow the laws will get out of here." Immigrants rights activists in Greeley are still in a state of shock and wonder whether they missed a chance to help a rare ally. Selders' campaign got some support in the heavily Latino neighborhoods, said activist Sylvia Martinez. "People didn't believe [in Selders] because he is white, because he is a Republican, because he is a businessman," [bigotry?] she said. "I don't think a lot of people believed he was running for his life."

More here




English is the foreign language for 40% of British primary school pupils

Schools are struggling to cover the cost of providing specialist teachers for thousands of new immigrant pupils, headteachers warned today. Forty per cent of primary age children in London now speak a language other than English at home and some schools take several new arrivals a week as pupils "appear from nowhere", heads have said. The National Association of Head Teachers called for schools to be given the "infrastructure" they needed to get pupils whose first language is not English fluent enough to cope with the national curriculum as soon as possible.

The NAHT warned that the Government's Ethnic Minority Achievement Grant, which is doled out by Whitehall to town halls to allocate among schools according to need, was failing to cover the cost of English as an Additional Language teachers. NAHT leader Mick Brookes said: "These children are welcome in our schools but we need the capacity to look after them properly."

Latest government figures show that the capital's primary schools alone took in more than 197,000 children for whom English is not their first language this year, up from just over 190,000 last year. Secondary schools' proportion of non-native English speakers rose from 33.5 per cent to 35.3 per cent. Most are concentrated in inner London - in Tower Hamlets, three quarters of children in primary schools are now not native English speakers.

Ofsted research has shown that primary schools typically spent their EMAG on a single EAL teacher, supported by a classroom assistant. But Ofsted also found that primary schools with a track record of successfully integrating EAL pupils were forced to find thousands of pounds more from their general budgets. Most had suffered cuts in their EMAG grants. "Schools were pessimistic about being able to sustain the excellent work they had built up over the years if funding continued to decline," said Ofsted.

Clarissa Williams, head of Tolworth Girls' School in Kingston, said she got œ1,300 from the Government to teach English to foreign pupils, and topped that up with another 30,000 pounds. "These children just turn up on your doorstep and it places a significant additional strain on budgets," she said. A spokesman for the Department for Children, Schools and Families insisted the EMAG was keeping up with demand, saying it was going up from 178.6million this year to 206.6million in 2010-11.

Source






27 November, 2007

Romney talks tough on immigration

See the original for a link to the video

Mitt Romney pledges to take charge to stem illegal immigration in a new TV ad that will air in Iowa and New Hampshire. "We need smart, tough solutions, not just talk," the announcer says before pointing out that Romney, while governor of Massachusetts, opposed driver's licenses and in-state tuition for illegal immigrants and pushed for English in the classroom.

As Romney is pictured rolling up his sleeves, the ad then says that he is the only candidate with a proven record of fixing major problems and will bring a no-nonsense, corporate-style approach to a problem that has vexed politicians of both parties: "Take charge. Demand results. No excuses."

Romney and other Republican presidential hopefuls are generally trying to out-tough each other on the issue, and criticizing each other for not being tough enough. The Democratic candidates are pushing a welcoming approach, though they acknowledge that immigration is a hot-button issue.

Source




Roundup of the recent European immigration experience

See the original for links

Large scale immigration to Europe, a trend going back to the end of World War II, may not be new, but the crisis the continent currently faces is. As second and third generation immigrants from the Middle East and Africa come of age, Europe is grappling with the challenge of protecting its own values while searching for a solution to the social ills - alienation, segregation, poverty, illiberalism and terrorism - associated with immigration.

Muslims in France:

France has perhaps received the most international media attention, particularly during major riots in 2005 when young immigrant youth burned cars, buses, and buildings. France's new employment law, now repealed after major protests, was meant to address the economic origins of the riots. Other controversies include a nativist group which served pork soup to the homeless and the controversial decision to prohibit girls from wearing headscarves in school.

Illegal African Immigrants Come By Boat to the Canary Islands:

The Canary Islands, a Spanish protectorate better known to the world as a mecca for cruise ships, are fast becoming a prime destination for illegal immigrants from Sub-Saharan Africa. (Read more)

Danish Cartoon Controversy:

When the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten published cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed deeply offensive to Muslims, what began as an assertion of free speech in Denmark deteroriated into violence in countries thorughout the Muslim world. Some think European Muslims' reaction was an expression of feelings of alienation and neglect. (See: "Read more)

UK's Immigrants & The London Bombings:

The 2005 London bombings once again brought home the real threat of terrorism in Europe and its relation to immigration. The bombers were three men of Pakistani descent who born and raised in the UK, but thought to have been "radicalized" during trips to Pakistan. The fourth was a young man born in Jamaica who had converted to Islam after moving to London. (Read more)

Holland's New Immigrant Quiz:

How would you react to...Men kissing in a park? A woman lounging topless on a beach? A measure designed to severely limit Muslim immigration to the Netherlands screens potential immigrants for their social attitudes and knowledge of obscure Dutch trivia. (Read more)

Germany's Turkish Immigrants:

In Germany, Turkish and Muslim immigrants are segregated from Germany society physically, linguistically and culturally. "How Germany Has Failed Its Immigrants" (Der Spiegel) looks at why the immigrants are not the only ones to blame and why European governments should be doing more.

Source






26 November, 2007

Pathetic Britain

Illegal immigrant demands to be flown home because Britons are 'rude and unfriendly'. Why is there ANY taxpayer support for people who have been told to leave?

An illegal immigrant has demanded to be flown home after saying he was fed up with British people - because they are "rude and unfriendly". Speaking today, Mokhtar Tabet, 30 - who has been given a home, food and free travel around London - claims his local council has breached his human rights by moving him to a place he does not like. He was refused asylum in 2004 and is set to be deported.

He said: "The council evicted me from my home in September and moved me to Streatham, which I don't like. "The new place is small, and the kitchen closes at 9pm, so I can't have anything to eat late at night. They have taken away my human rights."

Croydon Council says it has bent over backwards to help Tabet, who fled Algeria in 2002. A spokesman said: "Mr Tabet was accommodated in Norbury Crescent, with Croydon Council paying his rent, council tax and utility bills. "In July, his landlord gave him two months' notice to quit the premises, and the council offered him a flat in Anerley Road, which he refused citing its poor state of repair. "The necessary repairs were carried out and he again refused it. "He was told that refusal would amount to him making himself intentionally homeless and he would be placed in hostel-style accommodation. He agreed to this."

Mr Tabet is entitled to return to Algeria at his own expense and admits that he "does not like it here". But he refuses to do so and says Britain will have to pay for his travel if it wants him to leave. He moaned: "I miss Algeria. The English people are not helpful, they are so unfriendly and rude. "I thought I had made friends in Croydon, but when I ask them for money they don't give me it, so I know they can't be my friends."

Mr Tabet fled Algeria in 2002 after being arrested for refusing to give up his home so the army could monitor terrorist activity in his town. Released after 30 days' solitary confinement he fled to Britain, illegally entering the country on a flight from Tunisia, and sought asylum. He now receives 32 pounds a week in vouchers from Croydon Council to buy food with while he awaits deportation. Unsatisfied at this, he griped: "Croydon Council only gives me food vouchers, they won't give me cash. I want the money. "I have nothing to buy new clothes with, I have to go to a refugee centre. But if there's not anything nice there, you leave with nothing. "I want the council to give me a bigger flat and money instead of vouchers."

Mr Tabet suffers from diabetes, a retina disease and kidney failure and believes he should be allowed to stay in the country so he can continue to get free NHS care. He said: "The Home Office said I could afford the medicine back home, but I can't, I don't have a job."

The council insists he has no grounds for complaint. The spokesman explained: "He is supported by the council by way of vouchers, in accordance with the law." Mr Tabet admits that since he was refused asylum he has "stayed and no one has said anything about it".

Source




Feds to revise immigration plan

U.S. labor, business and farm groups have convinced the White House to revise a planned crackdown on firms employing illegal immigrants. The Bush administration has agreed to make unspecified changes to its plan to pressure employers to fire as many as 8.7 million workers with suspect Social Security numbers, The Washington Post reported Sunday.

The Bush administration Friday asked a federal judge in San Francisco to delay hearing a lawsuit brought by labor, business and agriculture until the revised plan is ready.

Those who brought the suit are not convinced, however, their objections will be met, including reducing the enormous cost of the plan to small businesses, U.S. Chamber of Commerce Vice President Randel K. Johnson said. "I hope they give the employer community adequate time to comment and do not just jam it through during the holidays," Johnson said, "particularly given that this regulation covers all industries, across all sectors of the economy."

Source




EU trying to protect little Malta from a flood of Africans

The EU's border control agency is planning to extend its illegal immigration sea patrols mission off the coast of Malta to at least six months next year, The Sunday Times has learnt. The Frontex agency's plans were explained to MEPs during a 'closed-door' session of the Civil Liberties Committee of the European Parliament last week. The agency has earmarked more than 8 million euros (Lm3.47 million) specifically to be used for this mission.

During the session, the agency's executive director Ilkka Laitinen gave a presentation of the surveillance missions that Frontex is planning to carry out next year across all the EU's external borders and how it intends to spend its 70 million (Lm30.4 million) budget, the biggest ever given to this agency. According to sources, Mr Laitinen told MEPs that the mission - once again called Nautilus - will be the second biggest sea patrol for Frontex next year, after the one to be carried out around the Canary Islands, which should last a few weeks longer than the one off Malta.

Nautilus III will now span six months - from April through to the end of September - practically covering the entire illegal immigration 'season'. Frontex has already established the number of helicopters, aircraft and patrol boats necessary to man this operation for the period. There will also be several other land, sea and air missions in other parts of Europe, although on a much smaller scale. The decision by Frontex to triple the extent of the Nautilus mission was taken following a positive assessment of the first two missions during 2006 and 2007. Sources said that Mr Laitinen told MEPs that this year's mission in the Mediterranean, conducted in two stages during July and September, yielded positive results, leading to a marked reduction in the number of illegal immigrants arriving in Malta.

Malta's increased patrols next year are a direct result of a 30 million increase to the agency's budget approved last month by the European Parliament following a proposal by MEP Simon Busuttil. When contacted, Dr Busuttil, a member of the Civil Liberties Committee, declined to comment, saying he was bound by confidentiality. However, Dr Busuttil confirmed that Malta will be benefiting substantially next year from the agency's increased budget. "This is why we worked so hard to double the agency's budget... because we want it to be more effective and help us stem the flow of illegal immigration."

Source






25 November, 2007

Attempted immigration deception by the NYT

By Ann Coulter

Here's a story that may not have been deemed "Fit to Print": In the six months that ended Sept. 25, The New York Times' daily circulation was down another 4.51 percent to about a million readers a day. The paper's Sunday circulation was down 7.59 percent to about 1.5 million readers. In short, the Times is dropping faster than Hillary in New Hampshire. (Meanwhile, the Drudge Report has more than 16 million readers every day.)

One can only hope that none of the Democratic presidential candidates are among the disaffected hordes lining up to cancel their Times subscriptions. The Times is so accustomed to lying about the news to prove that "most Americans" agree with the Times, that it seems poised to lead the Democrats -- and any Republicans stupid enough to believe the Times -- down a primrose path to their own destruction. So if you know a Democratic presidential candidate who doesn't currently read the Times, by all means order him a subscription.

On Sunday, Times readers learned that despite this year's historic revolt of normal Americans against amnesty for illegal aliens: "Some polls show that the majority of Americans agree with proposals backed by most Democrats in the Senate, as well as some Republicans, to establish a path to citizenship for immigrants here illegally." Was the reporter who wrote that sentence the Darfur bureau chief for the past year? By "some polls," I gather he means "a show of hands during a meeting of the Times editorial board" or "a quick backstage survey in the MSNBC greenroom."

As I believe Americans made resoundingly clear this year, the only "path to citizenship" they favor involves making an application from Norway, waiting a few years and then coming over when it's legal. Americans were so emphatic on this point that they forced a sitting president to withdraw his signature legislative accomplishment for his second term -- amnesty for illegal aliens, aka a "path to citizenship" for illegals.

This was the goal supported by the president's acolytes at the Fox News Channel as well as a nearly monolithic Democratic Party and its acolytes at ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, MSNBC, MTV, Oxygen TV, the Food Network, the Golf Channel, the Home Shopping Network, The in-house "Learn to Gamble" channel at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas and Comedy Central (unless that was just a sketch on the "Mind of (Carlos) Mencia").

But ordinary Americans had a different idea. Their idea was: Let's not reward law-breakers with the ultimate prize: U.S. citizenship. And the ordinary Americans won. The Times disregards all of that history to announce that it has secret polls showing that Americans support a "path to citizenship" for illegals after all! These polls are living in the shadows!

Only those "angriest on immigration," the Times said, are still using the various words related to immigration that liberals are trying to turn into new "N-words," such as, for example, "immigration." With an exhausting use of air quotes, the Times reports that: "The Republicans have railed against 'amnesty' and 'sanctuary cities.' They have promised to build a fence on the Mexican border to keep 'illegals' out." In liberal-speak, that sentence would read: "The Republicans have railed against 'puppies' and 'kittens.' They have promised to build a fence on the Mexican border to keep 'baby seals' out." (In my version, the sentence would read: "Believing New York Times 'polls,' Democrats irritate 'voters.'")

Half the English language is becoming the "N-word" as far as liberals are concerned. Words are always bad for liberals. Words allow people to understand what liberals are saying. According to the Times, all decent, cultured Americans cringe when politicians use foul words like "illegals" to describe illegals. Apparently, what most Americans are clamoring for is yet more automatic messages that begin, "Press '1' for English." That, at least, is the message the Times got from the stunning victory of grassroots over the elites on the immigration bill this year.

It is against my best interests to mention how utterly out of touch Times editors and reporters are with any Americans east of Central Park West and west of Riverside Drive. I enjoy watching the Democratic presidential candidates take clear, unequivocal positions in favor of driver's licenses for illegals and then denouncing those very positions a week later (after the real polls come in). Some people love watching the trees change color every fall. I enjoy watching the candidates' positions on immigration change.

But it is too much for any human to endure to read the Times' version of history in which "most Americans" agree with the Times on illegal immigration in the very year Americans punched back against illegal immigration so hard that the entire Washington establishment is still reeling. It's not like we have to go back to the Coolidge administration to get some sense of what Americans think about amnesty for illegals. (I mean "amnesty" for "illegals.") Using the Times' calculus, "most Americans" have also enthusiastically embraced soccer and the metric system. Read The New York Times, Democrats. Make my day.

Source




Laws are for suckers? Legal immigrants speak out

Radio host Hugh Hewitt interviewed columnist -- and legal immigrant to the United States -- Mark Steyn, and what Steyn said echoes the experience of my own legal-immigrant relatives:
MS: And if you talk to legal immigrants, they're the ones who are the most resentful of this whole illegal business, because we're the ones, we pay the huge fees to immigration lawyers, we filled in all the paperwork. I've stood in line at these dreary government offices to get these stupid cards and these stupid government numbers, to go through the whole process officially. And everyone whose done that is resentful to the idea that somehow if you just make it across the border, and you get here, you can stay here, and half the state governments in this country will do what they can to make your situation as painless as possible, and the public schools...I'll give you a small example of schools. If you're a legal immigrant, and you enroll your children in a local grade school, they want to know whether they've had all the shots, you know, for this and that.

HH: Sure. Vaccinations.

MS: If you're a legal immigrant, you have to then, you're faced with then getting the documentation out of whatever country you happen to have come from. And sometimes, that can be difficult, because they give them different things at different times, and the school nurse will give you a lot of harrassment. If you actually just say okay, scrub that, they're not legal immigrants, I want them redesignated as illegal immigrants, then you won't be asked for any paperwork. It's a lot easier. The problem at the moment is that it's a rational decision, coming into this country, to be an illegal immigrant. And that is the problem.
My question is, if the fact that lots of people break a law is a reason to get rid of it, why don't we get rid of the Drug War next? That would be OK with me. But it doesn't seem to be the way they think in Washington.

The problem with the current system -- and with the amnesty proposal -- is that it makes people who obey the law feel like suckers. That's a very destructive thing, socially. Whatever solution is offered is going to have to do better than that, or it's going to have unpleasant long-term consequences, whatever happens to immigration, legal or otherwise.

Source






24 November, 2007

Big day for Australia today

I have just gone and voted in Australia's Federal election. My local polling place was VERY well-staffed and well managed. I was in and out in 10 minutes -- unlike the way many Americans have had to line up for hours in their previous Federal elections. And because all votes are on paper, recounts are fairly easy and disputes about the results are rare.

We have separate ballot papers for the Senate and the lower house and the fact that the two ballot papers are very different in size means that it is almost impossible to get the two mixed up. Nonetheless there was a lady standing by the ballot boxes to see that everybody put their paper in the right box. Very good for absent-minded people like me!

I gave my Senate vote to Pauline, of course. Her policy of restricting Muslim immigration is the only sensible one for any Western nation, in my opinion.




Sixty-four African illegals drown

SIXTY-FOUR African migrants, including three children, drowned in the Gulf of Aden while trying to cross from Somalia to Yemen, it was reported overnight. The bodies were recovered from the sea by fishermen and the Yemeni coastguard after the migrants' boat overturned off the southeastern province of Chabwa, the official Saba news agency said. It said 25 of the would-be illegal immigrants managed to swim to shore. The agency, which did not give the nationality of the victims, said a total of 49 bodies were recovered from the spot where the vessel overturned and 15 others were found washed up on the coast.

At the start of November, 40 Somalis drowned after being forced overboard by people traffickers in the Gulf of Aden. They were part of a group of 120 who set out from the Somali port of Bosasso, the economic capital of Puntland, the semi-autonomous region in the north east of the country.

The UNHCR estimates that more than 20,000 people have made the perilous crossing of the Gulf of Aden to Yemen this year, with more than 439 deaths and another 489 people missing. Many of the migrants who attempt the journey are desperate to flee conflict and persecution in their home regions in Africa. The UN refugee agency announced on October 23 that up to 66 people drowned after being forced overboard in the same area.

Crossing the Gulf of Aden takes two days at best, and is made especially dangerous due to shark-infested waters, strong currents and inhumane conditions on poorly maintained vessels that are open to the elements.

Source




Australian Leftist leader would turn back illegals

It looks like the limpwristed approach to illegals that is common elsewhere will not be coming to Australia

KEVIN Rudd has taken a tough line on border security, warning that a Labor government will turn the boats back and deter asylum-seekers, using the threat of detention and the nation's close ties with Indonesia. In an interview with The Australian, the Opposition Leader advocated a layered approach to border security based on "effective laws, effective detention arrangements, effective deterrent posture vis-a-vis vessels approaching Australian waters".

Mr Rudd also said that a referendum on Aboriginal reconciliation, a separate Aboriginal treaty and a republican referendum would not occur in the first term of a Rudd Labor government, if at all. And he refused to give any commitment to a statutory bill of rights, saying Labor's only promise was to "consult the community" on the issue.

With the campaign closing amid Liberal exploitation of fears about Islam in Sydney's west and the arrival of 16 boatpeople from Indonesia off the West Australian coast, Mr Rudd promised a tough and integrated border-protection policy from Labor. This would mean close co-operation with the UN High Commissioner for Refugees and the Indonesian Government. Mr Rudd said Labor would take asylum-seekers who had been rescued from leaky boats to Christmas Island, would turn back seaworthy vessels containing such people on the high seas, and would not lift the current [much reduced] intake of African refugees.

"You'd turn them back," he said of boats approaching Australia, emphasising that Labor believed in an "orderly immigration system" enforced by deterrence. "You cannot have anything that is orderly if you allow people who do not have a lawful visa in this country to roam free," he said. "That's why you need a detention system. I know that's politically contentious, but one follows from the other. "Deterrence is effective through the detention system but also your preparedness to take appropriate action as the vessels approach Australian waters on the high seas."

Mr Rudd heads into the final two days of the campaign with an election-winning lead in the polls, although early figures from Newspoll and the latest Galaxy poll in News Limited newspapers give the Coalition some hope. Newspoll is detecting strong gains for the Coalition in Western Australia and a minor recovery in Queensland and Victoria, with full figures to be available in the final poll of the campaign exclusively in The Weekend Australian tomorrow. The Galaxy poll, which surveyed almost 1200 people on Tuesday and Wednesday, had Labor and the Coalition equal on 42.5 per cent of the primary vote. Taking into account preference flows, this gives Labor a lead of 52per cent to 48 per cent - the Government's best result this year. Such a swing, if uniform across the country, would deliver Labor 15 seats, one short of the 16 it needs to form government. An ACNielsen poll in Fairfax newspapers gives Labor a two-party-preferred lead of 57 per cent to 43 per cent, which would deliver a landslide victory.

Source






23 November, 2007

British crackdown

Bradford bosses face hefty fines or jail if they knowingly take on illegal workers in the latest crackdown on rogue employees. Home Office minister Liam Byrne today announced that from February a new system of civil penalties will come into force under which employers who negligently hire illegal workers will face a maximum fine of 10,000 pounds for each illegal worker found at a business. And if employers are found to have knowingly hired illegal workers they could incur an unlimited fine and be sent to prison.

Mr Byrne was speaking only hours after three Bradford restaurants were raided by the Borders and Immigration Agency. One arrest was made at the Saffron restaurant in Leeds Road. Officers also targeted Omar Khan's in Little Horton Lane and Greengates Balti. No illegal workers were found at either premises.

The Government's announcement comes after a consultation with business across the country and forms the biggest shake-up in immigration for 40 years. Mr Byrne said: "Our attack on illegal working therefore attacks the root cause of illegal immigration into Britain." A national advertising campaign will be mounted to ensure everyone is aware of the new rules.

But Omar Khan, owner of Omar Khan's restaurant, criticised the way immigration officers carried out the raid on his premises. He said: "I do not have any issues with immigration checking businesses for illegal workers but there must be a better way of doing it. "They stormed into the restaurant, barricaded the doors filming with video cameras. My staff were made to feel like common criminals. It certainly doesn't look good to my customers when uniformed officers storm in and drag all my staff out of the kitchen and off the floor area. "One poor chap was lucky he had a copy of his passport on him because they did not seem to believe him - it was very intimidating. The whole place looked like a murder scene or something with all the officers there and the cameras. "I have no problem with them coming to my restaurant but there must be better, more discreet ways of dealing with the situation."

Chris Hudson, regional director of the Border and Immigration Agency, said teams would continue to visit businesses across the region to make sure they are not breaking the law.

Source




S.F. to issue ID cards to illegal immigrants

San Francisco will begin issuing municipal identification cards to illegal immigrants next year, becoming the second city in the country to create such a program in the wake of stalled immigration reform efforts in Washington. The board of supervisors Tuesday gave the final OK needed to create the ID card program, effectively legitimizing the city's estimated 40,000 illegal immigrants. The cards will be available to anyone living in the city next August and used as proof of identity when it comes to most facets of city business, from library service to police stops. Although immigrants are the prime target for the ID program, the cards will be available to anyone who wants them.

The program becomes the most significant piece in San Francisco's efforts to offer a safe haven for illegal immigrants, which includes prohibiting city employees and police from asking anyone about their immigration status. Many other cities in the Bay Area, including San Jose, offer some of those safe-haven protections to immigrants.

Developing the program took on new urgency for San Francisco leaders this summer after Congress' inability to enact immigration reform and as the Bush administration made moves to more stringently enforce current immigration laws. "This will recognize contributions of people who are part of the community," said Supervisor Tom Ammiano, who led the push for the cards. The full extent of how the cards can be used remains to be hashed out, but San Francisco leaders are trying to develop a plan that would incorporate both an identification card and public transportation pass. The cards - complete with cardholders' addresses and photos - would cost $15 for adults and $5 for youths. Discounts will be offered to those considered low-income.

Ammiano estimates the program will cost San Francisco about $500,000, most of that expected during the program's first year. But some officials predict it could cost as much as $3 million. "If people have to live in the shadows, it affects you, me and everyone," Ammiano said, adding leaders are also working with banks so the IDs could be used to open checking and savings accounts. He said the cards also will offer some solace to illegal immigrants who have shied away from reporting crimes committed against them for fear of being found out.

The move didn't surprise Ira Mehlman, spokesman for the Washington D.C.-based Federation for American Immigration Reform, an organization calling for tighter border enforcement. "It's San Francisco being San Francisco," said Mehlman, noting that the move is far different from a controversial - and now-scrapped - plan by New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer to offer driver's license to illegal immigrants. Mehlman likened San Francisco's cards to "high school identification cards" that can't be used outside of the city and "it seems like an act of defiance" because supervisors "don't support stepped-up enforcement."

Ammiano got the idea for the cards from New Haven, Conn., where leaders began to talk about a city ID card for residents - specifically illegal immigrants - around summer 2005. At the time, the city of roughly 127,000 was experiencing some growing pains as its illegal immigrant population grew to about 15,000.

Robbers called illegal immigrants, who routinely carry cash because they don't have bank accounts, "walking ATMs," said Kica Matos, New Haven's community services director. New Haven began issuing cards July 24 with a $236,000 grant, expecting to hand out 5,000 cards during the first 12 months. But in less than four months, leaders have nearly surpassed their estimates, issuing 4,670 cards as of Monday, Matos said.

Ammiano said his plan doesn't only acknowledge illegal immigrants, but gives them a voice to speak up. When it comes to basic human rights, he said, "it's not a good idea to keep your head in the sand."

Source






22 November, 2007

Britain: New wave of immigration blamed for doubling of hepatitis B cases

Soaring rates of infection by hepatitis B, fuelled by large-scale immigration, pose a serious health threat that is not being addressed properly, a report has said. The Hepatitis B Foundation estimates that the numbers infected by the disease in Britain have almost doubled in the past five years, to 326,000. More than half of these people are immigrants from Africa, Asia, Russia and the new EU nations. Hepatitis B has few symptoms. If untreated it can lead to serious liver disease including liver cancer, and death, decades after infection. World-wide, 500,000 to 700,000 people die every year as a result of infection by the virus.

Britain, unlike 85 per cent of countries, does not have the universal vaccination against hepatitis B that is recommended by the World Health Organisation. Instead, the policy is to vaccinate selectively, attempting to prevent the spread of the disease from mothers to children, for example.

The report cautions that growing levels of undetected infections are a health time bomb that needs to be defused urgently. It calls on the Government to develop a strategy for dealing with the problem. "Much more needs to be done," the report says. "There is a serious risk that in the future, while chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection declines in countries which have implemented universal vaccination, the UK - that great pioneer of public health - will continue to harbour an ever-increas-ing pool of chronic HBV infection."

Damian Green, the Conservative immigration spokesman, said: "This is an alarming report and it is reasonable to expect from the Government an urgent response about testing those people coming into the country."

Hepatitis B is transmitted in many of the same ways as HIV - through sex, shared needles, blood, from mother to baby at birth, or from person to person by contact with skin grazes. The difference is that hepatitis B is ten times as easy to transmit as HIV.

David Mutimer, a reader in medicine at the University of Birmingham, who treats liver disease at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in the city, said: "It's pretty obvious that the number of patients is increasing exponentially year on year and it is quite clear the effect that migration is having on the numbers. The report doesn't come to definite conclusions about what needs to be done, but my opinion is that universal vaccination is the best answer."

Since most cases of infection are unknown, even to the individuals concerned, the report by the Hepatitis B Foundation, a charity that raises awareness of the disease, estimates the numbers by using the prevalence rate in each country and multiplying that by the numbers of people from that country now living in Britain. By working through all the national groups, the report comes up with a total of 326,000 cases in Britain, almost double the 180,000 estimated by Sir Liam Donaldson, the Chief Medical Officer, in his 2002 report Getting Ahead of the Curve.

The 326,000 figure is almost certainly an underestimate because only countries that have contributed more than 60,000 people to the population were included. The numbers originating from each country came from the Labour Force Survey and are themselves probably underestimates.

Eddie Chan, the director of the Chinese National Healthy Living Centre, said: "With a surge of migration from countries with a high HBV prevalence rate we are not surprised by these figures. Britain needs migrant workers and in return Britain must set in place the infrastructure to deal with the changing health demographics."

The report calls for a public education campaign, a reappraisal of the vaccination policy, action to identify and treat those who are infected and a mapping exercise to find how services for HBV infection are distributed across the country.

The Department of Health responded to the report by saying that Britain had one of the lowest prevalence rates of hepatitis B in the world and that the incidence of acute infection remained relatively stable and low. A range of measures was in place to control it. - A report in the Journal of the American Medical Association reported last month that since immunisation against HBV was introduced in the US in the 1980s, cases had fallen by 80.1 per cent and deaths by 80.2 per cent.

Source




Giuliani tough on illegal immigration

The Rudy Giuliani campaign is distributing this endorsement from a fellow New Yorker, Republican Congressman Peter King:

"As Chairman for the Homeland Security Committee in the last Congress and as Ranking Member of the Homeland Security Committee in this Congress it's obvious to me that immigration, illegal immigration, is not just a social issue or an economic issue, it's a national security issue, it's a homeland security issue and I strongly agree that Rudy Giuliani is the best man for that job.

"In fact, I intended today's news conference to be about Rudy and why I think he is the best for the job, but having seen some of the statements put out, I guess just last night and today by Governor Romney, to me his statements are so off the mark and are not backed up by facts.

"For instance, when he talks about how he authorized the state troopers to work with the federal government to stop illegal immigration, the fact is that plan never even went into effect. And if we're going to confront illegal immigration we need more than having plans that are never implemented and that are actually withdrawn before they ever get started.

"Again, the fact that there were the sanctuary cities in Massachusetts that . actually received increased aid when Governor Romney was the governor of Massachusetts , again speaks volumes. And this is all after September 11th, this is well after we realized the inherent problems that go with illegal immigration as they relate to homeland security.

"So clearly Governor Romney's record not only doesn't match what he's claiming, in many ways it's the opposite. And of course we go back to the whole issue of having . workers at his home being illegal immigrants.

"I am convinced that Rudy Giuliani has the plan, has the guts to stop illegal immigration. It would be from day one of his administration, a major, major priority. "As soon as the whole issue with the driver's licenses, for instance, for illegal immigrants broke Rudy was on the phone with me. I've introduced legislation - he's a huge supporter of it - to prevent states from doing that. And that's just one recent example.

"But there's no doubt in my mind at all that where it requires fencing along the border, where it requires increased border patrol agents, more detention facilities, going after employers who hire illegal immigrants, across the board Rudy Giuliani is going to stop illegal immigration.

"And for those who say it can't be done, I was there in New York when people said . back in 1992 and 1993 that nobody could turn crime around, nobody could turn the City around.

"The fact is murders went down dramatically, overall crime rate went down dramatically. New York City is in many ways a totally new city because of the leadership that Rudy Giuliani gave. He did the impossible there, he's also going to do that as far as stopping illegal immigration when he becomes President. And it's unfortunate that Governor Romney, rather than discuss the relative merits of each other's plans, has chosen to misrepresent his own record in an attempt to tarnish Rudy's record."

Source






21 November, 2007

Britain: Failed asylum seekers 'not being deported'

The number of failed asylum seekers being removed from the country has fallen to a five-year low, new figures have shown. Despite promises to clear a backlog of up to 285,000 foreign nationals, fewer than 1,000 were deported in September. At the same time, the number of asylum seekers arriving in the country was double that figure. In the three months to September, there were 3,120 removals - an 18 per cent fall on last year and the lowest number since the second quarter of 2002.

David Davis, the shadow home secretary, said: "This is another sign that the Government's tough talk on immigration and asylum is not matched by effective action. "The fall in the number of removals means the Government is failing completely to make inroads into the backlog of half a million people who have no right to be in this country."

The Government claimed the reason for the drop was that officials were concentrating on deporting foreign criminals and illegal workers. Liam Byrne, the Immigration Minister, said overall deportations were running at around 45,000 for the year. But two years ago, ministers said they would remove more failed asylum seekers than there were unfounded new applications. This so-called ''tipping point" target has now effectively been abandoned, despite being a priority for Tony Blair, the previous prime minister.

Mr Byrne said: ''The first people we should send home are those who break British laws. ''We're removing record numbers of foreign criminals including illegal workers who risk undercutting UK wages." The Government says it will deport 4,000 foreign national prisoners this year.

Overall asylum applications are running at the lowest level for at least a decade, though they went up in the third quarter of this year. The total is expected to be around 20,000 by the end of the year - the lowest since the early 1990s.

Sir Andrew Green, chairman of Migrationwatch, said: "Removals are the lowest they have been for years and fall far short of the Government's target. "The pool of failed asylum seekers, already about a quarter of a million, will have grown by about 2,500 so far this year." He added: "This failure to remove undermines the integrity of the whole system."

Separate figures showed that east Europeans continue to pour into the country looking for jobs. Since May 2004 when eight former Soviet bloc countries joined the EU, three quarters of a million people have registered to work. Many thousands more who do not need to register, such as the self-employed, have almost certainly pushed the total above one million. But it is impossible to say how many have remained in the country for any length of time. Most of the east Europeans say they are only coming for a short period, such as three months. But a growing number are claiming child benefit and receiving tax credits. Nearly 80,000 have been approved for child benefit payments and 45,000 for tax credits. This is three times the number at the end of 2006 and is an indication that many east Europeans - mainly Poles - are staying on.

Once an EU migrant has been working here for 12 months, they are entitled to the same level of support as any British citizen. Child benefit is worth 18.10 pounds a week for the oldest child and 12.10 each of the others. British taxpayers are spending more than 1million a month in child benefit to the families of youngsters who live in the former Soviet bloc countries. Tax credits - which are effectively a benefit as well - are also generous. A worker with two children earning 165 pounds for a 30 hour week can claim credits worth many thousands of pounds a year. These benefits are paid to a worker in Britain even if his family stays at home, provided he has paid taxes.

Source




Official slur on immigration control group

VIN SUPRYNOWICZ from Las Vegas writes:

A number of calls and e-mails poured in last week about what purports to be Question 57 on the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department application form, asking "Have you, your spouse, any members of your family, or any members of your spouse's family ever been associated with gangs or subversive groups (Minutemen, Aryan Brotherhood, etc.)?"

The concern, of course, is that Jim Gilchrist's Minutemen have taken considerable pains to debunk the claims of radical immigration scofflaws that the Minutemen are a bunch of trigger-happy slope-brows, anxious to run down to the border and shoot themselves a Mexican. The Minutemen would like to see our immigration laws enforced, and argue that they accomplish this by calling in appropriate law enforcement authorities when they see the law being broken.

If Metro were refusing to hire people who cooperate with law enforcement agents and pitch in to help enforce the immigration laws -- lumping them in with racist prison gangs -- yet had no compunctions about hiring members of any number of radical "Aztlan" groups with long Hispanic names that actually oppose enforcement of the immigration laws, that would be a concern.

In fact, Metro spokesmen called me back Wednesday to assure me that -- although that question once appeared on a document Metro calls a "personal history questionnaire" -- the language naming those specific groups was removed in 2005, and was accessible on the department's Web site only because a link to the out-of-date form was mistakenly left active.

As late as Friday, a Metro spokesman could not confirm whether the "Minuteman" group referred to in the pre-2005 form was Jim Gilchrist's current group, or some earlier outfit with the same name.

"Our position as an agency is we don't target any group, any individual organization," says Metro personnel Lt. Charles Hank. "We evaluate everyone on their background and their merit; if they've done something illegal -- no matter whether they represented themselves by their name or by their organization -- they may not qualify" to work for Metro

Source






20 November, 2007

Worldwide disquiet about immigration

In the past three years, as Britain has experienced the largest wave of immigrants in its history, opinion polls have shown a big increase in the number of people who are alarmed about immigration. The Conservative Party accordingly pledges to cut migrant numbers. Rattled, the Labour Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, talks of "British jobs for British workers" - a slogan once linked to the far-right British National Party. The parties look to be vying with each other to build Fortress Britain. Yet it has not happened. Brown promises tighter migration quotas and better border control to reduce illegal immigration, but neither will dramatically affect numbers. The Conservatives struggle to specify what categories of immigrants they would cut.

It is not just Britain. Three in four Americans say they want more controls on immigration, the latest Pew Global Attitudes Survey shows. Yet neither main party in the US plans to seriously wind back legal immigration: the US continues to take a million migrants a year.

The Pew Research Centre polled 45,000 people in 47 rich and poor countries and found that in 44 of them, majorities believed "we should restrict and control entry of people into our country more than we do now".

Nevertheless, Spain, where 77 per cent of people want more controls, is running a huge immigration program, with 4 million newcomers since 1996. Immigration to Italy is even larger - 700,000 a year - and 87 per cent of people want more controls. Yet the Prime Minister, Romano Prodi, has urged Italians to embrace the first mass immigration in their history.

What is going on? Are politicians out of step with the public, and is a reversal of policy just a matter of time? Perhaps, but I doubt it. Immigration is a fact of modern life and, despite periods of public unease, almost certain to remain so. That unease is hardly new. Arthur Calwell, the architect of Australia's postwar immigration program, was terrified of a backlash to his policy. Polls in the 1960s regularly showed that eight in 10 Britons thought too many black people were entering the country.

If governments have dared defy public opinion, it is not out of brotherly love for foreigners, but for hard-nosed economic reasons: to run factories and farms, get streets swept. Since the factories closed in the 1970s and '80s, Europe has struggled to integrate a mass of unskilled migrant workers and their children, but even as it debates the perceived failures of integration the clamour for new workers in new industries resumes.

Romanians, whose 500,000-strong presence in Italy is provoking huge hostility, are vital to the country's agriculture and aged-care sectors. Without foreign doctors and nurses, the former prime minister Tony Blair once said, the National Health Service could not run.

Could this new mobility of global workers be stopped? Yes, but probably not while the economy is good. Many European countries are also experiencing high levels of emigration. Last year Holland took 100,000 people but lost 130,000, while 200,000 Britons left last year, the highest figure in its postwar history. Many of the leavers are skilled and must be replaced. Yet they are far less likely than earlier migrants to stay in their adopted countries. At least half the 400,000 Poles who have come to Britain in recent years are expected to go home.

It would be wrong to be utopian. Immigration comes with costs, most of all to immigrants, but also to the poorer communities among whom many settle. There is evidence immigration is driving down low-skilled wages in Britain. Working-class concerns that it frays old social bonds should not be simply dismissed as racism.

Understandably, governments will want to manage migration in hard economic times or to ease public concern. They also have the right to make demands of migrants, such as language learning, which most want to do anyway. As the Dutch sociologist Paul Scheffer says, if you demand nothing of migrants, "the veiled message is: you will never be part of this society". However, "when you make demands of newcomers, the receiving society also undertakes an obligation".

Source




Imigration a crucial issue for candidates

America's rugged, porous southern border has come to symbolize a broken immigration system, spawning a political debate especially fraught with perils. Nowhere is that more evident than in the presidential primary races. The highly charged immigration issues have tripped up veteran politicians such as Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, who recently appeared to waffle on whether to grant noncitizens driver's licenses, and Sen. John McCain, who's backed away from a long legislative history advocating a path to citizenship for the estimated 12 million to 15 million people who've slipped over the border or overstayed their visas.

Pundits dub the immigration issue "a minefield," "a new third rail," as well as a "megaissue" because of its complexity and the strong emotions it evokes. Even the language used - "undocumented worker" versus "illegal immigrant" - has become a potentially volatile touchstone. While immigration still comes in behind the war in Iraq, the economy, and healthcare issues when voters are polled about their concerns, it now beats out terrorism. "Even more important, it's the high-intensity issue on both sides, and in this [primary race], high-intensity minorities are more important than majorities," says John Zogby, president and CEO of Zogby International, a polling firm. "It's also the ultimate wedge issue, because it's a zero-sum game."

In general, the Democrats support shoring up the border, having tougher enforcement in the workplace, and creating a way for "undocumented workers" to earn citizenship. Their mantra is "comprehensive reform." For Republicans, it's "tough enforcement": All support more border security and tough workplace enforcement, and most are adamantly opposed to creating any kind of "amnesty" for "illegal aliens." The exception is Senator McCain. While he has backed off stands openly advocating a path to citizenship, he still says it's important to "recognize the importance of assimilation of our immigrant population," according to his website.

Fault lines for each party

Within those fairly clear stances, there are political fault lines for both parties. For Republicans, the biggest problem lies in alienating the fast-growing block of Hispanic voters. That presents a serious challenge not just to the candidates, but to the long-term prospects of the GOP, most political analysts say.

The reason is that more Hispanics are voting. In 1992, Hispanics made up 4 percent of voters in the presidential election, according to an analysis of the data by Mr. Zogby. In 1996, it was 5 percent; in 2000, 6 percent. By 2004, Latinos made up 8-1/2 percent of voters. And many of them are in swing states such as Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, and Florida that President Bush won - some just barely - in 2004. "The Republicans are losing one of the great swing votes in American politics - Hispanics and Latinos," says Larry Sabato, a political analyst at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. "They're taking great offense at the Tom Tancredos of the world."

The presidential platform of Representative Tancredo (R) of Colorado says, "I am 100 percent opposed to amnesty.. I will secure our borders so illegal aliens do not come and I will eliminate benefits and job prospects so they do not stay." He also routinely ties the broken immigration system to the terrorist threat.

For many Hispanic voters, such adamant opposition to illegal immigration translates into opposition to Latinos in general. That became clear to them in the spring of 2006: Many Republicans abandoned Mr. Bush's efforts at comprehensive reform, and the House instead passed a bill that made it a felony to be an illegal immigrant and a felony to help one. That prompted mass demonstrations by legal and illegal immigrants and played a key role in that fall's election, which gave control of Congress to the Democrats. A recent report called "Hispanics Rising" done by NDN, a progressive Democrat-leaning think tank, notes there was "a dramatic reversal" of Hispanic voting patterns as a result. In 2004, 40 percent of Hispanics voted Republican, according to exit polls cited by NDN. In 2006, only 30 percent pulled the lever for the GOP. "This has been a catastrophic issue for the Republican Party because they've made a massive investment in something that's gotten them nothing," says Simon Rosenberg of NDN.

That trend also has some Republicans worried. "Republicans have given Democrats a way to take a free ride: Too many people in my party have chosen to demagogue on immigration, and that makes it easy for Democrats to say, 'We'd like to do better,' " says Tamar Jacoby, a political analyst at the Manhattan Institute, a conservative think tank.

Supporters of taking a tough stance on illegal immigration disagree. Ira Mehlman of the Federation for American Immigration Reform, a Washington-based advocacy group, argues that Hispanics still make up a relatively small percentage of the voting population. There are enough moderates angered by illegal immigration in both parties to offset the Hispanic vote, he says.

For proof, he points to New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer's proposal to give driver's licenses to illegal immigrants. With 72 percent of New Yorkers opposed, he withdrew the idea last week - but not before it tripped up Senator Clinton on the campaign trail when she, in Mr. Mehlman's words, "tried to dance" around the issue by saying that it was a "sound idea" but that she opposed it. "It's a tougher issue for Democrats because to get the nomination you have to go farther out to the left," says Mehlman. "That's probably the only sector of the American public that doesn't want to see meaningful enforcement."

Therein likes the immigration pitfall for Democrats. Many Democrat voters, including blue-collar workers and some African-Americans, blame illegal immigration for driving down wages and increasing worker exploitation. They, too, want to see strict workplace enforcement and tighter border security. "Republicans are ready to pounce on Democrats for being soft and weak on illegals," says Zogby.

Polls show the majority of Americans support finding a way to allow the estimated 12 million to 15 million illegal immigrants to earn citizenship. But those poll outcomes depend very much on how the question is asked. "If you put the stress on the fact that these people are here illegally, that colors everything else. People say, 'They've already broken the law; they can't be rewarded for that,' " says Mr. Sabato, the University of Virginia political analyst. "But if you start out by saying, 'Should we create a path for citizenship for those that are here trying to build better lives for themselves and their families?' Then that brings out the compassionate side of the American public."

Since this is such an emotional, hot-button issue, voters can expect most of the main presidential candidates to stick very close to their scripted positions - and avoid getting entangled in specifics. "That's the dance we're going to see all the way through 2008," says Tom Patterson, a political analyst at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government in Cambridge, Mass. "If a Democrat does get elected, there will be a serious effort to come back to something that, ironically, won't be too different from what President Bush proposed [in 2006]."

Source






19 November, 2007

Japan cracks down

Given the famous safety of life in Japan, a desire to look carefully at people from less law-abiding countries would be perfectly rational

Japan has tried hard in recent years to shake its image as an overly insular society and offer a warmer welcome to foreign investors and tourists. But the country is about to impose strict immigration controls that many fear could deter visitors and discourage businesses from locating here. On Tuesday, Japan will put in place one of the toughest systems in the developed world for monitoring foreign visitors. Modeled on the United States' controversial U.S.-Visit program, it will require foreign citizens to be fingerprinted, photographed and questioned every time they enter Japan.

The screening will extend even to Japan's 2.1 million foreign residents, many of whom fear they will soon face clogged immigration lines whenever they enter the country. People exempted from the checks include children under 16, diplomats and "special permanent residents," a euphemism for Koreans and other Asians brought to Japan as slave laborers during World War II and their descendants.

The authorities say such thorough screening is needed to protect Japan from attacks by foreign terrorists, which many fear here because of Japan's support for the United States in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But the measures, part of an immigration law enacted last year, have been criticized by civil rights groups and foreign residents' associations as too sweeping and unnecessarily burdensome to foreigners. They note that the only significant terrorist attack in Japan in recent decades was carried out by a domestic religious sect, which released sarin nerve gas in the Tokyo subway in 1995, killing 12 people.

Some of the most vocal critics have been among foreign business leaders, who say the screening could hurt Japan's standing as an Asian business center, especially if it is inefficiently carried out, leading to long waits at airports. Business groups here warn that such delays could make Japan less attractive than rival commercial hubs like Hong Kong and Singapore, where entry procedures are much easier.

The business groups also contend that the screening runs counter to recent efforts by the government to attract more foreign investment and tourism. "If businessmen based here have to line up for two hours every time they come back from traveling, it will be a disaster," said Jakob Edberg, policy director in the Tokyo office of the European Business Council. "This will affect real business decisions, like whether to base here."...

However, some civil rights groups worry that the government is using terrorism to mask a deeper, xenophobic motive behind the new measures. They say that within Japan, the government has justified the screening as an anticrime measure, playing to widely held fears that an influx of foreigners is threatening Japan's safe streets. These groups also note that fingerprinting of foreigners is not new here. Until fairly recently, all foreign residents were routinely fingerprinted. That practice was phased out after years of protest by foreign residents and civil rights groups.

"Terrorism looks like an excuse to revive to the old system for monitoring foreigners," said Sonoko Kawakami at Amnesty International in Japan. "We worry that the real point of these measures is just to keep foreigners out of Japan." ....

Only the Tokyo area's main international airport at Narita has agreed to set aside lines for foreign residents. Others, including the nation's second-largest airport, Kansai International near Osaka, will force these residents to line up with other foreigners, who even before the new screening often waited an hour or more to pass through immigration.

Source




Driver's licenses for migrants? Not in Mexico

The question of whether to give driver's licenses to illegal immigrants ignited a national debate in the United States. But in Mexico, the largest source of U.S. immigrants, there's no question: Here, you must be a legal resident to get a driver's license. All of Mexico's 31 states, along with Mexico City, require foreigners to present a valid visa if they want a driver's license, according to a survey of states by The Arizona Republic. "When it comes to foreigners, we're a little more strict here," said Alejandro Ru¡z, director of education at the Mexican Automobile Association

Immigrant drivers zoomed into the national spotlight after presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton said a move by the New York governor to give licenses to illegal immigrants "makes a lot of sense" during an Oct. 30 debate. On Wednesday, Clinton backed off that plan. Proponents said the plan would have made the roads safer by ensuring that drivers are trained and insured, but the ensuing public outcry forced Gov. Eliot Spitzer to abandon the effort Wednesday. U.S. Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., planned to file a bill this week that would bar states from any future attempts to give licenses to illegal immigrants.

Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah and Washington allow drivers to get licenses without proving they are legal residents, according to the National Immigration Law Center. Most other states, including Arizona, require applicants to prove they are citizens or legal residents. Mexicans make up the bulk of illegal immigrants in the United States, accounting for an estimated 6 million of the 11.5 million undocumented residents as of March 2005, according to the Pew Hispanic Center.

Mexico's Foreign Relations Secretariat declined to comment on the controversy this week, but the Mexican government has fought U.S. restrictions on licenses in the past. In 2004, the former Mexican consul in New York, Arturo Sarukhan, called such rules "a policy without a purpose" during a hearing in the New York State Assembly. Sarukhan is now the Mexican ambassador in Washington.

Yet, licensing offices in all of Mexico's 31 states, along with the Federal District, where Mexico City is located, said they require applicants to prove their citizenship, preferably by showing a federal voter-registration card issued by the Federal Elections Institute. Of those, 28 states and the Federal District said they would issue licenses to foreigners only if they present valid FM-2 or FM-3 residency visas. The central Mexican states of Morelos, Puebla and Guerrero are more lenient. Foreigners there can get a driver's license with a valid tourist visa, or FMT. Tourist visas are issued by federal immigration agents at airports and border crossing points. Foreign tourists who are in Mexico temporarily can also drive using their foreign licenses, states said. Most U.S. states, including Arizona, have a similar exemption for temporary visitors.

Mexican officials said the application rules are strictly enforced, especially in southern states that have a problem with illegal immigrants from Central America. "Last week a man came here (with a tourist visa) and said he was working as a deliveryman," said Denia Gurgua, manager of the driver's license office in Tuxtla Guti‚rrez, the capital of the southern state of Chiapas. She said she denied him a license because he did not have a visa to work in Mexico. "Our constitution has certain restrictions for foreigners," she said.

U.S. proponents of tougher restrictions worry that having a driver's license helps legitimize illegal immigrants, making it harder to detect and remove them. "The fact that all 31 states in Mexico would have such a common-sense position . . . shows to me a certain hypocrisy on the part of the Mexican government, because they are constantly criticizing those of us in Congress who want immigration laws to be tougher up here," said King of New York.

But immigrant advocates says the two countries don't compare. U.S. states are trying to protect other motorists from millions of illegal immigrants who are already driving, said Tyler Moran, an expert on driver's licenses at the National Immigration Law Center. Mexico's pool of foreign residents is much smaller, about 492,000 people in a country of 105 million, according to the 2000 census. "It may be a bit like comparing apples and oranges," Moran said. "The (U.S. states) are dealing in reality, and it's better public policy to have people actually have licenses, have identification, have insurance than not."

Source






18 November, 2007

New Zealand doesn't want fatties

A British woman planning to start a new life with her husband in New Zealand has been banned from entering the country - because she is too fat. Rowan Trezise, 33, has been left behind in England while her husband Richie, 35, has already made the move down under leaving her desperately trying to lose weight. When the couple first tried to gain entry to the country they were told that they were both overweight and were a potential burden on the health care system.



Mr Trezise managed to shed two inches from his sizeable waistline to fulfil criteria set out as part of his visa application to work as a technician in the country. His wife however has had no such luck and faces a desperate battle to shed the pounds before Christmas, at which point the couple say they will abandon their overseas plans. New Zealand officials assess people's weight using Body Mass Index which measures fat by comparing the height and weight of an individual.

Mr Trezise, a submarine cable specialist and former member of the army said his BMI was measured at 42 making him well over the limit of 25 which is regarded as overweight. "My doctor laughed at me. He said he'd never seen anything more ridiculous in his whole life," he said. "He said not every overweight person is unhealthy or unfit. The idea was that we were going to change our lifestyle totally and get outdoors and on mountain bikes and all sorts of activities."

Robyn Toomath, a spokesman for New Zealand's Fight the Obesity Epidemic and an endocrinologist said that obese people should not be victimised, but agreed with the restrictions. "The immigration department can't afford to import people who are going to be a significant drain on our health resources. "You can see the logic in assessing if there is a significant health cost associated with this individual and that would be a reason for them not coming in."

While the New Zealand Immigration Service could not say how many people had been refused entry on similar grounds, the Emigrate New Zealand website revealed that many people had been banned for being obese.

Source




Employer-sanctions law faces federal test today

As Arizona's employer-sanctions law goes under the legal microscope today, it is attracting a national spotlight for its potential effects on jobs, workers and policies nationwide. "If it passes federal muster here, it'll be coming to a state legislature near you," said Farrell Quinlan, who represents a coalition of business groups working to make sure the law gets stopped in court. The hearing begins at 10:30 a.m. before U.S. District Judge Neil Wake in the downtown Phoenix federal courthouse. Late Tuesday, court officials scheduled the hearing for a larger courtroom to accommodate what is expected to be a big crowd.

A key issue in the case is whether Arizona is within its constitutional limits to use the state's business licenses as the way to punish any employer found to have knowingly hired illegal workers. Arizona is in the vanguard of states trying to curb illegal immigration by shutting off the job magnet they believe entices millions to enter the country illegally. Georgia and Oklahoma have similar laws targeting employers.

Arizona's law is slated to take effect Jan. 1. It calls for up to a 10-day suspension of a business' state-issued licenses for the first violation of having "knowingly" hired an illegal worker. A second offense would require revocation of those licenses.

The case is being closely watched by groups such as the National Conference of State Legislatures, which has added a discussion of the sanctions law to the agenda of its fall meeting to be held later this month in Phoenix.

Today's proceedings should give panelists plenty to talk about. "States are trying to test their boundaries because this is a gray area between federal and state law," said Ann Morse, a program director at the legislative group. "The immigration issue has just skyrocketed. The number of bills introduced (in legislatures) this year has doubled, and that had doubled over the year before."

A report compiled by the legislatures group found that immigration legislation was introduced in each of the 50 states this year, for a total of 1,404 bills. Of them, 182 survived to become law, including Arizona's House Bill 2779. Most business groups opposed to the law make the same argument that underpins their lawsuit against the state: The law is unconstitutional because it calls for the state to intrude into employment law, which is a federal responsibility. State attorneys have argued in briefs filed in advance of today's hearing that federal law clearly gives states authority to regulate businesses through the licensing process.

The outcome, expected next month, is likely to touch off national repercussions. If the law is upheld, it could set off a wave of similar bills in other states. It could even get a divided Congress to act, said Hector Chichoni, an immigration and employment attorney who practices out of Miami, Fla., and objects to the Arizona law. "I think Congress will hurry up and enact some law to stop pandemonium in other states," he said. If the law is struck down, there would be "relief" among many employers and immigrant groups, he predicted. But whatever the outcome, it's likely to be appealed by the losing party, leading to the prospect of a protracted legal battle and continued debate here and nationally over how to cut illegal immigration.

The bill's prime sponsor, state Rep. Russell Pearce, R-Mesa, tried for years to enact sanctions legislation. It passed easily this year amid growing public frustration with illegal immigration, although some lawmakers have since said they regret their votes in favor of it. Gov. Janet Napolitano signed the bill into law on July 2, even as she expressed reservations about some of its provisions. Business groups sued 11 days later.

Wake, appointed to the federal bench by President Bush, has promised a ruling on the case before the law's Jan. 1 effective date. The case may mark the first time the merits of a sanctions law has been taken before a federal court, said Mark Kirkorian, executive director of the Center for Immigration Policy, which backs a strong enforcement-first approach to the nation's immigration problems. And a verdict in the case could break through the sound barrier that often blocks Washington, D.C., from paying attention to what's happening west of the Potomac, he said. In his view, the legal debate over sanctions laws hasn't drawn much attention. For example, earlier this month a federal judge in Oklahoma rejected a request for an injunction against that state's immigration law, which includes employer sanctions. The action drew little notice in Washington, he said. Oklahoma's law took effect on Nov. 1, although the challenge to the law's merits - brought by Latino groups and clergy - is continuing.

Source






17 November, 2007

Republicans winning new citizens for 2008 vote

Minutes after taking the Pledge of Allegiance, new American citizens are urged to register as voters by Democratic activists who see them as natural party supporters who could hold the key to the 2008 election. But with increasing illegal immigration threatening the economy and security of the United States, many legal immigrants anxious to uphold the laws of their adopted country are moving towards the more hard-line immigration stance of Republicans.

Even in California's Democratic-controlled San Diego, sizeable numbers of America's newly-minted potential voters said that illegal immigrants should be penalised rather than given an easy route to citizenship as most Democrats advocate. "For a long time, immigration was OK," said Sarah Wright, 49, a seamstress from Mexico who arrived in the US legally in 1986. "But now, no more. A lot of really bad people come from Mexico and commit crimes. "People are coming in and having two, three, four babies and going on welfare. Some are making money here and spending it back in Mexico. "That's not right. They should go back to Mexico and get a permit."

Mrs Wright, whose American-born husband Ed served in the US Navy, was one of 1,591 people from 89 countries who became citizens at a ceremony in San Diego's Golden Hall on Tuesday. Nearly two thirds of them were from Mexico, whose border is just 17 miles from the city. During the 40-minute ceremony, performed by a judge, the new citizens waved American flags, sang "America the Beautiful" and raised their rights hands as they repeated the oath to "abjure all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince, potentate, state, or sovereignty" of another nation.

More here




Italy, Denmark, Switzerland . . . all around us we are having to deal with the consequences of immigration

Below is about as far as a British mainstream newspaper can go at the moment. It's improving!

I pity the poor immigrant," wrote Bob Dylan, "Who wishes he would have stayed home/ Who uses all his power to do evil/ But in the end is always left so alone." The minstrel-poet from Minnesota was chronicling attitudes a generation ago, but his words seem especially apposite today.

Immigration is toxic now in most of the developed world. In Britain, Gordon Brown's Government seems eager to test to destruction its insistence that tolerance is the essential facet of what it means to be British. The incomparable bungling that resulted in illegal immigrants being hired among other things to police border security would surely be parody if it were not prosaic reality. It certainly suggested a rather new take on Mr Brown's famous promise of "British jobs for British workers" a couple of months back.

In Italy, Romanians are in the cross-hairs, after one of them was charged with beating and sexually assaulting a teacher. Last week the Danish Government won re-election only with the continued support of the anti-immigrant People's Party. Last month the Swiss party that goes by the same name got more votes than any party in that country since 1919, with the help of a campaign that included imagery such as a flock of white sheep kicking a black sheep off a Swiss flag. Anti-immigrant sentiment continues to boil in France and the Netherlands.

This week its saliency was underlined when Eliot Spitzer, the Governor of New York, was forced to withdraw an ill-conceived proposal to give driving licences to illegal immigrants. This was the issue that got Hillary Clinton into so much trouble recently when in the last Democratic presidential debate, she gave a classic non-committal, nuanced, focus-grouped answer.

With 12 million or more illegal immigrants in the country, voters are in no mood for overt displays of generosity. Populist anger defeated efforts to give them amnesty a few months ago, and the issue looks set to become perhaps the biggest issue of the presidential election campaign - especially if, as it is currently, progress in Iraq takes the war off the front pages.

Our political, intellectual and media elites ponder this turn of events with a disdainful eye. They shake their heads at the irredeemable bigotry of the masses and wring their hands at the primitive ignorance that drives the popular mood. But our leaders should instead be looking hard at their own role in helping to create this rising backlash against immigration. It comes after 50 years in which, against their own will and better judgment, the masses have been directed to shed anachronistic and dangerous notions of national identity. In Europe especially, the multicultural worldview insisted that we should look with benign neutrality on global cultural diversity, to think of other cultures as no worse than our own, and in many respects quite a bit better. Patriotism equalled racism. National identity was incompatible with global peace.

So what happens when you spend decades suppressing national identity? Do you actually succeed in pouring us all into a great big melting pot? Or do you, in fact, simply nurture a subterranean sense of national selfhood; steadily curdling it over the years so that, when it reasserts itself, it is angry, illiberal and ugly? In Europe we see the consequences everywhere. The current mood, of course, is partly economic - the cheap immigrant stealing our jobs. It partly reflects heightened insecurity, especially the very specific threat posed by Islamists, the vipers in the bosoms of too many Muslim communities. But, as the Italian-Romanian incident shows, it goes much farther, and can take the unprepossessing form of raw and ancient hatreds.

America has, to its great fortune, been spared the worst excesses of multiculturalism. But it has not been completely immune. The current antipathy towards illegal immigrants is apparently about economics, but it isn't really. The US continues to enjoy solid growth, low unemployment and rising incomes for most Americans. As in Europe, the current sentiment is partly about security concerns. It is partly about a simple sense of fairness that asks: why should millions of people be able to break the law with impunity? But it also reflects a rising worry that the new wave of immigrants - mostly from Mexico - are not like previous waves of immigrants who made this country. Those earlier generations may have proudly asserted their ancient heritage, but they quickly integrated as Americans. There is an unsettling impression that many of the new immigrants are not following this model.

A small minority are actively separatist, trying to create little outposts of Mexico in the heartland. But even in its milder form - the refusal to learn English, for example - this modern immigrant mentality is troublingly different.

So now we have one hell of a mess. We - all of us - need immigration. We can't close our doors. In Europe, mountainous demographic challenges mean the only plausible supply of labour is from overseas. But even America cannot afford to be autarkic. It needs strong and steady flows of immigrants to power the world's most dynamic capitalist system. Neither should we regard immigrants as merely a source of cheap labour. They can and do enrich our societies, feeding a diversity that broadens and deepens us all.

But our clumsy efforts to create deracinated "global communities" have badly backfired. In the end, we should not forget that immigrants are immigrants. That means they have come to us, not we to them, because of the opportunities and intrinsic appeal of our own societies. Only by insisting that our own national identity and sovereignty is non-negotiable will we be able to continue both to welcome new immigrants and to maintain our chance at prosperity, and even survival, in a competitive and dangerous world.

Source






16 November, 2007

Emigration soars as Britons desert the UK

Britain is experiencing the greatest exodus of its own nationals in recent history while immigration is at unprecedented levels, new figures show. Last year, 207,000 British citizens - one every three minutes - left the country while 510,000 foreigners arrived to stay for a year or more. The British made up more than half of the 400,000 moving abroad - yet only 14 per cent of immigrants were UK nationals coming home. The figures do not include hundreds of thousands of east Europeans who have come to work in Britain in the past two years. This is because most are coming for less than 12 months and do not show up on the statistics.

The figures from the Office for National Statistics suggest that only one sixth of the immigrants in 2006 were from the states that joined the EU in 2004. The biggest influx was from the New Commonwealth - India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka - with more than 200,000.

Since Labour came to power in 1997, 1.8m British people have left but only 979,000 have returned, Over the same period, 3.9m foreign nationals have come to Britain while 1.6m have left. More than 50 per cent of the British emigrants moved to just four countries in 2006 - Australia, New Zealand, France and Spain. Eight in every 100 went to the USA.

The ONS said that overall last year there were 591,000 immigrants to the UK and 400,000 emigrants, both the highest figures ever recorded. Net immigration - the difference between those leaving and arriving - was 191,000.

The departure of so many Britons is exacerbating the demographic and cultural changes caused by high levels of immigration. Recent figures showed that despite high levels of emigration and a low birth rate, the population is still growing rapidly because of immigration. It is growing by the equivalent to a city the size of Bristol every year. Sir Andrew Green, chairman of Migrationwatch, said: "Two thirds of yet another record level of arrivals come from outside the EU. They could and should be subject to much tighter controls." He added: ''This gives the lie to claims that nothing effective can be done about immigration because of our membership of the EU."

Damian Green, the Conservative spokesman, said: "These figures prove that immigration is still running at unsustainably high levels. "This is the direct result of the Government's 'open door' approach which has totally failed to consider the impact of immigration on public services, housing and community cohesion." Sir Simon Milton, chairman of the Local Government Association, said the Government had no clear idea of where all the immigrants were going and their impact on services. "No-one has a real grasp of where or for how long migrants are settling so much-needed funding for local services isn't getting to the right places," he said. "The speed and scale of migration combined with the shortcomings of official population figures is placing pressure on funding for services like children's services and housing. ''This can even lead to unnecessary tension and conflict."

While immigration is the highest in the country's history, the emigration of UK nationals is running at its greatest level since before the First World War. Little research has been done into the reasons for the exodus of Britons, though it appears more are going abroad to retire though many younger people are leaving to work. A study last year by the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) suggested that one in 12 UK nationals may now be living abroad. There are 250,000 second homes owned by British nationals in France alone. Surveys indicate that another one million are set to pack their bags for good over the next five years and a further 500,000 live abroad for part of the year.

Danny Sriskandarajah, of the IPPR, said: "The UK is seeing revolving turnstiles and not over-run floodgates. "More people are on the move than ever before, with a million emigrants and immigrants crossing our borders last year." He added: "It is also clear that immigration is an economic phenomenon, with almost half of those immigrating and emigrating doing so for work-related reasons."

More British live abroad than any other nationality. There are 41 countries with more than 10,000 British living there and another 71 countries with more than 1,000. The levels of emigration are now back to those last seen in the late-1950s and early 1960s, when the "10 pound Poms" left in their droves for Australia, enticed by subsidised travel and settlement.

The last exodus on a similar scale was before 1914, when the outflow was running at 300,000 per annum and more young men were leaving the country every year than died on the battlefields of Europe. Between 1853 and 1913, more than 13 million British citizens left, mainly for North America, Australia, South Africa and New Zealand. Some came back; but cumulative net emigration was equivalent to 13 per cent of the population, mostly those aged between 18 and 45. However, there was little immigration then: the population grew because of a high birth rate.

The difference of around three million between the emigration of British nationals and immigration of foreigners represents a five per cent turnover of the entire population in ten years. Previous immigrations did not exceed one per cent over fifty years. This turnaround in population has inevitably changed its ethnic composition. Over the last 20 years, the white British population has decreased slightly while the number of ethnic minority Britons has doubled. Looking ahead to the next 10 years, the white ethnic group will remain static while the number of Asian non-dependents alone will increase from 1.5 to 2.5 million

Source




ID Cards for all Residents Pass a Vote in San Francisco

The San Francisco Board of Supervisors has given preliminary approval to an ordinance allowing municipal identification cards to be issued to anyone living in the city, regardless of their legal status. The proposal passed the first of two required votes on Tuesday night, putting San Francisco, with a population of 725,000, on track to become the largest city in the nation to issue identification cards to anyone who requests one and proves residence. In June, New Haven, Conn., passed a similar measure, believed to be the first in the nation. Since then, several other cities, including New York, have floated the idea.

In San Francisco, supporters said that the ordinance was intended to make life easier for the large number of illegal immigrants working in the city, many of whom cannot get access to services because they have no formal identification. The city already has a "sanctuary" policy forbidding local law enforcement or other officials to assist with immigration enforcement. "I think it's admitting the reality of the situation that we depend on, our tourist and hotel industry depends on, a labor force that's supplied by, for lack of a better term, undocumented residents," said Tom Ammiano, the supervisor who sponsored the bill. Mr. Ammiano described the measure as "a passport of sorts," to "take the kid to the library or open a bank account, or report a crime without being deported."

Supporters and opponents of such measures said states and cities were more likely to take up issues like this one since Congress rejected a comprehensive immigration bill this year. "The brass ring collapsed in Congress, so the people on the ground are still trying to think of things that are going to help this issue down the road," said Steven A. Camarota, director of research for the Center for Immigration Studies in Washington, which advocates stronger enforcement of current laws.

And while Mr. Camarota said the card's uses would be largely symbolic, he said passage of the ordinance might force Democratic presidential candidates to talk more about immigration, an issue that public opinion polls show is of concern to many voters and has already been part of the Republican campaign. "It keeps the issue on the front burner," he said.

Supporters of the ordinance say it has more practical effects, including crime prevention. John Trasvina, the president and general counsel of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund in Los Angeles, said he had recently received several reports of so-called SOM, or Sock on Mexican, attacks in the Los Angeles area, crimes he hoped might be reduced if victims came forward. "The victims are living in a cash economy, and they are reluctant to go to the police," Mr. Trasvina said. "Having an ID card addresses both of those issues: it reduces the reliance on cash, because it opens up the opportunities for banking, and it takes away a barrier between community and police."

Mr. Ammiano said the card would also be useful to other groups without government-issued identification, including the elderly, students and transgendered people, who have long found a sympathetic home here.

The bill, which passed the first vote by 10 to 1, will be taken up by the board again before going to Mayor Gavin Newsom, who has indicated his general support. If the experience in New Haven is any indication, the demand for the card here could be strong. More than 4,800 cards have been handed out since late July, said Kica Matos, the New Haven community services administrator, with a "significant number" going to illegal immigrants. "The second day there was a line halfway down the block, and by the third it was all the way down," Ms. Matos said.

Source






15 November, 2007

British scandal gets worse

10,000 in security industry could be illegal, says Smith

Jacqui Smith, facing her first political crisis as home secretary, was forced to admit yesterday that as many as 10,000 non-EU nationals licensed to work in the security industry may be illegal immigrants and that one of them had been responsible for overseeing then-prime minister Tony Blair's car while it was being repaired.

Smith, well supported by backbenchers and cabinet colleagues after being forced to come to the Commons, appeared to have survived, after Downing Street privately said she had not made a mistake in failing to tell Gordon Brown of the news as soon as she discovered the security lapse in the summer. The row was sparked by the leak of Home Office internal emails showing that Smith had accepted Home Office press office advice in August not to disclose the number of illegal immigrants cleared to work in the security industry, on the basis that "the lines to take" would not be good enough for the public and media.

Smith denied Conservative accusations of "blunder, panic and cover-up", insisting: "My approach was that the responsible thing to do was to establish the full nature and scale of the problem, taking appropriate action to deal with it, rather than immediately to put incomplete and potentially misleading information in the public domain. There was no fiasco, there was no blunder, there was strengthened and improved action."

The shadow home secretary, David Davis, owner of many previous Home Office ministerial scalps, attacked Smith, saying she had put avoiding political embarrassment ahead of solving the problem and informing the public.

In an attempt to show that her notoriously malfunctioning department was on top of the problem, Smith disclosed that an initial inquiry by the Security Industry Authority between April 2005 and December 2006 of 3,000 non-EU nationals working in the industry showed that only 41 were illegal workers.

However, ministers were first told in April 2007 that a Border and Immigration Agency operation had found 44 illegal migrants working for the police as security guards, including one at a site where the prime minister's car had been repaired. The home secretary confirmed that she had been told about the problem on July 2, days after she had taken over the job of home secretary, when SIA licences were changed to include a check on immigration status. The full-scale exercise to determine exactly how many illegal migrants there are among the 40,000 foreign nationals licensed to work as security guards before July will not be completed until next month.

Smith's Commons statement left open the possibility that up to 10,000 illegal migrant workers may have been licensed to work in the private security industry either as guards or "close protection" personnel - twice as many as the Conservatives claimed yesterday.

MPs were told that preliminary checks on 6,000 out of the 40,000 workers licensed before July 2007 had shown that only 77% of them had the right to work in Britain. A further 10.5% had been established to be illegal migrants. In a further 12.5% of cases further checks were still being made, raising the possibility that up to 23% could be illegal migrants. As about 40,000 non-European workers have been licensed, the number of illegal workers could be as many as 10,000.

Nick Clegg, of the Liberal Democrats, said Smith seemed to have learned nothing from the failure of her predecessors: "Perhaps if the Home Office was more worried about getting things right and less worried about spinning, these mistakes would not happen at all."

Source




Spitzer backdown

New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer has decided to abandon a plan to issue driver's licenses to illegal immigrants, officials familiar with the decision told The Associated Press Tuesday night. The governor is due to meet Wednesday morning with New York's congressional delegation, many of whom openly oppose the program. Debate over the issue also has spilled into New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's presidential campaign. The governor's office signaled to New York lawmakers Tuesday that Spitzer will say at the meeting that he is shelving the plan and that immigration is a federal issue to be handled by Washington, according to congressional aides who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because no formal announcement had been made.

Last month, Spitzer sought to salvage the license effort by striking a deal with the Department of Homeland Security to create three distinct types of state driver's licenses: one "enhanced" that will be as secure as a passport; a second-tier license good for boarding airplanes; and a third marked not valid for federal purposes that would be available to illegal immigrants and others.

Clinton has been criticized by her Democratic and Republican rivals for her noncommittal answers on the subject. She has said she sympathizes with governors like Spitzer who are forced to confront the issue of immigration because the federal government has not enacted immigration reform. She has not taken a position on the actual plan offered by Spitzer.

A Spitzer spokeswoman did not immediately reply to an e-mail seeking comment. The governor introduced the plan with the goal of increased security, safer roads and an opportunity to bring immigrants "out of the shadows." Opponents charged Spitzer would make it easier for would-be terrorists to get identification, and make the country less safe. Many New Yorkers agreed with them.

About 70 percent of New Yorkers oppose the license plan, according to a Siena College poll of 625 registered state voters released Tuesday. The poll, conducted Nov. 5-8, had a sampling margin of 3.9 percentage points.

"As I've said on numerous occasions, this is a tough issue," Spitzer said Tuesday in New York City. "And it's one where we're continuing to try to talk to the public, explain why we took the position that I have thus far, and explain what issues we're trying to address. But I understand - you don't need to see the most recent poll to understand that this is an issue that has touched a nerve in the public and we're trying to address that in a thoughtful, modulated way, and then we'll see where we go."

Source






14 November, 2007

Even illegals can pass security vetting in Britain!

The Home Secretary, Jacqui Smith, has been accused of covering up the fact that thousands of illegal immigrants were given clearance to work for the government in sensitive security posts. A report in the Daily Mail has quoted emails which show Ms Smith was aware of the error in July, however only admitted the fact to reporters on Sunday in answer to questions. The scandal is centred around the revelation that the Security Industry Authority, a Home Office body, gave security clearance to 5,000 illegal immigrants to work as government security guards.

Opposition Leader David Cameron called on Ms Smith to explain. "I think there are some really big questions for the Home Secretary to answer and she needs to come to the House of Commons today and give a statement and answer those questions," he said. "In particular, I think the real problem for the Government here is that it looks like they put the convenience of when they wanted to announce things to the press and Government spin ahead of public safety and telling the public what was happening." He added, "Until we have a proper Home Secretary announcement and the chance to ask her questions in the House of Commons, it is difficult to get to the truth."

The Home Secretary is to make a statement to the House of Commons later today.

Source




Costly immigrants in Britain

Town halls will have to raise council tax or cut services to pay for the care of thousands of child asylum-seekers, which costs up to 45,000 pounds a year per child, council leaders say today. Nine councils will introduce a report at Westminster showing that they are losing out on 35 million a year, because the Home Office and the Department for Education are not providing the cash.

More than 3,200 unaccompanied asylum-seekers under 18 entered Britain last year, some as young as 4 or 5. Many are orphans or have been smuggled out from their home countries in an act of desperation and councils have a legal duty to look after them. The councils for Birmingham, Hounslow, Hillingdon, Hammmersmith and Fulham, Kent, Manchester, Oxfordshire, Solihull and West Sussex, claim that foster care can cost as much as 900 pounds a week, and that older teenagers often have to be put up in bed and breakfast accommodation. Paul Carter, leader of Kent County Council, said: "In Kent alone we have accumulated 7.5 million to 8 million in debts in care for unaccompanied minors."

Source






13 November, 2007

Dems look for ways to fool voters on immigration

Top Democratic elected officials and strategists are engaged in an internal debate over toughening the party's image on illegal immigration, with some worried that Democrats' relatively welcoming stance makes them vulnerable to GOP attacks in the 2008 election.

Advocates of such a change cite local and state election results last week in Virginia and New York, where Democrats used sharper language and get-tough proposals to stave off Republican efforts to paint the party as weak on the issue. In Virginia, for instance, where Democrats took control of the state Senate, one high- profile victory came in the Washington suburbs, where the winner distributed mailings in the campaign's closing days proclaiming his opposition to in-state college tuition for illegal immigrants.

The party's calibration could also be seen in New York, where a number of Democrats won local elections in part by opposing a plan by Democratic Gov. Eliot Spitzer to issue driver's licenses to illegal immigrants, and in the presidential campaign, in which party front-runner Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton has struggled to explain whether she supports the Spitzer plan or not.

In Congress, a group of conservative Democrats, led by freshman Rep. Heath Shuler of North Carolina, introduced legislation last week calling for more Border Patrol agents, heightened surveillance and additional requirements that employers verify the legal status of workers. The proposal does not include measures to create a path to citizenship for millions of illegal workers, measures that recently had been supported by Democrats nationally.

With polls showing broad discontent with the government's handling of immigration, some Democrats argue that the party can toughen its image without moving too far away from its traditionally pro-immigration leanings -- for example, by supporting heightened security at the Mexico border, opposing benefits for illegal immigrants, and pushing for harsher penalties against businesses that hire illegal workers.

"If Democrats turn a blind eye to the public concerns about immigration, it would be a mistake," said Rep. Chet Edwards (D-Texas), who won reelection last year in his conservative district by taking a hard line against illegal immigration while backing what he said were "practical" ideas for dealing with the nation's estimated 12 million illegal immigrants. "If Democrats are seen as strongly supporting the protection of our borders and not supporting a vast array of welfare benefits for people here illegally, and combine that with a responsible approach toward earned citizenship for those who have been in our country for a number of years, then it can be a winning issue for Democrats."

The internal debate has grown emotional in recent days, boiling over on Friday during a tense encounter on the House floor between Rep. Joe Baca (D-Rialto), chairman of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, and Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer (D-Md.). The caucus was upset because some House Democrats had backed a Republican measure protecting employers that impose certain English-only rules -- the latest in what Baca called a series of frustrations with the party leadership's approach to immigration. "We're tired of people trying to scapegoat the immigrants or Hispanics as a platform," Baca said. "Republicans have done it, and Democrats have followed . . . because they're afraid they're going to lose their elections. But we got elected to represent all communities, not to vote based on whether we're going to get reelected."

The party's dilemma comes in the wake of the Senate's defeat this summer of a major immigration overhaul that would have created a path to citizenship for illegal workers....

The headline in the LA Times was "A fine line for Democrats on border issues." That is a hint as to how they are trying to fool both sides on the issue. It is more evidence that the Democrats are a party whose core beliefs are found in the latest polling data. It is also a party that is largely on the wrong side of the issue trying to please one of its constituency groups that is out of touch with the rule of law when it comes to immigration.

Source




Poll says Brits want less immigration

More than four-fifths of the public believe immigration in Britain should be cut substantially, according to a poll. A majority also dispute the Government's assertion that those coming into the country have helped the economy. The research, carried out by YouGov for pressure group Migrationwatch, emerged as politicians battle to dominate the immigration agenda.

David Cameron was boosted when another poll suggested he was more trusted to deal with the controversial issue than Gordon Brown. The Tory leader has condemned ministers for "incompetence" and called for an overall limit on immigration levels. He has also attacked the Prime Minister for echoing the BNP with his "British jobs for British workers" slogan.

The latest study found 85% of people thought that immigration was putting too much pressure on public services, with only 10% disagreeing. Some 81% supported the view that the level of immigration should be reduced substantially, while 14% rejected it. When asked if they believed immigration had been generally positive for the UK economy, 35% said it had compared to 54% who thought it had not.

Migrationwatch chairman Sir Andrew Green said: "These figures show that now the scale of immigration and its consequences are now being better understood and people are deeply concerned at what is going on."

Source




Australia: Head-in-the-sand Immigration bureaucrats

Years in jail for nothing and not even an apology two years later! This is rivalling the incompetence of the U.S. immigration bureaucracy!

Details have emerged about the wrongful detention of a man who remains a stateless citizen despite an Immigration Department admission of error. Tony Tran, who was living in Brisbane with his wife and son, was detained in December 1999 when immigration officials told him his visa had been cancelled years earlier. The Department admitted a mistake and released him after five-and-a-half years, but because he and his son have no permanent resident status they still face possible deportation.

Mr Tran had been in Australia for seven years, and after applying for a spouse visa for his wife he was detained. This was despite the fact that a letter notifying him of his cancelled visa had never been properly delivered to him. David Manne, director of the Refugee and Immigration Legal Centre, told ABC's Lateline that is illegal. "He should never have been in there in the first place. He should never have been locked up," he said. "Under Australian law, if you're not properly notified of a decision, it is unlawful for you to be detained."

His wife and two-year-old son Hai were not detained, but when faced with detention, his wife willingly left the country. She returned two years later and left her son in Queensland, before returning to South Korea. Mr Tran has not heard from her since.

While Mr Tran was in detention the Immigration Department had his son put in foster care and tried to have him deported, despite his repeated attempts to keep in contact with his son. In 2005 Mr Tran was released with a letter from the Government admitting that he had actually had valid visas since 1993. But two years after his release, there has been no resolution of his or his son's ability to stay in Australia.

Even though he has no rights of citizenship anywhere else and has now been in Australia for 14 years, Mr Tran and his son could still be deported unless they are given permanent residence. Mr Manne says Mr Tran is in legal limbo. "Their future fate is completely uncertain," he said. "They have nowhere else to go, and yet in Australia they have no permanent status." A suit has been filed in the Victorian Supreme Court seeking damages for the unlawful detention, and the reinstatement of Mr Tran's visa.

Source






12 November, 2007

The Dems' Immigration Dilemma

By Gloria Borger

For the past year or so, the Republicans handed the Democrats a gift that kept on giving: immigration reform. The GOP was divided-with the president standing firmly against most of his party, calling for a "path to citizenship"-as the Democrats watched the squabbling from the sidelines. Even more to the point, they were absolutely delighted at the prospect of picking up the support of Hispanic voters outraged at the efforts of some Republicans to deport 12 million illegal immigrants. It was a free ride, and Democrats were happy to take it.

Until the wheels came off. Hillary Clinton didn't mean to be the one to do it, but she was. Her struggle with herself over how to handle the issue of driver's licenses for illegal immigrants the other week changed everything. Not only was she caught without a clear idea of how to handle the matter; the entire dais of Democrats sharing the debate stage with her seemed to be a tad undone by the question-and pleased that she had been called on first. That way, they could jump on her for taking both sides of an issue (a fair critique, to be sure) but delay their own answers long enough to figure out how to straddle the matter. And they're still doing it.

It's not hard to figure out why. Immigration is a killer issue, one that cuts so many ways it's hard for a pol to figure out just how to pander: Liberals are against building that fence to keep illegal immigrants out; conservatives are worried the fence won't be tall enough. Most Americans want some form of reform, yet the solutions are literally all over the map, largely constituency-driven. If you're from New England, for instance, your view is likely to be different from that of someone who lives in the Southwest. "I could empathize with Senator Clinton," Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano, a Democrat, told me. "I've had to think my way through about what makes sense."

That's a nice way of saying that the Democratic Party-and its candidates-had better get started. And here's the key reason: Independent voters are unhappy that nothing has been done on the matter, and anyone who wants to be president needs to keep independent voters happy. In fact, a recent survey by Democratic pollster Stan Greenberg shows that the top issue underlying the discontent of independents is "unprotected" borders. For these voters, the matter of illegal immigration is a question of breaking laws and not a stalking horse for something else-like racism. The public is practical and wants tougher enforcement. And if the Democrats can't find some way to embrace the principle of the rule of law, then they've got a problem. "We need to have a strategy beyond saying the Republicans are awful," says one top Democratic strategist. "And we don't."

Tough political call: So it's no surprise there's a debate raging within the Democratic Party about what to do. And the sticking point isn't about enforcement; everyone agrees that needs to be stronger. It's about benefits for illegal immigrants. Should taxpayers provide any? And, if so, what are the parameters? It's not an easy political call. "The push for more benefits is a killer," says one Democratic strategist involved in discussions about immigration. "The public doesn't want that, but it's a problem with some Hispanic leaders." Ipso facto, some Democrats-like the ones running for president-are unwilling to take it on.

That's a mistake. There's a smart analogy being offered by Greenberg, and Democrats ought to listen. Given voters' dissatisfaction with the lack of immigration reform, he says, why not actually offer a proposal to do something? It could be, he says, a "welfare moment." As in: Bill Clinton's end-welfare-as-we-know-it pledge in 1992. That plan was a major component of Clinton's success-not only because it painted him as a new kind of Democrat but also because he seemed fearless in his eagerness to tread into waters Democrats had once avoided. Clinton's willingness to take on the issue was essential to changing-and shaping-the debate. It also transformed him into a leader. Now Hillary Clinton has the opportunity to do something similar, if she has the guts. The first candidate who gets there should get the credit.

Of course, that could well be Barack Obama or any other Democrat if Hillary Clinton's penchant for caution remains. That is, unless her husband can talk her out of it.

Source




British Tory leader in immigration poll boost

David Cameron has been boosted by signs that the public support his stance over immigration. The Tory leader has forged ahead of Gordon Brown when people are asked who they trust to deal with the controversial issue, according to an ICM poll for the Sunday Express. The Conservatives also hold an 8-point lead over Labour when it comes to voting intentions - on 43% compared to 35%.

Immigration has moved to the fore of the political debate over recent weeks, with Mr Cameron condemning the Government for "incompetence" and calling for an "overall limit" on those coming into the country. He attacked the Prime Minister during the Queen's speech debate for echoing the BNP with his "British jobs for British workers" slogan. The poll also suggests the Tories have escaped damage from the row involving Nigel Hastilow, who was forced to quit as a Parliamentary candidate after suggesting that Enoch Powell had been right over immigration.

When people were asked which of the two main party leaders they trusted most to get the issue of immigration "right", 45% named Mr Cameron while just 30% plumped for Mr Brown. As well as receiving the backing of 82% of Conservative voters, Mr Cameron also gleaned support from 23% of Labour voters. And he was regarded as the more likeable of the pair by a margin of 46% to 33%.

However, there was better news for the Prime Minister in other areas of his personal ratings, where he maintained a lead. Despite efforts to brand him as a "bottler", half of respondents believed he was a stronger leader, compared to 29% for Mr Cameron. He was regarded as more of a conviction politician by 44% to 30%, more courageous by 39% to 33%, and better at handling the economy by 53% to 28%.

Source






11 November, 2007

Border crossers now risk jail

Arizona could become the first state to prosecute every adult caught at the border crossing illegally from Mexico. Authorities in the Yuma sector, in the western part of the state, have been prosecuting people caught at the border since December. The Del Rio sector of Texas introduced the policy a year earlier. Both areas phased in the crackdown over six months and saw dramatic drops in the number of border arrests.

Now, federal agencies are discussing expanding the policy, known as Operation Streamline, in January to include the Tucson area, the busiest human-smuggling route in the country. Last week, the Laredo sector in Texas introduced the policy. To make it happen, the Department of Homeland Security would lend acting Arizona U.S. Attorney Dan Knauss four lawyers to work exclusively on Streamline cases. "These are serious discussions. You need to get cooperation of a number of parties," Knauss said. "We still need judges, defense counsel and prison space."

Prosecutions are normally reserved for foreigners with criminal records or people who had been repeatedly caught sneaking into the country. Knauss said his office prosecutes about 2,000 such cases a year in Arizona.

Operation Streamline marks a significant departure from the Border Patrol's historical methods, which let sector chiefs develop their own guidelines for when to refer cases to the immigration courts and when to return illegal immigrants to Mexico quickly, voluntarily and without legal process. Before Operation Streamline, a border crosser in Yuma without a criminal record would have had to be caught three times before being jailed. In Del Rio, it was customarily five times. Since the policy was introduced in Del Rio in December 2005, the Border Patrol has referred 23,000 cases for prosecution. In about 22,000 of them, the illegal immigrants were convicted and deported.

First-time offenders are guilty of a misdemeanor, punishable by up to 180 days in jail. In Del Rio, the average jail time for first-offenders is 34 days. Minors, critically ill people and asylum-seekers are exempt, as are those caught after spending 14 days in the country. Border Patrol agents say the prospect of jail is a deterrent.

About a year ago, the Del Rio sector lent Border Patrol agents to the overwhelmed Tucson area. While there, those agents arrested illegal immigrants who had traveled 600 miles from Piedras Negras, which is across from the Del Rio sector, to cross instead in Nogales. The immigrants said they made the longer trip to avoid going to jail if caught, said Hilario Leal, supervisory Border Patrol agent in Del Rio. "The word of mouth gets out. They trek pretty far to get here, and all their efforts go for nothing," he said.

A few weeks in detention may not sound like much when illegal immigrants, who typically pay "coyotes" $1,500 to $2,000 to guide them across the border, risk their lives to trek through the Sonoran Desert. But a second offense under Operation Streamline can mean up to two years in prison.

Arrests in the Del Rio sector dropped dramatically in the first nine months of fiscal year 2007 compared with the same period the year before. From October 2006 to July 2007, agents made 20,000 arrests, 35,000 fewer than the year before. Leal said the agency attributes the drop exclusively to the new policy because it is much sharper than the 30 percent decline in arrests borderwide and Del Rio didn't see the boost in personnel, equipment and fence-building that other areas did.

Source




A censored immigration debate in Britain

Enoch Powell was not right about immigration. But it is wrong to hound out a Conservative candidate for suggesting that he was. Whatever the parties think about immigration, honesty is the best policy and free speech the way to protect a free society. Which is why, as an old libertarian Marxist who supports open borders, I disagree with the attempt to close down the debate.

Nigel Hastilow, Conservative candidate in a Midlands marginal, wrote in a newspaper in Wolverhampton (where Powell was MP when he made his infamous “Rivers of Blood” speech in 1968) that most local people think immigration is our biggest problem, and that “Enoch was right” to say mass immigration would change Britain “irrevocably”.

Last week David Cameron said he wanted a “grown-up debate” about the need to restrict immigration. This week Gordon Brown will announce plans to restrict immigration. Yet everybody agreed that Mr Hastilow must resign for using incorrect words to make the same point. This seems less like a grown-up debate than an all-party attitude of Not in Front of the Children ? and for children, read citizens.

The complaints were not about Mr Hastilow criticising immigration, but the “unwise”, “insensitive” language he used to do so. Speaking for many, George Osborne, the Shadow Chancellor, said that candidates of all parties “have to exercise great caution in the language they use about immigration”. By contrast, Mr Cameron was praised by Trevor Phillips, the anti-racism tsar, for the “deracialised” tone of his call to reduce immigrant numbers.

This is a tiff about etiquette, not a debate about immigration. It is apparently fine to talk about the alleged problem in coded terms ? the “demographic challenge” or “carbon footprint” ? but not to offer blunt arguments about the supposed cultural impact of immigrants. Why do our leaders insist on this etiquette? Because they think we kiddies are so unstable and ignorant that we might start a pogrom if we get a glimpse of Enoch's shroud?

If politicians had the courage to trust people's intelligence and start a truly grown-up discussion, they might be surprised by the response. Immigration has re-emerged as a focus for public insecurities. But there is no prospect of the sort of racist backlash seen in Powell's day. It is unlikely that Mr Hastilow planned to contest Halesowen & Rowley Regis, as the Tories did successfully in Smethwick in 1964, on the unofficial slogan: “If you want a nigger for a neighbour, vote Labour.”

Unlike Messrs Powell, Brown, Cameron and Hastilow, I don't believe that immigration is to blame for social problems. But if our leaders imagine that a Not in Front of the Children policy can defuse the issue then, to paraphrase Powell, we must be mad, literally mad.

Source






10 November, 2007

A Watershed Moment on Immigration

October 2007 may turn out to be the month that immigration became a key issue in presidential politics. It hasn't been, at least in my lifetime. The Immigration Act of 1965, which turned out to open up America to mass immigration after four decades of restrictive laws, wasn't one of the Great Society issues Lyndon Johnson emphasized in 1964. The Immigration Act of 1986, which legalized millions of illegal immigrants but whose border and workplace provisions have never been effectively enforced, was a bipartisan measure unmentioned in the debates between Ronald Reagan and Walter Mondale. There was no perceptible difference on immigration between George W. Bush and Al Gore in 2000. Both favored a comprehensive bill with legalization and guest-worker provisions. John Kerry in 2006 and 2007 voted for immigration bills along the lines supported by Bush.

Now, things look different. In the Democratic debate on Oct. 30, Tim Russert demanded to know whether Hillary Clinton supported New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer's policy of issuing driver's licenses to illegal immigrants. The forthright answer: yes and no. A clarifying statement by the Clinton campaign later in the week did not much clarify things: a hedged yes. It was one of several issues on which Clinton seemed to take calculating and ambiguous non-positions. But it is one that may have major reverberations in the presidential campaign -- and in congressional races, as well.

The reason is that the Democrats -- and Bush -- are out of line with public opinion on the issue. That became clear as the Senate debated a comprehensive immigration bill in May and June. Most Republicans and many Democrats, in the Senate and among the public, turned against the bill. Supporters of the bill tended to ascribe that to something like racism: They just don't like having so many Mexicans around.

But if you listened to the opponents, you heard something else. They want the current law to be enforced. It bothers them that we have something like 12 million illegal immigrants in our country. It bothers them that most of the southern border is unfenced and unpatrolled. It bothers them that illegal immigrants routinely use forged documents to get jobs -- or are given jobs with no documents at all.

You don't have to be a racist to be bothered by such things. You just have to be a citizen who thinks that massive failure to enforce the law is corrosive to society. That was apparent to me as I listened to a focus group of Republican voters in suburban Richmond, Va., conducted by Peter Hart for the Annenberg School of Communications. One voter after another complained that the immigration laws were not being enforced. None of them made any derogatory remarks about Latino immigrants -- two said they admired how hard they work. They don't want to see Latinos banished from this country. They want the immigrants here to be legally here.

Which leaves Democratic politicians and political candidates out on a pretty flimsy limb. Most of them reflexively back a comprehensive bill, and some of them (like Bush and a number of Republicans backing such a bill) have dismissed opponents as racists. Most Democrats have also been backing bills extending various benefits to illegal immigrants, like the Dream Act for college education for illegals brought over as children. There are appealing arguments for such bills. But most voters reject them. And most voters certainly reject driver's licenses for illegal immigrants. That was one of the issues that led to the recall of Gov. Gray Davis in California in 2003.

The Republican presidential candidates have taken note. Only John McCain, a longtime backer of a comprehensive bill, stands apart, and he concedes that voters are demanding tougher enforcement. In the special congressional election in Massachusetts on Oct. 5, the Republican was able to hold the Democrat to 51 percent by stressing immigration as one of his two top issues. Other Republicans are likely to echo that theme next fall. And the Democratic presidential nominee (unless Chris Dodd gets the nod) is going to have to explain why she or he believes it's a good idea to give illegal immigrants driver's licenses.

The last several Democratic nominees could have said that they're just taking the same position as their Republican opponent. The 2008 nominee won't be able to say the same of hers or his (unless McCain gets the nod). "The centrality of illegal immigration to the current discontent about the direction of the country may be taking us back again to a welfare moment," write the shrewd Democratic strategists James Carville and Stanley Greenberg. Yup.

Source




Muslim Somalis flood one small Kansas town

And many of the locals don't like the transformation of their city into a taxpayer-supported Muslim center. Post below from American Congress for Truth represents that viewpoint. See the original for links

Emporia, Kansas is a small city of perhaps, 28,000 people, near the eastern Flint Hills in the sunflower state. Emporia has a major beef processing plant for Tyson Foods with over 2,000 employees. Dolly Madison Bakery and Hopkins Manufacturing are other major employers, as well. Emporia is going through an influx of Somali Muslims, who may account for upwards of 1,000 residents in this small city. It is also, according to this Emporia Gazette article, about to have an influx of upwards of another 400 Somalis. About 400 Somali refugees currently work at Tyson.

For the calendar year ended September 30, 2007, more than 7,500 Somali refugees came to the U.S, out of a total of 17,000 African "humanitarian refugees" Because the Somalis are certified as `humanitarian refugees' under our State Department rules, they are supported by social services provided by the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The ORR in turn contracts via state Departments of Social Services with providers such as Catholic Charities to deliver services. U.S. Taxpayers are picking up the tab, so food processors like Tyson couldn't be happier, given the tightness of the low skilled labor pool in the vicinity.

Emporia is rapidly becoming a major destination for these tough foot soldiers of Islam. Because of its size, not unlike what happened to Lewiston, Maine another small city that has experienced difficulties with Somali immigrants, this influx will have a substantial and taxing impact. We have written about problems of assimilating Muslim Somali refugees in other heartland cities such as Indianapolis, Indiana, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Lincoln, Nebraska, Kansas City, Kansas, Nashville, Tennessee to name a few.

What is consternating is that the Somalis are being recruited for what is clearly the lowest of low end jobs-butchering and meat packing - at Tyson's processing plant in Emporia, The previous pool of workers, Hispanic immigrants, aren't taking the positions. It is a pattern that occurred in Lincoln, Nebraska at another beef processor, Swift & Co. There, in May of this year, 70 of 120 Somali butchers and meat packers quit their jobs because of insufficient "prayer time" was given them. While they subsequently returned, this eruption of Muslim resentment left the locals, flummoxed as to what to do. As noted in the Lincoln Star Journal:
Similar requests for workplace accommodations of Muslim religious obligations have become common around the country, says Muslim advocates. "I don't know how it's going to work, and I feel bad about it," said Dan Hoppes, president of Local 22 of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union.
Will the experience in Lincoln be repeated on a larger scale with the significant Somali work force at Tyson's in Emporia? Probably so. Islamist Mosques will sprout up and Imams will doubtless deliver fire breathing Friday sermons filled with the usual incitement to hate against the Somalis welcoming hosts. the `unbelievers' or kuffirs in Emporia. Perhaps Tyson meat packers might succeed in extracting prayer time and wudus or foot baths, will follow. Just as their Somali cousins did in Lincoln with able assistance of Muslim Brotherhood front group, CAIR. Who knows, even female genital mutilation, spousal abuse and other traits common to the Somalis will burst forth upon the local scene in Emporia. To quote the Emporia Gazette article:
The news cheered Fardusa Council, community liaison for Tyson, and Emporia Refugee Resettlement Alliance members laughed when she responded, "Hurry up and bring 'em so I can shut off my phone."
Steven Weitkamp as director of refugee and migrant services for Catholic Community Services a branch of Catholic Community Charities in Kansas City, Kan that will administer a $104,495 grant from the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services had these benighted remarks in the Emporia Gazette article:
"It was, in a way, almost overwhelming . and yet another opportunity for me to be humbled," Weitkamp said of the registration. "I got a sense of the potential impact of this (Somali) community on a town the size of Emporia. Weitkamp said he expects Emporia to become home to a "pretty substantial community" of refugees. The refugees can maintain that status for five years; they can become permanent resident aliens in one year and, with an unusual amount of effort, can become citizens in five years.
So, these tough foot soldiers of Islam from Somalia get into the US on humanitarian refugee certifications, receive social assistance from the ORR delivered by Catholic Charities to obtain green cards within a year and US citizenship in five years. All of this on your taxpayer dollars and mine.

The barbarians are truly in the gates and American businesses like Tyson in Emporia, Swift in Lincoln, Nebraska and Opryland and Dell Computers in Nashville, Tennessee are facilitating this influx of Somali Islamists in America's heartland. If the Emporia Gazette's famed Pulitzer Prize winningeditor, William Allen White were alive today, I wonder what he would say about all this?






9 November, 2007

Dangerous racket stopped

In a string of early morning raids today, federal and local authorities cracked down on a wide-ranging scheme to provide illegal aliens with fake ID badges that allowed them to work at O'Hare Airport. The fraudulent security badges gave the illegal or undocumented immigrants access to the tarmac at O'Hare, where they loaded pallets, freight and meals onto commercial airliners. The badges were issued by the city's Dept. of Aviation.

Authorities arrested 23 illegal aliens, who now face state felony charges for possession of fraudulent state identification. Two employees of Ideal Staffing Solutions, an employment agency in Bensenville, have been charged with federal crimes and were scheduled to appear in court late Thursday afternoon. The two Ideal Staffing employees were identified as Mary Gurin and Norinye Benitez.

The raids included agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement - a division of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security known as ICE - as well as Cook County sheriff's deputies. "This case illustrates ICE's resolve to ensuring unauthorized workers are not employed at our nation's critical infrastructure facilities," said Elissa Brown, special-agent-in-charge for the ICE Office of Investigations in Chicago.

The issue of illegal or undocumented immigrants working at O'Hare is not new. Elvira Arellano, who conducted a year-long standoff with U.S. immigration authorities by seeking sanctuary in a Chicago church, once held a job at O'Hare cleaning airplanes.

Source




Paper rebuts reports of farm labor shortage

A new paper issued by a University of California, Davis, agricultural economist challenges recent media reports suggesting that farmers are suffering from escalating labor shortages. Farm industry groups have cited the reported shortages as evidence that immigration policy changes are urgently needed.

The paper - by UC Davis economist Phil Martin - was presented Monday by the Center for Immigration Studies, a Washington, D.C., think tank that favors reducing legal immigration and dismisses arguments that U.S. farms need foreign workers. Farm groups and labor advocates - often adversaries - joined in questioning the substance and relevance of Martin's paper.

Growers and advocates both argue that the United States needs immigration changes because most farm laborers are probably undocumented. They say that foreign workers have been filling a void in the U.S. labor market, and that there is no viable visa system to admit these workers legally. "It may be that Phil Martin is right that there is not much of a shortage now," said Bruce Goldstein of Farmworker Justice, a Washington, D.C., advocacy group. "So what?" Goldstein said "the real question" facing the country is what to do about undocumented farmworkers, who are needed but vulnerable and stuck in the United States because they can't legally travel back and forth to home countries seasonally even if they want to.

Martin's paper, "Farm Labor Shortages: How Real? What Response?" was released this week just as the Senate gears up to consider attaching an agriculture-specific immigration proposal to the new farm bill. Backed by labor advocates and agribusiness, the AgJOBS proposal would allow certain farm laborers to earn U.S. residency if they keep working in agriculture for three to five years after registering with the U.S. government. A new guest worker program would admit future workers only for short periods and would not allow them to earn residency.

Martin said his report doesn't debate the merits of AgJOBS. The report, he pointed out, reveals that plantings of U.S. fresh fruits and vegetables have increased in recent years, a sign that growers are not fearful of labor shortages. Martin said, too, that real shortages would have caused wages to increase more. If wages were increased by 40 percent in fresh produce, he added, consumers would pay only about $8 more a year.

Goldstein said he accepts that growers could afford to pay workers more. But the answer, he said, is to make undocumented workers legal so they are less afraid to demand higher pay.

In his paper, Martin also suggested that if a real labor shortage were to occur and wages were to rise, agribusiness would feel urgent pressure to mechanize jobs and reduce the need for workers. Mark Krikorian, director of the Center for Immigration Studies, said Martin's paper bolsters the argument that U.S. farms don't need "Mexican high school dropouts," and could supplant foreigners with a combination of mechanization and by luring back U.S. workers.

Martin, however, said his paper doesn't reach this conclusion. "I don't want to get drawn into people's speculation," he said. His paper says: "If current trends continue, the farm workers of tomorrow will continue to grow up somewhere outside the United States." The "big argument," he said, is going to be how much access farmers should have to those foreign workers.

Craig Regelbrugge, lobbyist for the pro-AgJOBS Agriculture Coalition for Immigration Reform, said evidence is strong that individual farmers have suffered losses due to labor shortages. He said, too, that while the industry is always inventing ways to mechanize, human beings are inevitably needed for some jobs. Agricultural economist Jim Holt, who works for the coalition, argued that the U.S. economy is producing more jobs than domestic workers can fill in agriculture. In 1999, he added, the United States became a net importer of fruits and vegetables. In a global economy, he said, "the real policy question is: Do we rely on foreign labor to produce the food elsewhere, or do we rely on foreign labor to produce the food here?"

Source




A crackdown that could make a difference

The co-owners of a nationwide janitorial service that authorities say provided cleaning crews staffed with illegal immigrants to a northern Michigan resort have pleaded guilty to charges in the case. The investigation into Rosenbaum-Cunningham International Inc., or RCI, a Florida-based cleaning contractor, led to the nationwide arrest in February of more than 200 illegal immigrants, mostly Mexican nationals.

Richard M. Rosenbaum, 61, and Edward S. Cunningham, 44, pleaded guilty to charges of conspiring to defraud the federal government and harboring illegal aliens in plea agreements with federal prosecutors. Cunningham, of West Palm Beach, Fla., entered his plea Friday, and Rosenbaum, of Longwood, Fla., entered his plea Oct. 17. Rosenbaum faces up to 10 years in prison and a $500,000 fine. Cunningham faces a five-year prison term and up to $250,000 in fines. Both face restitution amounts that the government says could exceed $16 million.

Rosenbaum's sentencing was scheduled for Feb. 4. The electronic record for U.S. District Court for the Western District of Michigan didn't indicate a sentencing date for Cunningham. RCI controller Christina A. Flocken, of Longwood, Fla., also was charged in the case. She has a plea hearing scheduled for Monday.

The investigation began at Grand Traverse Resort in Acme, in Michigan's northwestern Lower Peninsula. The practice of paying cash wages to workers deprived the U.S. government of about $18.6 million in employment taxes, according to the indictment against the three. The government said RCI contracted with the resort between June 1997 and March 2006.

Source






8 November, 2007

The latest from CIS

1. Farm Labor Shortages: How Real? What Response?

EXCERPT: For several years stories in the media have reported a farm labor shortage. This study examines this question and finds little evidence to support this conclusion. First, fruit and vegetable production is actually rising. Second, wages for farm workers have not risen dramatically. Third, household expenditure on fresh fruits and vegetables has remain relatively constant, averaging about $1 a day for the past decade.

********

2. Problems with Governor Spitzer's License Proposal (Part I), (Part II)

EXCERPT: The driver's license represents a veritable "key to the kingdom." When we engage in routine business matters, driver's licenses are accepted as positive proof of identity for the bearer of such a license. When we make purchases with credit cards or personal checks, we are often required to provide our driver's license to satisfy the person with whom we are doing business that we are who we claim we are. In the case of illegal aliens, the driver's license provides a level of credibility that would enable such immigration law violators to conduct business as usual when they should not be conducting business at all in our country since their very presence here is in violation of law and patently illegal.

In my 30 years of experience with the former INS it was common to find that illegal aliens would spend money on counterfeit or altered identity documents in order to accomplish what Governor Spitzer's plan would officially provide for illegal aliens; documentation that would enable such an illegal alien to blend into our society. When such an alien is a terrorist, the 9/11 Commission referred to that process as "embedding." I refer to it as hiding in plain sight.

********

3. The Immigration Solution?

Panel discussion including Authors of Provocative New Book "The Immigration Solution: A Better Plan Than Today's" -- from The National Press Club, Washington, DC, October 30, 2007

********

4. DREAM Act Offers Amnesty to 2.1 Million: New Estimate Shows Another 1.4 Million Family Members Could Also Stay

EXCERPT: The Senate is currently considering the DREAM Act (S.2205). Some have argued that only 60,000 illegal immigrants would be granted amnesty annually under the Act, but a new analysis by the Center for Immigration Studies of 2007 Census Bureau data shows millions of potential beneficiaries . . .

********

5. Give Me Your Murderers, Your Huddled Cons. In Our Flawed System, Even Criminals Can't Be Sent Home

EXCERPT: America's immigration system is obviously broken, but to get a sense for just how dysfunctional it really is, scan the pages of Ames Holbrook's "The Deporter.' This first-person account of the four years Holbrook spent working to deport criminal aliens from the United States is as hair-raising as it is distressing.

See "The Deporter: One Agent's Struggle Against the U.S. Government's Refusal to Expel Criminal Aliens"




77% oppose licenses for illegals

Voters oppose driver's licenses for illegal aliens by a nearly five-to-one margin, a new Fox 5/Washington Times/Rasmussen Reports poll finds. As immigration politics explode into the presidential race, polls show Americans are taking a hard line on benefits for illegal aliens, including opposing driver's licenses and such taxpayer-funded benefits as scholarships at state colleges for illegal-alien students. The new poll found 77 percent of the adults surveyed opposed making driver's licenses available to illegal aliens, while just 16 percent supported the idea.

Licenses fared poorly across party lines, including near-blanket opposition among self-identified Republicans, at 88 percent. Among independents and Democrats, it was still overwhelmingly unpopular, drawing 75 percent and 68 percent opposition, respectively.

New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer in September proposed adding New York to the list of seven states that offer licenses to illegal aliens, and the issue has refused to die down since.

Most Democratic presidential candidates have embraced the policy, including front-runner Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, arguing it's a matter of road safety and a valid response to the federal government's failure to give a path to citizenship to illegal aliens......

This is why many in the media describe the issue as "thorny," the Democrats are on the wrong side of the issue. Now that the polling has become clear look for a quick retreat by Hillary et.al. Their core belief is in getting elected and they are not going to buck these polls.

Source






7 November, 2007

Hamas, Hizbullah cells may be active in Mexico

Former CIA official warns that terror groups, Iran may exploit permeable US border with Mexico to infiltrate terrorists into US

The US is concerned that Hamas and Hizbullah agents may penetrate the porous US-Mexican border in order to carry out terrorist attacks, according to Robert Grenier, the former head of the US Central Intelligence Agency's counterterrorism center. His comments were featured in a report published by the Mexican press on Thursday.

Speaking at an event in Mexico, Grenier-who now runs his own international security firm called Kroll-said that reports indicate the United States is fearful that Iran, Hamas, and/or Hizbullah may seek to set up operations in Mexico in order to carry out terrorist attacks in the US.

According to the US counterterrorism expert, American officials are concerned that terrorists will tap into illegal immigrant and/or drug trafficking networks in order to use them to bring people and equipment into the US. The former CIA official added that the American government is also fearful that Hamas and Hizbullah sleeper cells are already operational in Mexico; and, that Hizbullah is funneling money from Mexico into to Lebanon to fund the organization's operations there.
Until now, the US has not given Hizbullah operations in Mexico much thought. However, in wake of the recent escalation of rhetoric between the US and Iran regarding the latter's nuclear program, American officials have become concerned that Iran will use Hizbullah to carry out terror attacks on US targets around the world, Grenier explained
According to this scenario, Iran could also use Hizbullah networks to hit the US on its own soil. The terrorism expert noted that it was hard to say for certain that sleeper cells already exist in Mexico. However, according to Grenier, The Lebanese Shia community in Mexico supports Iran and Hizbullah and there is speculation that members of the community could be recruited to carry out acts of terrorism.

Source




The immigrant surge to get legal

The number of citizenship applications received in the Los Angeles area tripled in September compared with the same period last year, despite a major application fee increase that immigration experts feared could drastically set back demand.

Nationwide, citizenship applications also increased in August and September compared with last year, according to new figures from the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.

The applications are on track to surpass the 1-million mark, a milestone reached only twice in the last century -- both times in the mid-1990s. That's when many illegal immigrants who received amnesty in the 1980s became eligible for citizenship, and a political backlash against them motivated many to apply.

This year, similar dynamics are in place, immigration experts said.

"The anti-immigrant sentiment is bordering on the xenophobic, and people are taking notice of that," said Evan Bacalao of the National Assn. of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials Educational Fund in Los Angeles. "So even though the fees have increased, people still want to make sure their voices are heard."

To help boost the number of new citizens even more, an alliance of hundreds of organizations last week launched a "100 Days" national campaign to urge immigrants to apply for citizenship in time for the 2008 election.

Source




Protest Styles Presented A Clash of Cultures, And One Decisively Won

Quiet Drowns Out Clamor on Immigration Vote in Virginia. The "protests" and street demonstations beloved of the Left often fail to impress

Opponents of Prince William County's plan to target illegal immigrants tried marches, a boycott and a one-day strike. They organized protest caravans with hundreds of cars and turned out ever-larger crowds for county board meetings. When the plan went before supervisors for a final vote Oct. 16, scores of mostly Hispanic residents lined up to deliver tearful, urgent testimony during a 12-hour public comment period. The result? All the supervisors -- six Republicans and two Democrats -- voted to push ahead with the measures anyway.

The clash over illegal immigration in Prince William has placed several cultural differences on display in recent months. But perhaps none was as stark as the two competing political strategies that drove the debate and shaped public perception, one rooted in a tradition of street protests, the other largely invisible and electronic.

The strategies were deployed by the two organizations that channeled the fears and frustrations of divided county residents to emerge with the loudest voices: Help Save Manassas, which helped draft the county's anti-illegal immigrant policy and applied steady pressure for its adoption, and Mexicans Without Borders, an immigrant advocacy group that deemed the measures racist and took to the streets to say so.

The contest was a study in political contrasts. And in the end, the quiet, coordinated, Internet-savvy lobbying efforts of the pro-crackdown camp won over the chants of "Si, se puede!" (Yes, we can!) and the mass mobilization techniques of their opponents.

Greg Letiecq, the conservative blogger and activist who is president of Help Save Manassas, said his rivals' strategy didn't translate to the suburban environs of Prince William. "That's not the way politics is done in the United States," he said, calling the rallies and protests by his opponents "a political engagement model from Mexico."

Few members of Help Save Manassas were still present at 2:30 a.m. Oct. 17, when county supervisors voted to deny certain services to illegal immigrants and ramp up police enforcement of immigration laws. But the mostly Latino crowd that stayed until the end fell into hushed bewilderment when the outcome was announced. The arithmetic itself was a stunning blow: Despite a crowd of more than 1,000 opponents of the measures and hundreds of heartfelt pleas and desperate appeals, they didn't win a single vote. The supervisors hadn't listened, they protested. It seemed as if officials' minds were already made up, they said. And for the most part, they were right.

"No one changed our opinion with their testimony," said Supervisor John D. Jenkins (D-Neabsco). "I can be persuaded to have sympathy for people. I can't have sympathy for anyone who breaks the law." That view was firmly shared by every member of the Board of Supervisors, Jenkins said. The board's decision to defer action at a previous meeting was the result of concerns about the county's financial situation, he said, not a sign of uncertainty. If anyone thought the board was going to backtrack, "that was a totally erroneous opinion," Jenkins said.

Though outnumbered at the Oct. 16 meeting, Letiecq's members had fired off 10,000 e-mails and 1,000 faxes in the lead-up to the vote -- so many that lawmakers had to unplug their machines. County officials reported that 85 to 90 percent of the correspondence they received endorsed the crackdown. Supervisor John T. Stirrup Jr. (R-Gainesville), who introduced the plan for the crackdown in June, said those in favor of it were "well-organized," while those opposed were "well-orchestrated." Most of supporters' outreach "was done through e-mails. It proved to be effective, in terms of sheer numbers," Stirrup said. Of opponents' effort he said, "It seems like it was well orchestrated to turn out that large a crowd."

Following the defeat, Mexicans Without Borders coordinator Ricardo Juarez stood by his group's tactics, saying they were chosen democratically through community assemblies held after plans for the crackdown were announced. He rejected the idea that marches, protests and other measures were ill-suited for Prince William politics, even though the group's boycott and the one-day strike had scant effect on the local economy. "The American people express themselves by marching," he said in Spanish. "I've seen a lot of marches in Washington, D.C., that have had nothing to do with immigrants."

Although Letiecq and Help Save Manassas worked directly with supervisors to develop the policies, Juarez said his group's attempts to sit with county leaders were rebuffed. He said the board, which is all white, might have been more sympathetic if it more accurately reflected Prince William's ethnic diversity. "There's nothing more we could have done," Juarez said. "If there was a failure here, it was the authorities' failure to listen to us." [That they may have listened but just did not agree is impossible of course!]

Although Mexicans Without Borders was built mostly through word-of-mouth networks and old-fashioned handbill advertising, Letiecq said he built Help Save Manassas on the model developed by the gun rights group Virginia Citizens Defense League, of which he is a member. "We get people to step up and do their own lobbying," he explained. "We educate them, keep them informed and get them engaged with phone calls, faxes, e-mails, and by showing up at supervisors' time."

The group has also wielded Tuesday's election to its advantage. Although the measures were first proposed by Stirrup, board Chairman Corey A. Stewart (R-At Large) became the biggest public champion of the crackdown, running his reelection campaign on the slogan "Fighting Illegal Immigration." Letiecq described Stewart's conversion to his group's cause as "the ultimate Gandhi moment," a galvanizing realization for the candidate.....

Geography and firsthand experience have shaped views on illegal immigration, Letiecq said, not politics. "When you have an overcrowded house with day laborers on your street, you want something done about it," he said. "We've gotten folks who don't normally get engaged in the political process to get very engaged, very quickly."

Source






6 November, 2007

Border fence is working in New Mexico

At this fabled border crossing, where the last armed conflict between the United States and Mexico flared, the rancorous debate over the new U.S. anti-immigrant fence has been resolved. The fence works, residents north and south of it say. At least it works for now on this snippet of the line. "You hear it all the time: Fences don't work. Fences don't work," said Mark Winder, a transplanted New Englander and part-time deputy sheriff who lives on a small ranch outside Columbus, N.M., where a 3-mile stretch of wall was completed in August. "I live 2« miles from the border, and the fence is working."

Many merchants agree in Palomas, once a sleepy farm town, now a booming haven for smugglers. "The fence has destroyed the economy here," said Fabiola Cuellar, a hardware-store clerk on the main street of Palomas who used to sell supplies to the throngs heading north from here. "Things are going back to the way they were before." Of course, with only about one-fifth of the fence complete, migrants from Mexico and other countries who had planned to cross the border illegally in places such as Palomas-Columbus can simply go elsewhere.

But U.S. officials have vowed to complete nearly 400 miles of the fence by the end of next year. Workers in August and September built 70 miles of it here, in Arizona and in parts of California. Thousands more Border Patrol agents, electronic monitors and other measures will tighten the squeeze.

James Johnson's 3,000-acre family farm abuts the border west of Columbus. "Where there is a will, there's a way," said Johnson, 32, of some migrants' ability to get around, over or under any barrier. "But anything is better than just running across the border anytime you want to," he said....

The fence, a 15-foot-high phalanx of girders tightly spaced and rooted deeply in the earth, is a jarring obstruction to the otherwise "for miles and miles" view of these parched high plains. Rather than a solid wall, the barrier more closely resembles a vertical iron grate. It lets people on either side see across the border while preventing them from crossing it. Its builders say the fence permits wildlife free passage. But the spaces between the posts seem tight enough to prevent even the wiliest coyote from slipping through.

The Border Patrol made about 36,000 apprehensions in New Mexico in the first 10 months of fiscal 2007, which ended Sept. 30. That's a huge drop from fiscal 2006, when nearly 74,000 illegal crossers were caught on the state's border, according to government records.

Source




New jobs in Britain are for immigrants

Few Australians would be surprised. They commonly perceive Brits as work-shy

MORE than 80% of the jobs created in the past 10 years have gone to foreigners - many more than the government admitted last week - according to statistics presented by the Treasury to parliament. They also show that in the past five years the number of foreigners in work in Britain has risen by nearly 1m, while employment among the UK-born population has dropped by almost 500,000. The figures are a further embarrassment for the government, which last week was forced to admit it had seriously underestimated the number of migrant workers in Britain.

"They are in a state of complete confusion over the figures for migrant workers," said Chris Grayling, the Conservative shadow work and pensions secretary. "Another day brings another completely different set of statistics. They are floundering and nobody has any idea what is going on."

Peter Hain, the work and pensions secretary, announced last week that previous estimates showing that migrants accounted for 800,000 out of 2.7m jobs created in Britain over the past 10 years were wrong, and that the true figure was 1.1m out of 2.1m. The share of jobs going to foreigners was thus 52%, rather than under 30% as originally estimated.

Gordon Brown was infuriated by the mix-up over the data, which has undermined government claims that immigration is a big benefit to Britain and provided David Cameron with a platform on which to attack the government's record. Downing Street aides said the prime minister was irritated by what they described as a "cockup". But the new figures, given by the Treasury in a written Commons answer last month, suggest the picture is even worse. Alistair Darling, the chancellor, was asked for estimates of the number of migrant workers in Britain since 1997.

In a written response, Angela Eagle, a junior Treasury minister, published a letter from Karen Dunnell, the National Statistician and head of the Office for National Statistics (ONS). In it she said the number of foreign-born workers in Britain rose from 1.904m in mid1997 to 3.269m in the middle of this year, an increase of 1.365m. Over the same period, there was a rise in working-age employment among UK-born people from 23.638m to 23.948m, a rise of just 310,000. The ONS figures thus show that 81% of jobs went to people born abroad. Since 2002 the number of foreigners working in Britain has climbed by 964,000 while UK-born employment has dropped by 478,000.

"The government's welfare to work programme is proving to be an abject failure," said Grayling. "UK employment has barely increased over the past 10 years and it is now falling."

Source




Italy Expels Gypsies

Post below lifted from Jawa Report

The Romani and Sinti tribal communities, widely known as gypsies, have lived for a thousand years in Europe, primarily Eastern Europe, and with Romania joining the European Union last year, many have migrated to Italy. In fact,
"Nobody imagined having to face 500,000 poor souls that in one year have left Romania for Italy," Interior Minister Giuliano Amato said.
They arrived as vagrants, building makeshift camps on river banks and back alley slums. With them came a cloud of petty, and some not so petty, crimes. Last year, more than 15 percent of foreigners accused of murder, sexual violence and theft were Romanian.

The Italians are understandably irritated. Racial hatred has been growing and a recent attack, blamed on a Romanian, on a naval officer's wife has caused outrage. As a result,
Italian authorities have expelled Romanians they deem dangerous and torn down a Roma and Sinti camp in the wake of the killing of an Italian naval officer's wife. Some fear an increase of racist violence.

Italian officials raised fears of an anti-Romanian "vendetta" on Saturday, Nov. 3, following apparent reprisal attacks the day before over the death of a woman allegedly killed by a Romanian. "Unfortunately, it's what we fear," Interior Minister Giuliano Amato told La Repubblica daily of Friday's attacks against three Romanians by masked men armed with sticks. "We must prevent this terrible tiger that is xenophobic hatred, the racist beast, from leaving its cage," Amato said.
Notably, the expulsion of the Romanians can occur with only a judge's order and it's good for three years. No criminal history nor trial is necessary for someone to be sent packing.

So, in a nutshell, a half-million Romanians arrive in Italy and crime spikes. They get blamed and the citizenry gets angry. Random vendettas occur. The Italian government decides to expel the Romanians despite the fact that they are EU citizens who supposedly enjoy unrestricted travel among EU countries.





5 November, 2007

Head of ACLU Legal Dept. arrested in Arizona protest

Illegals have apparently been loitering in front of an Arizona furniture store waiting to be picked up for work and the store owner thinks it detracts from his business. He wants them moved. Nobody else will do it so Sheriff Joe is taking care of it

Human rights protestors lined the sidewalk in front of Pruitt's Furniture in Phoenix, chanting and holding signs saying things like "don't buy from racists". Protestor Dorleen Kunkel says she's here to fight intimidation. Her anger is aimed at Sheriff Joe Arpaio. His deputies have been hired by Pruitt's to keep day laborers away. Kunkel says stepping over the border doesn't rate with committing real crimes, like robbery and murder - things she says the Sheriff's Department should be persuing.

The Sheriff says they will take care of business, if they violate any illegal immigration laws they're going to jail. And that's exactly what happened Saturday. The head of the American Civil Liberties Union's legal division was arrested. Not for violating immigration laws, but for trespassing. Deputies say they told him 6 times to leave the property, he refused to leave, so he was put in handcuffs. He has been booked into 4th Avenue jail. Despite the arrest the protest continued.

Pruitts is not only tired of protestors - but Mayor Phil Gordon. In the past, Pruitt's owner claimed Gordon and Phoenix Police wouldn't address his problem of day laborers - so he looked to Sheriff Joe.

Protestors say they think what he's doing is wrong. They say he's bothering people who are just trying to make a living for their familes.

Source




British Tory candidate quits over Powellite immigration views

A parliamentary candidate for the Conservative Party resigned on Sunday after saying a controversial party figure [Powell] had been right when he warned in the 1960s about the risks of uncontrolled immigration. Nigel Hastilow came under fire for writing a newspaper column citing Conservative politician Enoch Powell who caused outrage by saying in his 1968 "rivers of blood" speech that unchecked immigration to Britain could lead to racial violence. [What Powell actually said was: "As I look ahead, I am filled with foreboding. Like the Roman, I seem to see "the River Tiber foaming with much blood""]

Hastilow said Powell was marginalised for warning that uncontrolled immigration would change the country irrevocably. "He was right. It has changed dramatically," he said in the column for a newspaper in Wolverhampton in England's West Midlands.

One minister in the Labour government said Hastilow's remarks exposed the Conservative Party's "racist underbelly" and another called them unacceptable and urged Conservative leader David Cameron to rethink his support for Hastilow.

Hastilow, due to contest a marginal West Midlands seat at the next election, resigned as a Conservative candidate after being called to meet party chairman Caroline Spelman. "I am very sorry that any remarks of mine have undermined the progress David Cameron has made on the issue of immigration," Hastilow said in a statement. A Conservative spokesman said the party had accepted his resignation. Hastilow's comments were an embarrassment to Cameron, who has steered the Conservative Party towards the centre since becoming leader two years ago.

The incident stoked a debate over the level of immigration. Hundreds of thousands of people have come to work in the country in recent years, many of them from east European countries that are new members of the European Union. The main political parties agree immigration has boosted the economy. But critics complain that migration has undercut British-born workers and strained public services.

The government admitted last week it had underestimated the number of foreign nationals who had come to work in Britain in the last decade by 300,000 -- the size of a medium-size city such as Coventry. The new estimate is 1.1 million. Cameron has said a Conservative government would impose annual limits on migrants from outside the EU. Trevor Phillips, head of the Equality and Human Rights Commission -- a public agency that fights discrimination -- praised Cameron last week for trying to "deracialize" the immigration issue but said Cameron was giving an old-fashioned answer by saying capping immigrants' numbers was the solution.

Source




Australian politician says to suspend Muslim immigration

I will be voting for Pauline. She has long had a lot of popular support and the major parties do eventually move towards her views

Senate hopeful Pauline Hanson has accused the Federal Government of opening up the immigration floodgates to people "who have no intention of being Australian". Ms Hanson, who is running in the federal election under the banner of Pauline's United Australia Party, was campaigning on similar policies to those that won her international notoriety a decade ago, including calling for a moratorium on Muslim immigration.

Campaigning in NSW, the right-wing firebrand told website www.federalelection.com.au she was worried about the loss of Australian values, particularly as a result of Muslim immigration. "I've seen the destruction of our industry, manufacturing, our farmers, everything that is Aussie and to be proud of ... that's been lost," she said. "They've just opened up the floodgates to allow people here that have no intention of being Australian or being proud Australians. "I've actually now called for a moratorium on Muslim immigration because I believe it's not for reasons of religious or any other reason. "But I think it is a cultural difference to us as Australians and we must protect our own culture."

Ms Hanson, who co-founded the One Nation party, listed "Australian values" as the nation's culture, way of life and standard of living. She said if she held the balance of power in the Senate she would be willing to block legislation she did not agree with. "If it is not in the best interests of our country and the Australian people, yes I would," she said. "I wouldn't do deals and sell myself out or the people out for that. "I would fight to make the politicians accountable to us and that's what they haven't done and that's why I'm standing again and that's why people are getting behind me in the support. "They don't believe that there is true representation."

Ms Hanson's vote will be bolstered by the fact she has registered a party. When Ms Hanson ran for the Senate in 2004 she appeared under the line as an individual candidate - a position which historically attracts fewer votes.

Source






4 November, 2007

Britain: Immigration row hits Brown's support in the polls

Prime Minister Gordon Brown's party is still trailing in the polls and 80 percent of Britons think his government is being dishonest about immigration, surveys showed Saturday. A poll in The Sun showed the Conservatives on 40 percent, Brown's Labour Party on 35 percent and the Liberal Democrats on 13 percent. The results would produce a hung parliament if replicated in a general election. The Conservatives have been ahead for nearly a month after Brown, who took over from Tony Blair in June, decided against holding a snap early poll.

In a separate survey on whether the government had been honest about the true scale of immigration into Britain -- a topic which flared up last week -- 80 percent said it had not. The government admitted Tuesday to making mistakes over the number of foreign workers coming into the country, leaving Brown seeking to calm a simmering immigration row. New figures also revealed that up to half of all newly-created jobs over the last decade of Labour government had gone to foreign-born nationals.

Home Secretary Jacqui Smith said she was "sorry" the government had to correct official figures on the increase in foreign nationals working in Britain since 1997, from 800,000 to 1.1 million. Then, citing a written answer to parliament dug up from July, the Conservatives said the figure was actually 1.5 million people.

The Sun's poll found 51 percent strongly disagreed that the government had been honest; 29 percent tended to disagree; 11 percent tended to agree and three percent strongly agreed. Asked whether public services would cope with the influx, 49 percent said they were not at all confident; 33 percent said they were not very confident; 11 percent said they were fairly confident and four percent said they were very confident. Overall, 48 percent agreed immigration was good for Britain, 36 percent disagreed and 13 percent said neither. IPSOS-Mori interviewed 1,013 random adults by telephone on Wednesday and Thursday.

The subject is a regular hot topic in Britain, with critics branding the asylum and immigration system as "open-door" and "chaotic". The Daily Telegraph said: "All of a sudden, immigration is just another political issue, like housing or schools. There is no longer anything risque about raising the subject. "We want settlers to come here; but we also want to have a rough sense of whom we are admitting, and in what numbers. "The problem in recent years has been that we feel we have lost all control of our borders, and that politicians are making promises about immigration that they will not, or perhaps cannot, fulfil."

Treasury statistics released under the Freedom of Information Act showed that one in six of Britain's highest earners are foreign-born, said the Financial Times newspaper. The data showed that about 1,000 foreigners who register themselves as foreign residents for tax purposes were among the 6,000 people who had a taxable income of more than one million pounds in 2005-2006. The prevalence of "non-domiciled residents" was likely to reflect the importance of foreign nationals in well-paid jobs in London's City financial district, as well as senior positions in manufacturing and the oil and gas industry, the business daily said.

Source




Immigration a sticky issue for Clinton, Democrats

Hillary Clinton's tangle with the immigration issue this week is likely to present itself again this presidential campaign, as she and other Democrats toe a difficult line on the issue that divides potential supporters. But in the meantime, a host of problems associated with illegal immigration continue to worsen, according to some members of a University of Pennsylvania panel on immigration at the National Press Club today. "The American political system is gridlocked on this issue," said Rogers Smith, moderator of the seminar and a professor of political science at Penn. "There's no consensus on change. The problems associated with immigration - health care, housing, economic security - all those are continuing to get worse."

The challenge for Democrats is that many Latino and civil rights leaders lean against drastic reform measures, while some potential Democratic voters are worried about the economic and cultural impact of immigration and want to see some kind of crackdown. Clinton highlighted the dilemma in Tuesday's presidential debate, when she seemed to both support and differ with a New York plan to grant driver's licenses to illegal immigrants.

This morning and afternoon, Penn academics from several departments, ranging from anthropology and sociology to business, law and medicine, have been discussing the impact of immigration on American culture, economy and life. Child welfare agencies have weak plans for dealing with the children of undocumented immigrants, said Richard Gelles, a sociologist and dean of Penn's School of Social Policy and Practice. When illegal immigrants are detained or deported, that often throws their children, who may actually be citizens, into state care.

Meanwhile, that same split among family members - some in the country legally, others not - creates "fragmentation" when it comes to health care. Children born in the U.S. are eligible for government health insurance while sisters and brothers born elsewhere probably aren't, said Steve Larson, an emergency medicine physician and educator at the Penn hospital.

One Democratic candidate has adopted language and policy from both sides of the debate, said Margaret Dorsey, a visiting anthropology scholar at Penn who has studied Barack Obama's position on the issue. "He talks about the need for border security, and about 'floods' and 'waves' of immigrants, which is something you hear from Pat Buchanan," Dorsey. "But he also talks about earned citizenship, which draws heavily from more liberal-leaning coalition groups."

Smith, the political scientist, thinks immigration will be a driving issue in the next campaign, because it's so thoroughly wrapped up in voters' thinking about national and economic security. He thinks the most strident proposals, like the promise to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, is mostly a symbolic gesture. It sounds good for those who want tough measures, he said, but it probably won't be effective enough to upset the business interests who thrive on low-wage labor. "The political system responds with symbolism," he said. "The wall is a classic example. It won't stop immigration, but it will send a strong message that we did something."

Source






3 November, 2007

British human rights chief to investigate immigrant preference in government housing

A new inquiry into whether immigrants jump council housing queues was announced by Trevor Phillips yesterday as the row over immigration policy intensified. The chairman of the Equality and Human Rights Commission said there was a widespread public perception that new migrants were given unfair advantages to which they were not entitled. In a speech in Birmingham, Mr Phillips argued that rather than trying to suppress the debate, the Government needed to be better informed with robust, independent evidence. He announced that the organisation would work with the Local Government Association (LGA) to commission an independent study by “dispassionate academics” to look at whether the housing system was being abused to the detriment of anyone - including white families. “If there is evidence that it is, then we have the powers and the mandate to stop the abuse and we will do so. If there is no evidence then we can properly say that this insinuation should play no part in next year’s elections.”

David Cameron stepped up the pressure on the Government over the issue of immigration as it emerged that the number of British people in work has fallen in the past two years. Foreign workers wholly account for the rise in employment from the spring of 2005, official statistics show. In the latest challenge to ministers’ claims over the benefits of migration, a written Commons answer has disclosed that 540,000 nonBritons took up posts in this country, offsetting a decrease of 270,000 in the number of British workers over the same period. Mr Cameron accused the Government of panicking and repeated that he wanted a “substantial cut” in the number of nonEU migrants. “About 200,000 people, net, are coming into this country each year. I think that’s too high, and we would like to see a substantial cut,” he said. Liam Byrne, the Immigration Minister, challenged Mr Cameron to state what his annual limit would be.

While welcoming the Tory leader’s attempts to strip the immigration debate of “racial toxicity”, Mr Phillips did not agree with his proposals to cap immigration levels. “A general cap on migrant numbers will do little to solve [the] problems,” said Mr Phillips. “Shutting out the underachieving Pakistani, Turkish or Somali newcomers also locks out the hugely overachieving Indian or Chinese star pupil; and a cap would have little impact on the most worrying emergent group of underperformers – poorest white boys.”

Sir Simon Milton, chairman of the LGA, said: “The LGA is happy to support Trevor Phillips’s initiative. We think it is in the public interest. “If there are examples of people receiving unfair treatment on grounds of race or nationality, we want it out in the open.” Mr Phillips also backed the LGA’s demand for a 250 million pound emergency cash fund for local councils that are struggling with big migrant rises.

Source




Immigrant problems in Italy

The brutal murder of a woman — allegedly by a homeless immigrant — as she returned home from shopping has brought to a head the simmering anger in Italy over the arrival of tens of thousands of impoverished Romanians. Giovanna Reggiani, 47, the wife of a naval captain, died last night after being raped, beaten and thrown into a drainage ditch as she walked home in the dark from a railway station in a suburb of Rome. Her assailant had smashed her face into an unrecognisable pulp with a stone before leaving her for dead, police said.

Nicolae Romulus Mailat, 24, who came to Italy from Transylvania four months ago, was arrested at an immigrant bivouac of makeshift shacks on the Tiber embankment near the station at Tor di Quinto. Police were alerted by a Romanian woman who saw Mr Mailat returning to his shack covered in blood. She flagged down a bus and asked the driver to call police. Mr Mailat admitted robbing Ms Reggiani but denied raping her, police said.

The horrific attack has appalled Italians, who blame Romanian immigrants for a wave of crime in the biggest cities since January, when Romania joined the European Union, and now threatens to drive a wedge between two nations that have a long history of cultural ties. Romano Prodi, the Italian Prime Minister, telephoned Calin Popescu Tariceanu, the Romanian Prime Minister, yesterday to demand urgent action to prevent criminals from crossing the border. On Wednesday Mr Prodi chaired a Cabinet meeting that approved a measure allowing police chiefs to expel EUcitizens who posed a threat to public security, as well as immigrants from outside the EU.

The measure, which would appear to contravene EU legislation on the free movement of people from member states, was due to be debated in Parliament within 60 days. Mr Prodi said yesterday that it would be imposed immediately by decree. He said: “These acts must not be repeated. We are not acting out of rage but we are determined to keep a high level of security for our citizens.”

The furious reaction to the attack on Mrs Reggiani has exposed the anger felt by many Italians at what they perceive to be the inability of authorities to deal with a sharp rise in burglaries and assaults involving migrants from Eastern Europe, particularly Romania. In a front-page editorial Il Messaggero, the Rome daily, said “Our anger, frustration, fear and grief cannot be underestimated. This atrocious and vicious attack goes beyond our darkest imaginings, and is the direct consequence of excessive tolerance. We have blindly accepted anyone who wanted to come to Italy. We should have reacted much earlier.” Corriere della Sera said that Romanians had “replaced Moroccans and Albanians as Italians’ No 1 nightmare. The difference is that Romanians are now Europeans like us.”

Walter Veltroni, the Mayor of Rome, said that Italy should have followed the example of Britain and other EU countries in imposing immigration limits for new EU members. Mr Veltroni said that before Romania’s EU accession Rome had been one of the safest cities in Europe. “These are not immigrants who came here to live, but criminal types,” he said. Mr Veltroni said 75 per cent of street crimes in Rome so far this year had been committed by Romanians, and there was a “risk of xenophobia”.

Despite fears that Romanians would flood into Britain after their country joined the EU, most have headed for Southern Europe, especially Italy, because of affinities of language and culture. Cristian David, the Romanian Interior Minister, called on his compatriots to “help the Italian authorities combat crimes committed by our fellow nationals”. He said that the majority of Romanians were honest, and a “criminal minority” should not be allowed to damage the image of Romania as a whole.

In the past 18 months Romanians have been responsible for 76 murders, more than 300 rapes and 2,000 robberies in Italy, according to police statistics. Nearly 400 Romanians have been charged with kidnappings, mostly involving prostitution, and 6,000 with receiving stolen goods. Concern that Bulgaria and Romania were let into the EU too soon means that most Balkan countries will have to wait at least a decade before they can join, officials in Brussels said yesterday. The slow pace of judicial reform in Bucharest and Sofia created a backlash against rapid membership.

A progress report on EU applicants will paint a damning picture of political and judicial corruption, The Times understands. The draft report, due to be published on Tuesday, covers the three official candidate countries – Croatia, Turkey and Macedonia – as well as the potential applicants Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Montenegro, Serbia and the breakaway Serbian province of Kosovo

Source






2 November, 2007

Hillary confirms her support for licences for illegals

Hillary Clinton's campaign said late Wednesday that she supports New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer's plan for illegal immigrant driver's licenses, a clarification required after a twisted campaign performance Tuesday night left people guessing her position. Spitzer's plan, which he has retooled in the face of heavy criticism, would grant identification on a three-tier basis, decreasing with the level of proper documentation. Undocumented, illegal immigrants would receive a license only to be used for driving, and be inscribed "not for federal purposes," meaning it couldn't be used to board flights or cross borders.

"Senator Clinton broadly supports measures like the ones being advocated by Governor Spitzer, but there are details that still need to be worked out," Clinton spokesman Phil Singer said Wednesday. "Senator Clinton supports governors like Governor Spitzer who believe they need such a measure to deal with the crisis caused by this administrations failure to pass comprehensive immigration reform," he added.

During the debate Tuesday night, Clinton offered support for Spitzer, saying he was trying to "fill the vacuum left by the failure of this administration to bring about comprehensive immigration reform," and noted millions of illegal immigrants are in New York at any one time. They should be able to have identification if they're in an auto accident, for instance, she said.

When all seven of the candidates were asked whether they agree that illegal aliens should have driver's licenses, only Sen. Christopher Dodd said he disagreed. He then pressed Clinton on the issue and argued against the plan, saying: "A license is a privilege, and that ought not to be extended, in my view." Clinton responded: "Well, I just want to add, I did not say that it should be done, but I certainly recognize why Governor Spitzer is trying to do." Dodd then quickly interrupted Clinton before she could finish, seizing on the apparent discrepancy. Moderator Tim Russert then tried to elicit an answer on whether she supported the plan or not, but she avoided offering specific support for the plan. Then former North Carolina senator John Edwards and Illinois Sen. Barack Obama, both attorneys like Clinton, took turns dicing her statement. "Unless I missed something, Senator Clinton said two different things in the course of about two minutes just a few minutes ago," Edwards said. "I was confused on Senator Clinton's answer. I can't tell whether she was for it or against it," Obama said.

Clinton's apparent indecision also made fodder for Republicans on the campaign trail. Speaking to reporters in Nashua, N.H., former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani took a page out of President Bush's campaign playbook, playing on a phrase used against Sen. John Kerry. "Hillary Clinton was for it, she was against it, and she wasn't sure if she was for it or against it, in the space of one answer," Giuliani said. "She is known for taking one position with one audience and another position with another audience. ... What they didn't know is she can actually take two different positions in front of the same audience."

Former Mass. Gov. Mitt Romney's campaign issued a statement, calling Clinton's debate answer "troubling." "Senator Clinton's troubling answer on providing driver's licenses to illegal immigrants was emblematic of someone who is both dismissive of efforts to enforce our nation's immigration laws and entirely unwilling to offer a straight answer to a very direct question," Romney spokesman Kevin Madden said. Former Tennessee senator Fred Thompson said Clinton's response was "another example of (her) dodging hard issues." And the Republican National Committee issued its own talking points memo, pointing to statements it said show that "Hillary's stance on illegal immigration reforms remains vague and undefined."

Meanwhile, the controversy over Spitzer's plan is not going away any time soon. On Thursday, 32 Republican New York Assembly members filed a lawsuit against Spitzer, seeking to quash the license plan. The suit states the plan violates the section of New York law that says the Department of Motor Vehicles must require a Social Security number before issuing a driver's license. Among the concerns about the plan is that it will giving illegal immigrants the right to get ID that they could use to vote, to support terror activities or buy weapons. "The basis of the suit is the governor's proposal is unlawful," said Josh Fitzpatrick, spokesman for New York Assembly Republican Leader James Tedisco, who is leading the effort against Spitzer.

Fitzpatrick said the assembly members resorted to court action after a move to amend the governor's plan failed in special session. He said Clinton's response to Spitzer's plan during the debate Tuesday "raised awareness" about the issue but did not by itself prompt the lawsuit. "It's a battle that's been raging for about six weeks now," he said.

Nonetheless, Tedisco bashed Clinton in a statement Wednesday, calling her a flip-flopper and comparing her to 2004 Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry, whose positions were mocked by opponents as malleable. Amid the renewed national attention, Spitzer stood by his plan Thursday. "I have a very serious obligation. That's to improve the security of the state, and that's what we're doing," the governor said.

Source




New Report from FAIR Finds More than 13 Million Illegal Aliens Reside in the U.S. -- 88 Percent Increase Since 2000

According to a new report from the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), How Many Illegal Aliens?, the illegal immigrant population of the United States now exceeds 13 million. In 2000, the now defunct Immigration and Naturalization Service estimated that there were a little more than 7 million people residing illegally in the U.S.

The burden and costs of illegal immigration are still distributed unevenly across the country, but states and regions that were virtually immune to the impact of large-scale illegal immigration just a decade ago are now feeling the effects, finds the study. About 60 percent of all illegal immigrants - nearly 8.4 million people - are settled in just six states, California, Texas, New York, Florida, Illinois and New Jersey . Other recent reports by FAIR indicate that the combined costs of K-12 education, health care and incarceration of criminals to those six states exceeds $27 billion annually.

"These new estimates, showing explosive growth in illegal immigration in recent years, indicate why Americans all across the country are demanding that the government control our borders and block illegal immigrants from working or receiving benefits in this country," said Dan Stein, president of FAIR. "Almost from the day the Bush Administration took office, they made it clear that their aim was to reward illegal immigration with amnesty and assorted other benefits. As a result, we have seen record increases in illegal immigration, mounting burdens on taxpayers, and unprecedented public concern about this issue."

At 13,175,000 people, the illegal population of the United States is now larger than the entire population of Illinois, the nation's fifth most populous state. The phenomenon has also become a national one in the past decade, finds How Many Illegal Aliens? More than three-fifths of the states have seen their illegal alien population more than double since 2000. In all, 24 states now have illegal populations that exceed 100,000.

"There are no overnight fixes to a problem that has been growing for years," commented Stein. "But the American public strongly supports an enforcement-first approach that discourages new people from coming illegally and encourages millions who are here to return home. What is clear, is that lack of enforcement and proposed amnesties have only exacerbated the problem."

Source






1 November, 2007

Tide of immigration debate turning

More than anyone else, Tancredo has put immigration on the front burner. In the course of tirelessly stumping across the country -- most recently as a no-hope presidential candidate -- he has riled up citizens on the need for better border security, English only, federal standards for driver's-license documents, and preserving and perpetuating the "American identity." He has been called every name in the book, but he has persevered. Today his ideas are winning, even if he himself has been marginalized.

That's the fate of many polarizing figures, those who carry an issue from the fringe to the mainstream. In that sense, Tancredo resembles Jean-Marie Le Pen, the Frenchman who campaigned against immigration in France for decades -- until finally, in the last few years, after the immigrant riots, Le Pen's platform became the conventional wisdom.

Now the new president of France, Nicolas Sarkozy, elected on a tough law-and-order platform -- he famously referred to the mostly Muslim rioters as "scum" -- has sought to implement Le Pen's restrictionist agenda. On Tuesday, for example, the national legislature adopted a bill that would mandate DNA tests to prevent fraudulent "family reunification." This measure outraged the left, of course. The International Herald Tribune denounced it as "pseudoscientific bigotry." But, as cops know, there's nothing unscientific, or bigoted, about DNA testing.

Meanwhile, here at home, nobody calls Spitzer a racist. He is so politically correct, it kills you -- or, more precisely, it will kill him politically. Spitzer has put forth a plan for issuing driver's licenses to illegal immigrants that is opposed by 72 percent of New Yorkers. Earlier this week, the state Senate, including nearly one-third of its Democrats, voted by a ratio of more than 2-1 to reject the Spitzer plan.

But one might ask: How is Spitzer's view different from that of most national Democrats? Answer: It's not. One key indicator was the immigration bill earlier this year. Supporters -- including, bizarrely, George W. Bush -- claimed that the bill offered "earned citizenship," while opponents, singing from Tancredo's hymnal, derided the bill as "amnesty." A heated debate ensued, and on June 28, the U.S. Senate voted 53-46 to reject the legislation.

Yet the immigration bill didn't lose among Democrats. Senate Democrats voted 34-16 in favor; included among the "ayes" were Hillary Rodham Clinton and all the Senate Democrats running for president. So who can blame Spitzer, sitting atop one of the bluest of blue states, for assuming that his plan for illegal immigrants would be popular, at least among Empire State Democrats? But unfortunately for Spitzer and the bulk of his party, the politics of immigration are changing rapidly, nationwide, in a Tancredo-esque direction. This week, The Washington Post released a poll showing that three-fourths of Virginians count illegal immigration as an "important" issue, and they don't mean that in a good way.

Republicans, realizing that Tancredo is pointing them to the political promised land, are now trekking in a winning direction -- to the land of milk and high walls. A case in point is former Sen. Fred Thompson, one of the GOP's '08 hopefuls. Once a dove on immigration, he's now a hawk: He wants to ban federal aid to states and localities that harbor illegals. And so the battle of ideas is joined. But something tells me that Tancredo is happier about the tide of events than Spitzer.

Source




Another reason for that fence

Post below lifted from Fausta. See the original for links

Last August I posted about the MS-13 gang's connection to the Newark murders of three young college students in Newark. In yesterday's Princeton Packet (I'm including the full article since the Packet tends to not keep their articles up permanently):

Night of burglaries in Princeton nets arrests. Three gang members are charged

Princeton Borough Police followed silently for more than two hours the night of Oct. 19 as three individuals allegedly cased several homes before being arrested and charged in connection with at least 10 burglaries in the borough, the township and on the campus of Princeton University.

All three suspects are undocumented illegal aliens, and evidence has linked all three with the MS-13 street gang, police said, in announcing the arrests this week.

Saul Eduardo Palma-Chajon, 22, whose last known address was in Princeton, and Byron Diaz, 18, of Princeton, and a 16-year-old male Princeton resident were charged with numerous counts of burglary, theft and criminal mischief as well as conspiracy to commit burglary, receiving stolen property and being armed while committing a burglary. Mr. Palma-Chajon and Mr. Diaz were also charged with employing a juvenile in a crime, and the juvenile was also charged with juvenile delinquency.

Police said the series of residential burglaries over the last several weeks involved homes being entered with the use of force during the late afternoon or evening hours. Once inside, the suspects stole merchandise, including jewelry, laptop computers, cameras, iPods and credit cards.

Princeton Borough Chief Anthony Federico said two burglaries in the borough occurred on Gordon Way, and two occurred on Hamilton and Vandeventer avenues, respectively. At least one of the two burglaries in the township occurred on Deer Path, and at least three more occurred on the university campus, he said.

Although much of the stolen items have been recovered and claimed by the victims, a substantial amount of stolen merchandise has not yet been linked to any victim, and police are still determining how many burglaries occurred, Chief Federico said.

As part of the investigation, a team of officers engaged in a burglary surveillance detail on the east end of the borough on Oct. 19, a Friday night. At 8:30 p.m., officers began to observe the group of three males acting suspiciously near Hamilton Avenue, before they entered yards on a number of properties and walked around to allegedly "case" the homes, police said. For the next two hours, the surveillance unit followed the group while they continued to enter yards in the northeast and southeast sections of town and occasionally split up, police said. Although they did not attempt to break into a house, the group was stopped by police at 10:30 p.m.

Two of the three individuals gave police fake names and identification, police said. Further investigation revealed that all three individuals possessed property that had been reported stolen from recent burglaries, police said. Subsequent residential searches in the borough yielded stolen items from at least eight different recently reported burglaries and thefts in the borough, the township and on the university campus.

Borough police have notified Immigration Customs Enforcement to advise the agency of the arrests of the individuals, all of whom are from Guatemala. Charges are also pending within Princeton Township and within the Princeton University Campus.

Mr. Palma-Chajon's bail has been set at $1,000,000 cash, and Mr. Diaz' bail has been set at $500,000 cash. The juvenile is being held at the Mercer County Youth Detention Center.

Chief Federico said it was unusual that most of the stolen property was recovered. "Most burglars will get rid of the stuff really quickly," he said. "It's unusual when we get back this amount of property."