What is happening is we are being taxed so that others from other countries who have put nothing into our system can come here and instantly take advantage of our social benefits system. It's completely wrong. That may seem harsh but I believe that the people who have paid into the system all of their working lives should come first and have priority.
The reason why migrants head to the UK is because we are stupid and far too generous and sooner or later the country needs to wake up otherwise the UK will end up being a bankrupt dung-hole just like many of the countries from where they have migrated.
You are the victim of asylum myths in your belief that they 'instantly take advantage of our benefits system'.
If you aren't interested in the facts, just file this under 'burn before reading'.
The UK is
not the most generous country - far from it.
In
Austria, Belgium, France, the Netherlands, and the Nordic countries, social benefits are higher for immigrants than for natives.
And the UK is way down the list of the number of arrivals.
Here's what asylum seekers in Britain
actually get. (It doesn’t include house or a car):
Quote:
Somewhere to live, a cash allowance or both.
Housing:
You’ll be given somewhere to live if you need it. This could be in a flat, house, hostel or bed and breakfast, [or will be ‘warehoused’ in the Bibby Barge]. You cannot choose where you live. It’s unlikely you’ll get to live in London or south-east England.
Cash support:
You’ll get £49.18 per week for each person in your household. This will help you pay for things you need like food, clothing and toiletries. Your allowance will be loaded onto a debit card (ASPEN card) each week. You’ll be able to use the card to get cash from a cash machine.
So, that's just £7.00 a day for food, clothing, and such things as hygiene and sanitary products.
Extra money for mothers and young children:
You’ll get extra money to buy healthy food if you’re pregnant or a mother of a child under 3. The amount you get will depend on your situation.
Your situation | Extra payment per week |
Pregnant mother | £5.25 |
Baby under 1 year old | £9.50 |
Child aged 1 to 3 | £5.25 |
Hardly enough to 'live the life of Riley'.
Why aren't they put to work?
They're not allowed to. [Albeit some unscrupulous employers exploit them to work illegally for slave wages in menial jobs]. This is to deter 'Economic Migrants' from coming here, (usually from Eastern Europe, such as Albania, who are not in danger and who are indeed 'illegal'). Asylum seekers can only apply for permission to work if they have waited over 12 months for an initial decision on their asylum claim or for a response to a further submission for asylum; and they are not considered responsible for the delay in decision-making. (They can do voluntary unpaid work).
If an asylum seeker's application is upheld, they become a
'refugee' with indefinite leave to remain. Refugees are allowed to work in any role consistent with their skill level. The quicker the applications are processed, the sooner they can seek employment and pay taxes, or if refused, can be be returned. (63% of asylum claims were granted in UK in 2023).
As of the end of June 2024, the UK's asylum backlog was 85,839 applications, which is a 36% decrease from the previous year.
However, the total number of cases in the asylum system was 4% higher than in June 2023, due to a large number of cases being refused and going to appeal. The Nationality and Borders Act 2022 (NABA) separated asylum cases into "legacy" and "flow" cases, with the goal of prioritizing cases that had been waiting a long time for a decision. The legacy backlog decreased by 97% between December 2022 and March 2024, but the flow caseload increased by 92%. Factors that have contributed to the UK's asylum backlog include: Declining caseworker productivity, Administrative problems, High staff turnover, new rules on inadmissibility, and suspension of the 'Detained Fast Track' process.
If their application for asylum is refused, in a long drawn-out process, they're returned to their country of origin. if they overstay, only then do they become an ‘
illegal immigrant’. If they are granted asylum, most will become productive citizens, and will pay their taxes, as will their children.
When you consider the perils they put themselves through, it's facile to assert that they lack the work ethic and want loaf around on welfare benefits.
The broad term often used by hard-of-thinking racists to describe asylum seekers as 'illegals'. They’re not, and there’s no such thing as a ‘bogus’ asylum seeker. Because the government doesn't wish to use the term 'asylum seekers' and can’t refer to them as ‘illegals’, they refer to them as ‘irregular arrivals’
It won't make any difference to those with a racist mindset, but anyone washed up on these shores who claims asylum is not an
'illegal immigrant' - they're an '
asylum seeker'. Most are from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, and have made a perilous journey, the least dangerous part of which is sailing across the busiest shipping lane in the world in an overloaded inflatable. (In 2019, 68% of the world’s refugees came from
just five countries: Syria, Venezuela, Afghanistan, South Sudan and Myanmar). 45% of separated children applying for asylum in the UK in the year up to June 2020 were from Iran, Vietnam and Afghanistan.
Most of those arrive here uninvited, but thousands of Afghans
were invited here after the collapse of Afghanistan because they'd worked as interpreters etc for the British Government and their lives are in danger). It was Tory Blair who took the UK into Iraq based on a pack of lies, which has destabilised the whole of the Middle East, and who took us into Afghanistan - both unwinnable wars propagated by the USA, which have made the world a far more dangerous place.
And no - we don't take more refugees than other European countries. In proportion to its population, the year ending Dec 2021 UK ranks
18th in Europe for asylum applications. The country with the highest numbers of refugees in the European Union is Germany. It hosts some
1.2 million refugees, 243,200 asylum seekers, and 26,700 stateless persons.
Here are some statistics on asylum seekers in Europe by country:
- UK
In the year ending June 2024, there were 75,658 asylum applications in the UK, which is 8% fewer than the previous year. In 2023, the UK received 67,337 asylum applications, which was 8% of the total asylum applications in the EU+ and UK combined.
- EU+
In the year ending September 2023, there were 1.14 million asylum applications in the EU+, which is a 29% increase from the previous year. Germany received the most asylum applications in the EU+ (341,300), followed by France (167,230) and Spain (156,180).
- Italy
In 2023, Italy hosted 298,000 refugees. In 2022, the number of asylum applications in Italy was 84,000.
The number of asylum applications in the UK has fluctuated over the years:
- 2002: The number of asylum applications peaked at 84,132
- 2010: The number of asylum applications reached a low point of 17,916
- 2015: The number of asylum applications rose to 32,733
- 2020: The number of asylum applications dipped during the first year of the pandemic
- 2022: The number of asylum applications rose to 81,130, the highest number since 2002
In the year ending March 2024, there were 38,546 'irregular arrivals', 28% fewer than in the year ending March 2023. 81% of these arrived by small boats. In the year ending March 2024, 31,079 people arrived by small boats, 31% fewer than in the year ending March 2023 (45,019), and 32% fewer than the peak of 45,774 in 2022.
Source of information:
Asylum support - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
Working in the UK while an asylum case is considered - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
Can Refugees work in the UK? See:
https://sonacircle.com/are-refugees-and-asylum-seekers-allowed-to-work-in-the-uk/
Irregular migration to the UK, year to March 2024:
https://www.gov.uk/government/stati...ar-migration-to-the-uk-year-ending-march-2024
Refugee & Asylum facts:
https://www.refugeecouncil.org.uk/i...lum applications,, India, Pakistan and Turkey
Sensible balanced debate on this topic is impossible - it's highly polarised and generates more heat than light.
Meanwhile, work-shy Brits who – when we were in the EU, used to bemoan Eastern Europeans for 'stealing our jobs' - but post Brexit, workshy Brits no longer have that excuse, but still don't want to get off their backsides to pick fruit and veg for £60k a year:
Fancy picking vegetables? It could earn you £62,000 a year (thelondoneconomic.com)
https://www.gov.uk/government/stati...ny-people-do-we-grant-asylum-or-protection-to
https://www.unhcr.org/uk/asylum-uk#...drove a large increase from the previous year
https://www.unhcr.org/refugee-statistics/
But Labour say they'll succeed where the Tories failed, and will sort it all out. Starmer and Yvette Cooper have a plan:
They're are going to 'Smash the Gangs' and stop the boats, so will solve the problem.
Don't hold your breath.