A selection of recent media reports

UK and Jordan agree to make deal on Abu Qatada case
David Cameron and King Abdullah want 'effective solution' after deportation of radical Islamist cleric bl
Guardian.co.uk (09-Feb-2012)
Scheme To Deport Foreign Offenders Rolled Out
An innovative op pioneered by the Met that seeks to expel dangerous foreign nationals is to be rolled out to other forc
Security Oracle (09-Feb-2012)
As English stops being the first language of most London children, is Britain ready for the great integration challenge?..
There is a lot of discussion in the media about immigration, but relatively little about integration. Leaving aside how ...
Telegraph Blogs (09-Feb-2012)
Vaz: We need new laws to stop bailing of terror suspects
New laws should be drawn up to stop judges granting bail when national security is at stake, ministers were to
London Evening Standard (09-Feb-2012)
British Council director calls for 'urgent review' of visa policy
The organisation charged with promoting British education overseas has rounded on the govern
Times Higher Education (09-Feb-2012)
Theresa May Facing Fresh UK Border Passport Claims In Sunday Papers
Home Secretary Theresa May is under renewed pressure after a slew of fresh allegation
The Huffington Post (08-Feb-2012)
Qatada: Minister to visit Jordan
A Home Office minister is to fly to Jordan to try to gain assurances that would enable radical cleric Abu Qatada to stan...
London Evening Standard (08-Feb-2012)
The BBC: the world's largest liberal echo chamber
There's an old saying \u2013 you can be a famous poisoner or a successful poisoner, but you can't be both. The same rule...
Telegraph Blogs (08-Feb-2012)
Raid nets illegal workers
Seven immigration offenders have been caught by the UK Border Agency during raids on businesses and residential addresse...
Newquay Voice (08-Feb-2012)
East Anglia: MEPs pledge to tackle foreign criminal 'loophole'
FOUR of the region's MEPs have vowed to push for the closure of a loophole which allows foreign criminal
East Anglian Daily Times (08-Feb-2012)
Hate preacher Hamza could be set free after bail ruling on fanatic Abu Qatada
) Abu Hamza and five other dangerous terror suspects could follow Abu Qatada in being
The Mail On Sunday (07-Feb-2012)
We must stand up to Euro judges
The decision by an immigration judge to grant bail to Abu Qatada, one of the world's most dangerous fanatics, is a truly...
Mail Online (07-Feb-2012)
As Mrs May was being beaten up, the Lib Dems kept very quiet
Theresa May had a strikingly rough time of things. She was trying to justify Government policy \u2013 do
Mail Online (07-Feb-2012)
Fence to deter immigrants
Work will start next month on a six-mile fence topped with razor wire on Greece's border with Turkey to deter illegal im...
The Independent (07-Feb-2012)
Britain must become a land of opportunity once more to attract the world's workers
COUNTRIES receive the immigrants they deserve. A migrant has 192 countries to
City A.M. (07-Feb-2012)
Qatada decision 'not acceptable'
It is simply not acceptable that Britain cannot deport a radical Muslim cleric who "poses a serious risk to our national...
The Oxford Times (07-Feb-2012)
Bin Laden's former right-hand man in Europe released on bail
Radical cleric Abu Qatada to be confined to his home for 22 hours a day as he fights deportation
The Independent (07-Feb-2012)
Qatada back on the streets within days
Abu Qatada, the radical Islamic preacher once described as Osama bin Laden's \u201Cright hand man in Europe\u201D, will ...
Telegraph.co.uk (06-Feb-2012)
Abu Qatada release: Home Office fury as judge frees 'Bin Laden aide'
Radical Islamist cleric will walk free from Long Lartin maximum security prison afte
Guardian.co.uk (06-Feb-2012)
Why has Abu Qatada not stood trial in the UK?
Lawyers say the government was determined to pursue deportation, which was thought to be the easy option
Guardian.co.uk (06-Feb-2012)

Devastating demolition of the case for mass immigration

by Sir Andrew Green, Chairman of Migration Watch UK
The Daily Mail, London, 1 April 2008

Today's report on immigration from the House of Lords Economic Committee strikes a devastating blow against years of blatant government propaganda. It rejects outright the Government's argument that a high level of immigration is of economic benefit to the UK.

This is exactly what we in Migrationwatch have been saying for at least three years in the teeth of opposition and, indeed, insults from the immigration lobby.

Now, at last, after the first major inquiry of its kind in this country, our view has been endorsed by the considered verdict of one of the most heavyweight committees of Parliament, including, as it does, two former Chancellors, a former Governor of the Bank of England, and several distinguished economists as well as captains of industry and finance.

The committee's findings are devastating. The report takes each of the arguments that the Government has been putting forward for years, and tears them to shreds one by one. It is a watershed in the debate on immigration.

Most pertinently, the Government's key claim that immigration increases Britain's overall gross domestic product (GDP) is dismissed as "irrelevant and misleading" - even though, as the report points out, it is a claim that has been "persistently emphasised".
Far from focusing on GDP, the report says, the real issue is whether immigration has boosted income per head of population; and concludes that the effects on per capita income are "very small, whether positive or negative".

So if the Government's principal argument in favour of unprecedented immigration - namely that it has made us individually richer - is found to be disingenuous, how can it justify the extra 2.5 million immigrants it has permitted to enter Britain on its watch? Particularly in the light of the all-too-evident strains on public services that this influx has caused.

It is no good repeating yet again the Government's claim that immigration has contributed £2.5billion to the Exchequer, for this too is questioned. The report concludes that the impact on the Exchequer "is likely to be small".

And what of the Government's argument that immigration is needed to fill job vacancies? Such claims, the committee judges with admirable restraint, are "analytically weak". Immigration, it continues, is unlikely to be an effective tool for reducing vacancies other than in the short term.

In fact the employment statistics prove the committee's point beyond doubt. It is some five years since the Government started to argue there were 600,000 vacancies that needed to be filled by immigration. In that time, we have had net foreign immigration into Britain of nearly one-and-a-half million and guess how many vacancies we still have - 600,000!

The reason, as the report points out, is that immigrants fill some vacancies but their extra demand for services and goods creates others. The Government's argument on job vacancies would, therefore, lead to a continuous cycle of immigration.

How about the Government's claim that, because we are an ageing population, we need immigrants to provide the wealth that will pay our pensions?

This, too, is dismissed with contempt. It "does not stand up to scrutiny," says the report, for a reason that should be obvious to the Government: namely that immigrants themselves grow old and draw pensions.

The way to tackle pensions, the committee suggests, is not unlimited immigration but an increase in the retirement age.

In last-minute evidence to the committee, the Government stressed the "dynamic" economic benefits from having a more diverse society. This sounds plausible in theory, says the report, but there is no empirical evidence.

Taking the report as a whole, it is hard to imagine a more comprehensive demolition of the Government's case for massive levels of immigration - a policy pursued in the face of deep public concern.

Why then has it taken so long to blow these false government claims out of the water?
Part of the answer lies in a widespread reluctance even to discuss immigration.

A recent Newsnight poll of white British adults found that 77 per cent felt that they could not criticise immigration without being labelled racist. Times are now changing, thank goodness, but the multicultural enthusiasts have had it all their own way for far too long.
Why has the Government continued to pursue its immigration policy when it must have known that it was deeply flawed?

Some ministers may have believed their own propaganda on multiculturalism. Others, notably Gordon Brown at the Treasury, were keen to see impressive economic growth figures (yes, Britain's GDP does improve with increased immigration but, as the committee itself pointed out, not income per head). And, of course, it helps to keep inflation down to have a ready supply of cheap labour from overseas.

Furthermore, the importation of skills covered up the Government's own failures over the education and training of Britain's workforce.

One has to ask, too, whether there could be a political aspect. Immigrant communities are predominantly Labour voters. If they had all been budding Conservatives, one wonders whether the situation would have been allowed to continue for so long.

There is one more question raised by this report. Where was our supposedly independent Civil Service while the Government's misleading claims were being repeatedly trotted out? Political aspects are not matters for the Civil Service, but it does seem to have been complicit in the output of misleading information over a period of some years.

Here, I think, one can detect the malign influence of political advisers who have undermined both the independence and the self-confidence of the Civil Service. In the past, it has not always paid to stand up to government ministers; it certainly doesn't pay to do so now.

Set on its political course of increased immigration, all seemed to go swimmingly for the Government as it trebled the number of work permits and later lifted all restrictions on the entry of East European workers.

Then the politics started to fall apart as the white working class, which felt threatened by immigrants prepared to accept lower wages, began to desert Labour, often for the BNP - a development largely explained by the same Newsnight poll which found that 58 per cent of the white working class felt that "nobody speaks out for people like me in Britain today".

The Government is now in a serious bind. Its traditional supporters are deserting, 80 per cent of the public disbelieves it on immigration and, with this report, its underlying justification is in ruins.

We should not be misled by the Government's claims to be introducing the most far-reaching immigration reforms for a generation. Having lost control of our borders (and allowed the asylum system to collapse into chaos), the Government's response so far has been to form two more committees to assess the economic 'need' for, and the social impacts of, immigration.

This will not remotely restore confidence. It does not address the real issue which, as the report says, is how much net immigration is desirable. The committee calls for an explicit and reasoned indicative target around which immigration policies can be adjusted, but this is something the Government seems unable to address, perhaps for ideological reasons.
What we need is not more committees but a clear shift of policy towards the concept of "balanced migration" between immigration and emigration. Setting this as the key objective would provide a sensible way forward for a public increasingly desperate for practical solutions to a developing crisis.

Achieving such an objective would stabilise the population of the UK at 65 million, quite enough for a small island, thus easing the growing pressures on our health, education and transport services and on our environment as a whole. It would also ease the very serious strains on our society about which the Government seems to be in denial.

Sir Andrew Green is a former British Ambassador to Saudi Arabia and Syria.
© Copyright of Sir Andrew Green