MR. PRESIDENT, THIS IS
OUR "DREAM ACT"!
Cameron to
unveil new plan to impose stricter immigration rules in Britain
By Stephen
Castle
A new
immigration bill to be proposed by Cameron will include measures to speed
deportations, place new obligations on banks to report customers who are
illegal migrants and give the police powers to seize the wages of those without
work papers.
“With this
immigration bill, and our wider action, we will put an end to houses packed
full of illegal workers; stop illegal migrants stalling deportation; give
British people the skills to do the jobs Britain needs,” Cameron planned to say
in a speech today, according to excerpts released in advance.
Cameron’s
speech is one of his first since being re-elected this month. While arguing
that “a strong country isn’t one that pulls up the drawbridge,” Cameron plans
to promise to “control and reduce immigration,” by making Britain “a less attractive place to come
and work illegally.”
“The truth
is it has been too easy to work illegally and employ illegal workers here,”
Cameron planned to say, according to the excerpts.
Across Europe , governments are struggling to
deal with the flow of migrants from across the Mediterranean Sea , with thousands risking their
lives to flee poverty and conflict in Africa and the Middle East .
Partly
because of that EU policy, Cameron failed to honor a pledge, made in his first
term in power, to cut net migration into Britain to less than 100,000 each year.
Immigration
was one of the election issues highlighted by the populist UK Independence
Party, which also campaigns for British withdrawal from the European Union.
UKIP won around 3.8 million votes in the recent general election but, because
of the British electoral system, secured only one parliamentary seat.
For his
part, Cameron has promised to renegotiate British terms of membership of the
European Union, and to hold a referendum by the end of 2017 on whether to stay
in the bloc.
Cameron
was scheduled to meet Friday with other European Union leaders at summit talks
in Riga , Latvia , giving him his first chance to
take soundings about Britain ’s demands with colleagues on the sidelines
of the meeting.
One of his
objectives, in his pre-referendum negotiations, is to win the right to curb
certain welfare entitlements for new EU migrants for four years.
While
those talks have yet to begin formally, Cameron’s planned new domestic
immigration bill will feature in his new legislative program which will be
outlined next week.
His
package of proposals includes moves to allow local councils to crack down on unscrupulous
landlords and evict illegal migrants more quickly, according to Cameron’s
office.
Other
measures are designed to speed deportation procedures and place obligations on
banks to check accounts against a database with details of illegal immigrants.
― The New York Times (as reported on www.themalaymailonlone.com)
Ben Ferro (editor)
No comments:
Post a Comment
We value your comments