Nationalism, immigration and racism in the EU

yyaldrin

in je ogen waait de wind

logic consequence of a process that has been taking place for the last 20 years, and it will only get worse...
 

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Well-known member
A touch of the elderly Jimmy Page too.

jimmy-page.jpg
 

yyaldrin

in je ogen waait de wind
geertkibboets477.jpg


i think he was one of the first of a row of rightwing politicians dying his hair blond, trump and johnson being the other ones.
 

mixed_biscuits

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Professional bullshitter desperate to say whatever he can to wind people up on internet forum.
What is factually wrong with this statement?: Far right Palestinian nationalists desperate to evict Israeli illegal immigrants and establish ethnostate
 

sufi

lala

an enormous backlog of unresolved asylum cases that has ballooned under the Conservatives, to 140,000 this year from about 22,000 in March 2018.

About 50,000 people are being accommodated in hotels leased by the government — at times as many as 350 — at a cost of £8 million a day. In total, the asylum system has cost taxpayers nearly £3.97 billion, or around $4.8 billion, in the past year — nearly double what it was the year before, according to official data.

the asylum system has been run into the ground - it used to be shit and ruinously expensive after asylum seekers were stopped from using regular benefits in the 90's, but the tories have found a way to multiply the cost hugely by using hotels instead of normal rental and somehow making the home office even slower and less efficient in processing cases

i was curious to look at the numbers

2011 stats from https://webarchive.nationalarchives...lum-research/immigration-brief-q2-2011/asylum

Cases pending a decision​


At the end of June 2011, 10,881 applications received since April 2006 were pending a decision (initial decision, appeal or further review). Nationals of Afghanistan had the most cases pending a decision and in particular, cases pending an initial decision, while nationals of Sri Lanka were the group with the most cases pending further decisions.

Asylum support​


As asylum seekers are not normally allowed to work for the first year while their application is being considered, support (known as Section 95 support) is available. There were 11,600 support applications in 2010, having fallen from a peak of 68,624 in 2002.

At the end of June 2011, 20,855 asylum seekers were in receipt of Section 95 support, of which 3,009 were receiving subsistence only support and 17,846 were supported in dispersed accommodation, with the largest nationality group currently supported being nationals of Pakistan. The numbers in receipt of support has fallen from 80,123 at the end of 2003.

The falls in support applications and numbers receiving support are in line with falling number of asylum applications and the clearance of a backlog of asylum claims from the early part of the decade.

Failed asylum seekers who are destitute and have reasons that temporarily prevent them from leaving are also eligible for support (called Section 4). In 2010, there were 6,621 decisions to grant Section 4 support and at the end of June 2011, there were 2,461 failed asylum seekers, excluding dependants, recorded as being in receipt of this support.
while asylum applications are still well below what they were back in the 2000's
Asylum%20backlog%20vs%20applications%2023.2%20data%20release_0.png

Screenshot from 2023-11-23 23-43-32.pngScreenshot from 2023-11-23 23-44-49.png
 
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