From DAILY MAIL
The decline (immigration) was driven by a drop in
the number of immigrants coming to Britain, which fell from 589,000 to
515,000, while the number of migrants leaving the country rose from
342,000 to 352,000, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said.
Thursday, 28 February 2013
Saturday, 23 February 2013
TORONTO 200,000 ILLEGALS given RIGHTS to SERVICES.
Toronto Left-wing City Council gives Civic Rights to 200,000 ILLEGALS. More pressure on FREE Hospital services with average 4-7 hour wait in Emergency clinics.
Friday, 15 February 2013
UK:Lawyer TEVFICK SOULEIMAN guilty of 2,000 marriage scams
From UK DAILY MAIL
Solicitor and three immigration advisors guilty of running £20m fake marriage scam that allowed 2,000 foreign men live in Britain
- Gang flew in brides from eastern Europe and created 'touching love stories'
- Racket went on for almost a decade as group pocketed thousands
- Source describes scam as 'largest marriage fraud ever committed in the UK'
PUBLISHED: 16:51 GMT, 14 February 2013 | UPDATED: 00:06 GMT, 15 February 2013
Souleiman claimed he had no knowledge of the
scam which involved Eastern European brides and forged documents, but
was convicted after a trial
Solicitor Tevfick Souleiman, 39, and three colleagues flew women in from eastern European countries within the EU to marry non-EU citizens.
Most couples met on the day of the wedding and needed an interpreter to translate their vows. Some of the grooms were Albanian career criminals suspected of murder, drugs trafficking and money laundering.
The criminals would pay the law firm around £14,000 to arrange marriages. Often they would use fake identity documents to evade police at home.
Souleiman and his colleagues Cenk Guclu, 41, Furrah Kosimov, 29 and Zafer Altinbas, 38, made up ‘love stories’ to fool officials.
Last night a source told the Mail the ruse allowed ‘dangerous criminals to operate’ in Britain. ‘We believe this to be the largest marriage fraud ever committed in the UK,’ the source said.
The scam was run between January 2004 and February 2012. Several brides were flown in each day and taken to registry offices across the country. They were paid off and told never to contact the ‘husbands’ again.
At the Old Bailey yesterday Souleiman and Guclu were found guilty of receiving proceeds of crime and Kosimov guilty of money laundering.
Souleiman claimed he had no knowledge of the scam, while immigration adviser Cenk Guclu, 41, tried to blame workmate Furrah Kosimov, 29, but was also found guilty.
Kosimov, who went on the run before the case got underway, was convicted in his absence. Altinbas had earlier pleaded guilty to his role in the illegal plan.
Tevfick Souleiman and Zafer Altinbas (right)
were discovered to be part of a racket that created 'sham marriages' in
order to obtain British passports
As the verdicts were announced a woman sobbed so loudly in the public gallery that Judge John Bevan QC had her removed from the court.
Soulemain blew kisses to supporters from the dock as he was found guilty.
The gang ran their empire from the offices of Souleiman's Souleiman GA law firm in north Londo.
At one point they were flying in several brides a day on budget airlines including Ryanair and Aero Lithuania.
Cenk Guclu tried to blame workmate Furrah Kosimov for the crime
Once married, their non-EU husbands would have the right to live in the UK and claim benefits because of their new status - and would usually be allowed to remain in the country if they separated.
'That is the point of a sham marriage,' said prosecutor Nicholas Mather.
More...
'Normally if one was coming from a non-EU country there would be complicated and difficult steps one would have to go through in order to be able to live and work in this country.
'Generally, people can’t do that. We don’t have open borders in this country, except so far as EU countries are concerned.
'So in many cases these people who engage in sham marriages would have no chance at all of passing through the immigration system, either because they don’t have the right skills or the right income.'
Forged affidavits containing details of the couples’ supposed courtships were also included.
In one, Albanian Alban Spaho described how he met his Bulgarian bride-to-be Petya Zlatanska while on a day out with friends in 2008.
The affidavit said: 'We went to a cafe where our friends left us alone to get on with it.
'Petya was a bit shy but I eventually persuaded her to let me take her out.
'We didn’t go to any of the usual Bulgarian or Albanian places in north London but instead went to a really nice place in the West End.
'After three months I realised I wanted to be with her all the time and asked her to marry me.’
Another client recalled how he met his bride in a nightclub and proposed after a romantic Valentine's Day meal.
The were scripted by the lawyers, with some couples only coming face to face at the registry office on the day they were married.
The racket was busted when suspicions were raised about the number of couples marrying at Cambridge Registry Office, despite having no links to the city.
Police raided Souleiman GA’s offices and a lock-up rented by Kosimov, which contained thousands of files about the couplings.
They had so many clients they ran out of bogus addresses and listed several couples as living in the same home.
Many applicants also claimed to work at a takeaway store called Kebab Town.
The enterprise proved lucrative, with bank records showing thousands of pounds being paid into personal accounts belonging to Guclu and Altinbas.
Souleiman studied immigration law since the age of 15 and specialised in the Ankara Agreement, which allows Turkish citizens limited rights to live and work in the UK.
He was raking in a salary of nearly £50,000 after tax from legitimate work, the vast majority of which involved clients of Turkish origin.
The gang will be sentenced on Monday.
Thursday, 7 February 2013
UK DAILY MAIL 600,000 immigrants a year
Britain's now the migrant magnet of Europe: 600,000 come here in one year... twice as many as go to France
- The highest total of migrants recorded came to live in Britain in 2010
- Britain has now overtaken Spain and Germany as top target for immigrants
- New wave expected from Romania and Bulgaria in 2014
PUBLISHED: 00:34 GMT, 7 February 2013 | UPDATED: 07:40 GMT, 7 February 2013
Britain has become the biggest magnet for migrants in Europe, EU officials revealed yesterday.
The highest total recorded – 590,950 – came to live here in 2010, their figures showed. This intake was more than twice the 251,159 migrants who opted to go to France.
It means that this country has overtaken Spain and Germany, where levels fell sharply, as the top target for immigrants seeking jobs and a new home.
The rise in numbers coming here marks a historic immigration landmark and comes as a new wave of incomers from Romania and Bulgaria is expected in 2014.
Immigration: The highest total of migrants recorded - 590,950 - came to live in Britain in 2010, figures have revealed
Whitehall has declined to publish its estimates of how many will come then.
For decades, Germany has had higher immigration levels than Britain while Spain’s rates shot ahead ten years ago as its boom drew millions from Spanish-speaking Latin America.
French immigration dropped below British levels in the 1990s.
More...
The comparisons cover 2010 but the UK is likely to have retained top place in the immigration table.
Latest figures show there were 536,000 long-term immigrants to Britain in the year to April 2012.
Whitehall has declined to publish its estimates of how many migrants will come from Romania and Bulgaria in 2014
Its limited success in this may be further highlighted next year when EU legislation allows Romanians and Bulgarians the unfettered right to live and work in Britain.
German cities facing less pressure from immigration than their British counterparts have already complained of the impact of migrants from the two Eastern European countries. Yesterday, the Mail reported that they have warned Chancellor Angela Merkel about ‘significant costs of poverty migration’ and a risk to ‘social peace’.
Think-tank Migrationwatch warned that restricting the impact of immigration here is going to be a major headache for ministers.
Its chairman, Sir Andrew Green, said: ‘These figures are yet another indicator showing that Labour lost control of immigration. Our mass immigration far exceeds that of all the other major countries in Europe.
‘The Government is making huge efforts to get the numbers under control but it is not going to be easy given that Britain has become the destination of choice in Europe.’
Immigration into Britain was running at just over 300,000 a year until rising under Labour in 1997.
Numbers passed 400,000 in 2003 and 500,000 in 2004 when the borders were opened to workers from Poland and eight other EU countries.
Germany, Spain and almost all other EU countries put curbs on Eastern European workers.
UK officials predicted that only 13,000 Poles would arrive but, in fact, more than a million did so and Polish is now this country’s second most common language.
German cities have already been warning Chancellor Angela Merkel (pictured) of the impact of migrants from Bulgaria and Romania
After coming to power in 2010, the Coalition promised to cut net immigration to below 100,000 a year.
But ministers have struggled to reduce this statistic, which measures how migration increases the population after immigration and emigration have been counted.
‘The Government is making huge efforts
to get the numbers under control but it is not going to be easy given
that Britain has become the destination of choice in Europe’
The figure fell from 252,000 in 2010 to 183,000 at the latest count.
- Sir Andrew Green, chairman of think-tank Migrationwatch
However, it is still well above net migration in Germany, whose population swelled by 151,600 in 2010.
That year, Spain’s net immigration was just 62,200 as 400,000 quit its collapsing economy.
Eurostat said immigration restrictions had been a success across much of the EU. Limits focused on attracting specific migrants to combat skills shortages, based on language proficiency, work experience, education and age.
It added: ‘Significant resources have been mobilised to fight people smuggling and trafficking.’
The figures reveal how the dramatic fall in migration to Spain and Germany began in 2009 as the recession began to bite. In Germany, it fell from 682,000 in 2008 to 404,000 in 2010. In Spain, it fell from a peak of 958,000 in 2007 to 465,000 in 2010.
The impact of immigration to Britain was underlined by the 2011 census, which showed the population was 63.2million, half a million more than expected.
There were four million immigrants in a decade, whose arrival helped push the population of England and Wales up by 3.7 million.
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