A Damning Report

Published: 17 June 2004 y., Thursday
NINE of out ten immigrants from Eastern Europe should never have been given visas to enter Britain and seek work, a damning report has found. An investigation by a government watchdog found that British embassy officials in Romania and Bulgaria were appalled by a Home Office decision to admit thousands of immigrants, many of whom could not speak English and had no work skills. They told a team from the National Audit Office (NAO) that, if their tough standards for approving visas had been used, "they would have issued visas to less than 10 per cent of the applicants that did actually receive them". Despite the findings, the government insisted last night that the flood of Eastern Europeans into Britain which had been predicted in the run-up to European Union enlargement has not materialised. Des Browne, the immigration minister, in his first official comment on the issue since eight former Communist states joined the EU, said: "Early indications are that there has not been a ‘flood’ of new entrants and the majority of those who have registered were already in the UK before 1 May." However, the NAO’s findings will come as a blow to the Home Office, which is still trying to recover from the row over its slack immigration policy for Eastern European applicants that cost Beverley Hughes her job. The former immigration minister was forced to resign after a civil service whistle blower revealed how Romanian applicants, including a one-legged roof tiler, had been granted work visas by the Home Office. The controversy deepened last night after the NAO confirmed it had been urged by Home Office officials to delay the timing of its report from yesterday until today, to coincide with the Home Office’s internal investigation.
Šaltinis: news.scotsman.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

The Joint Exercise

A three-way border guard exercise of Estonia, Russia and Finland JUBILEX-2004 begin on Wednesday in the Gulf of Finland more »

Poland Wants Minority Veto in EU Constitution

Poland has now tabled a new demand which is set to further complicate talks more »

A common position

Estonian food processors enjoy preference status in trade with Russia, Ukraine more »

Estonia returns looted art

Prime Minister Juhan Parts presented German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder with a 16th century altarpiece looted by the Soviet Army in the final year of World War II more »

Turkish President Sezer Leaves For Poland

Turkish President left on Monday for Poland more »

Central European summit in Romania

Presidents of 17 Central Europe nations met in the Black Sea resort of Mamaia, Romania more »

The draft resolution

Putin, Mubarak discussed a settlement between Syria, Lebanon and Israel, call for a genuine sovereignty for Iraq more »

Chinese president to visit four nations

Chinese President Hu Jintao is to make state visits to Poland, Hungary, Romania and Uzbekistan from June 8 to 18 more »

Summit Endorses Reforms to Strengthen U.N.

Chancellor Schröder on Friday pushed for a permanent German seat on the U.N. Security Council at the EU-Latin America summit more »

US Forces Capture Key Aide to Moqtada al-Sadr

U.S. forces in Iraq have captured a key aide to Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, during a series of overnight raids in the southern Iraqi city of Najaf more »