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Britain: Labour and Conservative parties compete over anti-immigrant
measures
By Robert Stevens
3 March 2005
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The British Labour and Conservative (Tory) parties are ratcheting
up their campaigns against immigrants and asylum seekers as the
general election, expected May 5, approaches.
That they should choose to centre their prospective election
campaigns on the issue says much about the nature of official
politics in Britain. Both parties are fully committed to the type
of right-wing, big-business policies that are responsible for
growing inequality, the dismantling of public services and welfare
provision, and the undermining of civil liberties.
Consequently, neither party can make any appeal for support
by addressing the real concerns of working people. Their resort
to anti-asylum propaganda represents an attempt to win popularity
by an appeal to the most backward and reactionary sentiments.
The Conservatives kicked off the campaign. At the end of January,
Tory leader Michael Howard announced that his party was proposing
to impose an annual limit on immigration, which would allow people
work permits only if their skills were considered to be beneficial
to the country. A quota would also be imposed on those seeking
asylum in Britain, Howard said. Once these limits on migrants
and asylum seekers had been reached, no others would be allowed
into the country, regardless of their circumstances.
Howard also proposed establishing 24-hour security at ports
to prevent illegal immigration. Acknowledging that his proposals
would be in breach of international laws governing the right to
asylum, he said that any future Tory government would withdraw
Britain from the 1951 United Nations convention on refugees.
Howard further demanded that all non-Europeans seeking to reside
in Britain should be subjected to medical tests to establish whether
they are carrying infectious diseases such as AIDS or tuberculosis.
The proposals have been denounced by the medical journal, The
Lancet. In its February 25 editorial, the journal said
that Tory plans to implement checks on certain travelers for disease
were discriminatory.
It further noted that a UK public inquiry into such checks
had previously concluded that there is no evidence to suggest
that such a policy would be effective at protecting public health.
The All Party Parliamentary Group on AIDS, which had conducted
the inquiry, had expressed grave concerns at efforts to exclude
vulnerable individuals on the basis of poor health.
Just days after Howards announcement, the Labour government
unveiled its own plans to scapegoat immigrants.
Whilst acknowledging that some migration was necessary, Home
Secretary Charles Clarke said, What is wrong is when that
system is not properly policed and people are coming here who
are a burden on the society. It is that we intend to drive out.
The governments proposals similarly entail the restriction
of immigration to those whose skills are required. To ensure that
this is strictly monitored, Clarke proposed that everyone granted
a visa to enter Britain would be required to have his or her fingerprints
recorded.
Clarke further proposed speeding up the deportation of failed
asylum seekers, and the establishment of electronic border controls.
Prime Minister Tony Blair said that these measures were necessary
because The fact of the matter is the public are worried
about this; they are worried rightly because there are abuses
of the immigration and asylum system.
The Labour government has already severely curtailed the right
to immigration and asylum. The latest figures show that 34,000
people sought asylum in the UK in 2004, compared with 49,000 in
2003. Nonetheless, Immigration Minister Des Browne has announced
a further crackdown to increase the number of deportations. This
is to be aimed against young asylum seekers.
The Home Office will shortly introduce a trial whereby failed
asylum applicants below 18 years of age will be sent back to their
home countries, even if they have no family to go to. It is expected
that teenagers who have arrived from Albania will be expelled
first.
A pool of cheap labour
The anti-immigrant campaign by the official parties has provided
succor to the extreme right. Following the announcement of Howards
proposals, British National Party (BNP) leader Nick Griffin said
that the Tories plans were a definite move onto our
turf. He added, I quite freely accept that on a nationwide
basis, the Tories will con enough people to make a significant
hole in our vote.
According to a briefing document sent to Labour MPs, the BNP
intends to stand between 100 and 120 candidates in the forthcoming
election, including seats held by members of the Tory Party shadow
cabinet. This is three times as many as it stood at the 2001 general
election, and will allow the BNP to broadcast a nationwide televised
election broadcast.
At the same time, Veritas, the political grouping recently
founded by Robert Kilroy-Silk following his defection from the
anti-European UK Independence Party (UKIP), floated its demands
that all migrants be subjected to health checks.
The complaint of the extreme right is that Labour and the Tories
measures do not go far enough in restricting immigration.
Recent statistics reveal why the main parties are not prepared
to close the door entirely on immigration, however. While they
are only too willing to use migrants as scapegoats for the social
devastation caused by their own policies, they also want ready
access to a plentiful supply of skilled cheap labour.
Statistics released by the Home Office on February 23 revealed
that 133,000 workers from eastern Europe have applied to work
in the UK following the admittance of the 10 accession
countries to the European Union last year. Some 83 percent of
these applicants are single people, aged between 18 and 34 years,
and 80 percent of the total number earn between £4.50 and
£5.99 an hour.
The Blair government is targeting professional migrants as
part of its effort to fill the widespread skills shortage in the
UK, particularly in the National Health Service (NHS). England
currently has a shortage of 1, 850 dentists, for example, and
the government has pledged to recruit an additional 1,000 dentists
by October, most of whom will be brought in from eastern Europe,
particularly Poland.
On February 22, a report entitled, Whose Charity? Africas
Aid to the NHS, issued by the Save the Children organisation,
found that recruiting doctors and nurses from Ghana has saved
the National Health Service £65 million in training costs
since 1999. More than 1,000 Ghanaian nurses are now employed in
the NHS.
The charity wrote that Health services in the UK are
benefiting from the collapse of health services in some of the
poorest countries of the world due to the widespread and increasing
migration of health professionals. Children in these countries
are unable to obtain the most basic health services and many die
as a consequence.
See Also:
Britain: Labour and Tories
target immigrants in run-up to election
[2 February 2005]
Britain: Blair pledges
anti-immigrant clampdown
[30 April 2004]
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