UK ENGLAND BRITAIN

(Sabba) – Why send them to Scotland? Is there something in Scotland that needs destroying?

THE JEWISH CHRONICLE

The House of Commons’ members’ tea room overlooking the Thames feels a long way from the horrors of Raqqa, Aleppo and Damascus.

But as Richard Harrington eats a slice of cake in the refined surroundings of Westminster, the desperate situation in Syria is foremost in his mind.

He is the minister charged with co-ordinating the government’s response to the refugee crisis and has spent the past two months criss-crossing the country, making arrangements with local authorities for the arrival of thousands of Syrians.

The Watford MP was appointed in September after the images of the body of three-year-old refugee Aylan Kurdi washed up on a Turkish beach shocked western Europe and brought the crisis to the forefront of political and public interest.

Prime Minister David Cameron announced that 20,000 refugees from Syria would be admitted to Britain by May 2020. The first phase will see 1,000 arrive by the end of the year, with the other 19,000 spread out across the next four and a half years before the next general election. Around 100 — the largest group so far — arrived in Glasgow on Tuesday.

The pace and scale of the project has been criticised by those who would like to see Britain take in as many refugees as Germany — perhaps more than 100,000.

But the attacks in Paris have raised concerns about the possibility of Islamist terrorists masquerading as refugees to enter Europe.

A YouGov poll this week revealed that 49 per cent of the public now believed that Britain should be accepting fewer or no refugees — a 22-point increase since September.

But Mr Harrington said he was satisfied with the UN and Home Office checks on the refugees entering the UK.

“This isn’t just a question of first come, first served — these people are selected carefully based on their vulnerability,” he explained.

“It’s all done by the United Nations’ High Commissioner for Refugees. All refugees are registered, with biometric eye testing, and interviewed.

“They have to meet one of seven vulnerability criteria — women who have been raped, people in special danger, families who have suffered particularly badly in the fighting. If they get through that, they are health and security checked before they come to this country. It’s not something we’d rush.”

He said: “There are a lot of tests that can be done to see if the information they give us about where they came from and how they became refugees is genuine.

“But the vast majority of people we take are families — people who have been dispossessed for some time. They’re not people that we don’t know anything about.”

Almost 50 authorities around Britain have offered to rehouse Syrians, and plans are in place for the refugees to be settled as quickly as possible as permanent residents.

“It’s all pre-organised so we know where everyone is going,” Mr Harrington said. “Properties will have been rented for them from the private sector, not social housing stock.

“At the local community centre they get a briefing, an introduction, a Syrian meal and there will be discussions about children going to school, proper medical assessment.”

Many of the refugees arriving here are from the relatively affluent middle classes — the educated Syrians who could afford to pay their way out of the country — and will come with professional skills, as well as ambitions to return home to a rebuilt Syria. That prospect remains a considerable way off, Mr Harrington admitted.

But he is unconcerned about the prospect of the refugees encountering harassment in the more rural areas where they are sent to live. The “goodwill” shown by the councils taking them will overcome problems, he predicted.

“It’s good for the small communities to have Syrians. Remember these are places that want them. It’s amazing how many small councils are happy to take two or three families and see how they go. We are working to harness this avalanche of goodwill.”

Future phases could see refugee families twinned with British counterparts who would introduce them to the local area, help them integrate and possibly even lead them to job opportunities.

There is another dimension to the eagerness with which the minister is undertaking his work — his own family’s Jewish immigrant background.

Mr Harrington’s father’s ancestors arrived in Britain when Oliver Cromwell allowed Jews to escape from the Spanish Inquisition. His maternal family were victims of Russian and Polish pogroms and arrived in the 1890s.

“Both my grandparents were born here. But their parents weren’t. Jewish people feel a special affinity to the refugee cause. The fact these people are from Syria isn’t the point. The similarity is that they have been kicked out of their homes because of their religion or ethnicity.”

Mr Harrington, who is a member of Watford Synagogue, highlighted the Jewish community’s reaction to the crisis and acknowledged the response to World Jewish Relief’s Syria appeal, which has raised more than £700,000.

Leading Jewish figures, including Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis, Jewish Leadership Council chairman Sir Mick Davis and Reform Judaism’s senior rabbi Laura Janner-Klausner, have approached Mr Harrington to discuss what more can be done.

The former Conservative Friends of Israel chairman said: “Jewish people particularly feel that what they’ve been through in the past — their grandparents and great-grandparents — means they have a duty to try to help the least fortunate in the world. I’m very proud of that. I’m proud of what this country is doing and within that what a relatively small Jewish community is saying.

“I’m very conscious of the fact that for the people I meet from Syria while doing this job, I’m probably the first Jewish person they’ve ever met. I had a good session with some refugees in Bradford. One of them had read on Wikipedia that I was Jewish. He said: ‘I’m very pleased to meet you, I’ve never met a Jewish person’.

“People will say Britain should be doing more. Some will say we should be doing less. I say Britain is doing what it is. The critics tend to see this as a one-off and not part of the bigger programme. It’s not some political ploy… What we are doing puts many countries to shame, it really does.”

9 thoughts on “UK – No security threat from new arrivals, says minister”
  1. Amazing how the West/Jews demand the destruction of other lands ,get single out Syrian refugees fur the most concearn.
    Why ?
    They want Syria did dismembered, depopulsted,and destroyed.
    They want Europe disrupted.

    The ” curse of Ham” ,all must be enslaved.
    Yahweh rules by multicultural Babel..

  2. Dont worry Sabba the first batch arrived in Glasgow , Glasgow is a tough city they take no prisoners if any are ISIS or even come out with ISIS propaganda they will end up in hospital . This is a very pro-Palestinian town flies the flag from the city buildings . But it could be a Westminster conspiracy to create unrest in Scotland as the Jews hate Scotland but it wont work .Glaswegians have revolted in the past and the English army had to be sent in . MI5 is already active here trying to create unrest .

  3. WTF? In the long run it is all self promotion about being wonderful Jews!

    It is all about how they, as Barbara Lerner Spectre said, take an active role in managing the racial cohesion of Europe….

  4. #2 duncan lucas: it’s important that locals understand that people “trying to create unrest” is a positive sign that what the SNP and the widespread support they have is causing considerable unrest among the powers that (shouldn’t) be. Of course, the PTSB will step up their resistance to grass-roots change; and when they see things as desperate their actions will become desperate. It’s important that people understand what’s going on on. Patient explanation to unwitting frightened fellow Scots may be wiser than resorting to insults.
    Cheers.

  5. #1 Dante Ardenz: interesting choice words: “They want Europe disrupted.”
    I take it you mean (divide-and-conquer) domestication – “they want” to farm domesticated Europeans.

  6. Alan -Patient explanation to unwitting “Frightened” Scots ??? – WOW !! Its obvious you know nothing of the Scottish nature I do I am a Scots and born and brought up in Glasgow/Clydebank -Scots frightened -no way-shape or form come out with that in a public house and plenty of English people have I have watched them carried out the door of the public house in a stretcher . Scots are totally down to earth are immune to bull or propaganda , most in Glasgow live in poverty having to turn to crime for a living . Large housing estates -Drumchapel-Easterhouse- Roystonhill – Springburn Barrowfield -Possilpark etc and they are just on the North side of the river Clyde. Clydebank is just as tough they see life as it really is in the raw. So never if you value your health come to the West of Scotland and say that. What armies did the English use in the past 200 years first in battle -thats tight the Scots even the Germans were afraid of them .When the Scots were killed in Victorian battles the English soldiers used their dead bodies to walk over in wet ground after many of the enemy were killed . Do you want me to name the battles ?? I have personally been in fights had building bricks thrown at my head many scars and thats just because of a difference of opinion not even calling the person names. I dont know many “”frightened/scared “” Scots .

  7. Duncan, there was an intense fear campaign leading up to the independence referendum. It did appear to make a difference. There will be an intense campaign against the SNP. Threats, actual violence, maybe a mass atrocity. Smears. Who knows how far they will go? Election rigging? Was there any substance in allegations of deliberate miscounting of votes in the referendum?
    If you come across waverers (no insult intended to the world’s only fearless population) all I suggested was that it might be wiser to thoroughly discuss their concerns rather than angrily call them an (expletives deleted) so and so, and sending them off to hospital. While calmly discussing their concerns, you could also calmly explain to them the advantages to the non-elite Scottish people, of independence from England. Have the Scottish people been abused by Britain? Of course they have. And don’t forget, the rest of the world’s ordinary people need the Scottish ordinary people to win this struggle!

  8. There was some election rigging but not much, I think it was the Russian observers that spotted it . Yes the anti-Scots propaganda campaign was worldwide taking in the US president -Spanish president -German President etc all condemning the Scots for wanting independence . The biggest hypocrites werent the English as they were only interested in the financial loss and territorial loss but the US -the one country that continually boasts of its Independence from England -the Land of the “”Free ” who fought battles against the Redcoats ” and won to condemn a wee country like Scotland from wanting the same is hypocrisy gone mad . The reason the majority of the voters 55 % /45 % opposed Independence was the OAP,s (old age pensioners ) were told they would lose their pensions -LIE ! -the oil had run out -LIE ! border posts would have to be set up-LIE ! (non-between Northern Ireland and Eire ) -all industry would move South-LIE ! -all the banks would move South -LIE ! -we have our own currency -LIE ! -you cant use the £ -why not ? many countries use the American $ and if so then legally we would not be liable for our part of the National Debt (to Jews ) . You cant support yourself -LIE ! -the Truth is we input more /head of population than any English county and get back LESS in return -the English admitted it after the Independence vote . Scotland is a rich country in resources –self sustaining in electricity especially green production -its England that is well short of power . Plenty of water unlike England and yet all our money(OIL ) goes to pay for infrastructure in London and the Home Counties we dont get it back . No we werent frightened its just that a lot of Scots thought the English Government were telling the truth (just like they are telling the “truth ” about Putin NOT ! ) ,now they know different ,so the next vote for independence will be a majority for YES !

  9. Thanks Duncan – music to my ears. Beware of the British pound. If Croatia can have its kuna, Serbia its dinar, and Iceland its krona, why shouldn’t Scotland have its own sovereign currency, the kilt or whatever?
    There’s another issue at play here that I’ve thinking of raising in this forum – the issue of the size of nations. How big is too big for ordinary people to have a say in how their nation is run?
    Iceland (329,000 – 2015) seems not too big.
    Ireland (4,588,000 – 2011) kowtowed to Organized Usury. Too big?
    Portugal (10,427,300 – 2013) look at what’s happening there right now. Too big?
    Greece (10,816,000 – 2011) look at what’s happening there right now. Too big?
    Back to Scotland (5,246,000 – 2011) looks like Scotland might not be too big. Teach us Scotland – teach us. Irish people: look, take note, and learn.
    This is important, Duncan – for everybody everywhere.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Discover more from The Ugly Truth

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading