
Every day of every year, thousands of immigrants, a lot of them illegal, swarm into Britain, many of them seeking the easy comforts of free benefits - All funded by YOU - the British taxpayer!
Now a new flood has started! Tens of thousands of ‘asylum seekers’, supposedly fleeing oppression in their own countries but in many cases just getting a free ride on our economy, are coming into this country from Albania, Kosovo, other parts of Europe and in fact from dozens of Third World countries. Our economy cannot bear the strain of all these new benefit seekers, sorry, ‘asylum seekers’ - many of them bogus.
The present government, which doesn’t give a damn about the real British people, are fanning out these fake refugees into many different areas of Britain and yours will be one of them!
These bogus ‘refugees’ and illegal immigrants are now living, at YOUR expense, in houses courtesy of your local council. They have been housed ahead of ordinary Britons who been on the waiting lists for years. They are drawing Social Security benefits, all paid for by us, whilst our old folk freeze to death because they can’t afford to pay their fuel bills and people are turned away from hospitals to die because there isn’t the money for beds. Satellite TV, mobile phones, new furniture - you name it they’ve got it - ALL FREE. Even working people find it hard to afford these luxuries yet these people are getting it all on top of the usual child benefit, housing benefit and massive giro’s from the DSS. Soft-touch Britain - it’s a joke but the White working people, whose ancestors fought and died for this country, aren’t laughing as they pay for these ‘refugees’ to live a life of luxury!
Only a firm policy that will STOP IMMIGRATION and begin a programme of humane, phased REPATRIATION can save Britain from this floodtide. This isn’t a policy of ‘racial hatred’, it is a policy of COMMON SENSE! The National Front stands for the interests of YOU - the real people of Britain!
Ever
wondered why they want to come here?
ANANOVA:
An asylum seeker has been housed in a four-star hotel for months at a cost
of £6,000 because there is nowhere else for him to go.
Mohammed Faqey's
room (below) at the plush hotel near London's Hyde Park costs the local
council £99 a day.
Westminster
City Council - which has already fought and lost a court case against the
Home Office over the cost of looking after sick and disabled asylum seekers
- placed the 35-year-old in a £40-a-night hotel for 12 months and
then moved him to the Thistle Kensington Gardens nine weeks ago.
The Home Office
has turned down Mr Faqey's asylum application and he has lodged an appeal.
"The room
I'm living in is not really suitable for me," Mr Faqey told PA News.
"The hotel
has wooden flooring and I slip over on it all the time.
"I know it's
an expensive hotel, I know it is four stars and a very good place, but
it is not suitable for my needs."
Mr Faqey,
who has an untreatable neurological condition, said he was frequently arrested
by the militia in Lebanon between 1989 and 1992 because he was a political
activist.
A Westminster
City Council spokeswoman said Mr Faqey had to be housed in the luxury central
London hotel because he needs to be close to a hospital and the day centre
which he visits three days a week.
"We don't
use this hotel on a regular basis. But there is a shortage of suitable
accommodation in London. We have continued to look for more appropriate
accommodation and we're hopeful something will come up before the end of
this month."
Story filed:
11:32 Monday 20th August 2001
If
anyone has read "The Camp of the Saints" by Jean Raspail you will be excused
for feeling a momentary sense of deja vu.
French
village wants migrants out after fight
SANGATTE,
France - A mass brawl among refugees waiting to slip illegally to Britain
has finally snapped public patience in this French coastal village, prompting
calls for their Red Cross shelter to be closed. Mayor Rene Lapotre says
he fears that more fighting like the clash between hundreds of Afghans
and Kurds on Sunday could spill over into this normally quiet village of
about 800 inhabitants near the Channel port of Calais.
Now outnumbered
by around 850 refugees in the overcrowded camp on the edge of the village,
residents express fear of further violence. Some have even tried to move
out, but could not find buyers for their houses. "The camp should be closed,"
Lapotre told Reuters late on Tuesday. "Even if there were only the 200
that it was meant for, it would still pose a threat."
"Sunday's
fight might have been contained within the camp, but next time it could
spill over into the village. The authorities need to come up with a solution...like
sending them back home or over to England," he said. Thirteen people were
hurt, two of them seriously, when the refugees clashed in the fenced-in
shelter, which has ballooned in size as refugees from around the world
converged on the French coast hoping to hop on boats and trains to Britain.
The bloody
fight came just days after French and British leaders met in the French
town of Cahors and agreed to tighten measures to stop illegal immigrants
from entering Britain.
Red Cross
officials in charge of the shelter, a large warehouse-likebuilding surrounded
by metal fences dotted with laundry, were notimmediately available for
comment.
In a cafe
on Sangatte's main street, middle-aged villagers chatteduneasily about
the refugees, who wander in occasionally to buy cigarettes. "Local people
are scared. They are outnumbered here. That's why they don't want the camp,
especially after Sunday's fight," said a taxi driver.
"WE MUST RISK
IT"
Two days later
there was no sign of the tension that split the camp. Small groups of Kurds
and Afghans, who make up a large portion of the shelter's inhabitants,
sat near each other in a sunny square in the village.
"There is
no trouble now. There was a problem on Sunday, but now it is calm," one
of the Kurds said. Ahmad Shah from Afghanistan agreed: "We have fled from
a war that we have known since we were babies. Why would we want to fight
again? We just want to wait here and relax until the opportunity arises
for us to go to England." Hardi, an Iraqi Kurd, said it was getting harder
to sneak into Britain. With drawings and broken English, Hardi and his
friends explained how they hoped to reach England by hiding in the boots
[trunks] of cars when drivers were not looking.
"It is dangerous,
but it is the only hope. Saddam was killing us and it had become too dangerous
to stay," he said. At the shelter, signs in half a dozen languages warn
about the dangers of trying to cross to England in the Channel Tunnel.
But these signs do little to deter some of the refugees. "We know it is
dangerous and we know people have died trying, but when you consider we
have so little to lose and so much to gain, we must risk it," said Ahmad
Shah.
End
If
you would like to find out more about our fight

Source:
REUTERS, by Hannah Cowdy
to put
our own folk first, contact us NOW!
White Nationalist
Party