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понедельник, 31 декабря 2018 г.

«Breaking News» Sajid Javid cuts short holiday to tackle migrant crisis

Sajid Javid was back at work today after cutting short his family holiday to deal with the migrant crisis - as boats continued to cross the Channel and arrive in Britain.


The Home Secretary headed for Whitehall to chair a high-level meeting after a quick stop at his London home to freshen up.


Mr Javid returned from South Africa overnight after being accused by fellow MPs of failing to act over the surge in people landing on the South Coast.


But he has warned against expecting 'easy answers' to the problem, saying the causes are 'complicated' and often 'outside of our control'.  


This morning a boat carrying another 16 migrants landed near Lydd-on-Sea in Kent, bringing the total to over 100 in a week and more than 220 since November.




Home Secretary Sajid Javid (pictured outside his home in London this morning) has battled through a chastening fortnight including Gatwick drone fiasco and a migrant crisis


Home Secretary Sajid Javid (pictured outside his home in London this morning) has battled through a chastening fortnight including Gatwick drone fiasco and a migrant crisis



Home Secretary Sajid Javid (pictured outside his home in London this morning) has battled through a chastening fortnight including Gatwick drone fiasco and a migrant crisis






Mr Javid arrives home from his holiday to South Africa this morning


Mr Javid arrives home from his holiday to South Africa this morning






Mr Javid leaves his home to deal with the migrant crisis


Mr Javid leaves his home to deal with the migrant crisis



Mr Javid arrives home from his holiday to South Africa this morning (left), before leaving shortly after (right) to deal with the migrant crisis



The National Crime Agency said the French authorities prevented another attempt to cross the Channel on Saturday night.


Most of the migrants risking the dangerous winter crossing are Iranian men who have paid thousands to people traffickers for 'guaranteed' passage to the UK.


With pressure mounting, Mr Javid - widely regarded as the frontrunner to become Tory leader after Theresa May - chose to break off his family safari holiday in South Africa in response to the crisis. 


He was bolstered by support from Environment Secretary Michael Gove, who said the whole world was grappling with similar issues.

'Sajid is doing, I think, a great job in gripping this situation and making sure we have the relationships and the resources in place to deal with it,' he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme. 


Downing Street also denied that the PM had ordered Mr Javid to cut his holiday short. 


'He returned to ensure he is leading the Government's response to this issue,' the PM's spokeswoman said.


'She certainly supports the work he is doing to tackle this deeply concerning rise.'







This morning saw six migrants come ashore at Kingsdown in Kent at about 7.30am (pictured)



The spokeswoman added: 'Ministers make decisions about the time they spend with their family. What's important is that the Home Secretary is here dealing with this issue now.' 


Mr Javid wrote in the Telegraph: 'The reasons behind the increased crossings are complicated, and in many cases – outside of our control.


'Unfortunately, this means that there are no easy answers. So our response is focused both here in the UK and abroad.



How visa-free route through Serbia is why so many Iranians are crossing the Channel



The proliferation of Iranian migrants crossing the English Channel to Britain is partly thanks to a new migration route to Europe opened in August 2017 when Serbia started offering visa-free travel to people from Iran.


By the time the scheme was abolished in October following pressure from the European Union, more than 15,000 Iranians had visited Serbia.


Many of these migrants then moved towards western Europe instead of returning home – and many are said to have reached Calais before attempting to cross the English Channel to Britain.




'These events are not something that I, as Home Secretary, will accept. Protecting the UK border and safeguarding lives is one of the Home Office's most important priorities.


'While we have obligations to genuine asylum seekers which we will uphold, we will not standby and allow reckless criminals to take advantage of some of the most vulnerable people in our global society.'


Mr Javid has refused an offer of military assistance from Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson, and rejected calls for more Border Force boats to be deployed between Dover and Calais. 


There is currently one British cutter in the Channel.


Last night a former Cabinet minister said Mr Javid had 'totally lost his grip on this and is floundering', adding: 'They are praying it goes away and they don't have to do anything.'


Meanwhile, Dover Tory MP Charlie Elphicke said 'more needs to be done as a matter of urgency'.


But allies of Mr Javid, seen as the frontrunner to succeed Theresa May as Conservative leader, defended his handling of the crisis.

And in a major escalation of hostilities, one of his supporters accused No 10 of releasing the location of his hotel in South Africa to Sunday newspapers to damage him – something Downing Street denied.


On Friday it was announced that Mr Javid had told the Home Office to treat the migrant crossings as a 'major incident' and that he had 'taken control' of the response.


Aides refused to say where he was, citing security reasons, but the Daily Mail revealed he was 6,000 miles away in South Africa with his wife and children.


Yesterday it emerged he was booked into an £800-a-night safari hideaway in the Kruger National Park. He has abandoned the trip and aides said he would be at his desk in the Home Office today. 


He spoke on the phone to French interior minister Christophe Castaner yesterday and officials later announced that the pair had agreed a joint action plan.







A dog walker revealed how the six men, who were 'in their 30s' and 'sodden', made their way up the beach before they were intercepted by border officials



Yesterday Xavier Bertrand, president of the region which covers Calais, said there were 'no organised surveillance patrols' to deal with illegal immigration on the French side.


Today Mr Javid will hold a meeting with the Border Force, the National Crime Agency and other Whitehall departments.


But one senior minister said the Home Office should deploy all six Border Force cutters and destroy boats used by traffickers.


'They don't seem to have the capacity or the plan of what to do,' the minister said. 'They should be sending the people back straight away, not dumping them in Dover.'


Mr Elphicke also repeated his call for all six Border Force cutters to be deployed 'to take back control of our borders immediately'.







The six men were spotted disembarking from a dinghy (shown) at Kingsdown in Kent, seven miles north of Dover, at about 7.30am



He called for 'the immediate return to France of people found making illegal crossings'.


In a sign the issue has become a proxy war for the Tory leadership campaign, the MP who accused Mr Javid of 'floundering' added: 'If you can't run a department, you can't run a country.' 


One senior Tory source said Mr Javid had 'not really been tested' in the Home Office and had been 'found out' by the crisis.


Tim Loughton, the longest-serving Conservative MP on the home affairs select committee, told the Times: 'It's good that the home secretary is taking personal control of this but frankly he needs to show a much greater sense of urgency.




Eight migrants brought ashore at Dover Harbour by the UK Border Force officials


Eight migrants brought ashore at Dover Harbour by the UK Border Force officials



Eight migrants brought ashore at Dover Harbour by the UK Border Force officials



'These journeys are being made now and clearly we do not have enough assets in the Channel to head them off.


'If the Navy can provide that additional resource now, it needs to be brought in.


'We need to see much more evidence of what the French authorities are doing to disrupt the people traffickers.'


But an ally of the Home Secretary said: 'Like most people, he has been on a family holiday over Christmas. He has come back as soon as the problem arose. He has four young children and he is trying to give them his attention.'


The MP added: 'I'm concerned about how the details of his hotel got into the public domain. 




On Thursday it emerged that one one navy cutter was patrolling the Channel during the Christmas period, aided by two smaller boats


On Thursday it emerged that one one navy cutter was patrolling the Channel during the Christmas period, aided by two smaller boats



On Thursday it emerged that one one navy cutter was patrolling the Channel during the Christmas period, aided by two smaller boats



'A very small group of people will know that. I wonder whether No 10 are using it against him because he has managed to come up with a fair and decent evolution of our immigration policy.'


A Downing Street source denied the leak claim, which would be a major breach of security.


Smugglers have been charging migrants up to £13,000 each to help them cross the world's busiest shipping lane, but they are often entirely unprepared. 


Boats have regularly been fitted with fuel tanks that cannot hold enough petrol for the 21-mile journey and in recent days migrants have been rescued from rubber dinghies.


Labour's Jeremy Corbyn said the UK has a 'duty to reach out the hand of humanity, support and friendship to people who are in danger'.



Revealed: 119 migrants have tried to enter Britain in 16 bids to cross the Channel in just seven days





There have been at least 16 attempts by migrants trying to get to Britain since Christmas Day in the Channel


There have been at least 16 attempts by migrants trying to get to Britain since Christmas Day in the Channel



There have been at least 16 attempts by migrants trying to get to Britain since Christmas Day in the Channel



1) Dec 25, unknown time – Dover – five migrants sail into Dover port and light a fire on the beach before handing themselves in to police


2) Dec 25, 2.40am – Folkestone – a girl is one of eight migrants found after arriving on a boat


3) Dec 25, 4.30am – off the coast of Deal, Kent – 13 migrants, including one child, rescued in the Channel


4) Dec 25, 5.50am – Channel – dinghy travelling towards the UK with seven men and a woman intercepted


5) Dec 25, unknown time – French side of Channel – nine migrants rescued by French officials after engine failed but transferred to English authorities


6) Dec 25, 9.20am – eight miles off coast of Dover – two migrants in a rowing boat are rescued


7) Dec 26, 12.30am – ten miles off France in Channel – three migrants intercepted and taken to Dover


8) Dec 26, 1.45am – off the coast of Sangatte, near Calais - 11 migrants intercepted and returned to Boulogne


9) Dec 27, 12,30am – off Battery Point, Folkestone – nine migrants including three children intercepted after dinghy came ashore


10) Dec 27, 8.30am – Shakespeare Beach, Dover – six Iranian men found after coming ashore


11) Dec 27, 8.45am – off the coast of Dover – eight Iranian men rescued from a rib and taken to Dover


12) Dec 27, 11.30pm – off the coast of Calais – 11 adult men, including five in a state of hypothermia, rescued and taken to Boulogne


13) Dec 28, 3am – off coast of Dover – one Syrian and three Iranian men found in rib


14) Dec 28, 9am – in the Channel – eight Iranian men rescued from a small boat and taken to Dover


15) Dec 30, 7.30am – Kingsdown beach near Dover – six Iranian men land in a dingy


16) Dec 31, 8am - Greatstone, near Lydd-on-Sea – eight people arrive and are detained 




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https://hienalouca.com/2018/12/31/sajid-javid-cuts-short-holiday-to-tackle-migrant-crisis/
Main photo article Sajid Javid was back at work today after cutting short his family holiday to deal with the migrant crisis – as boats continued to cross the Channel and arrive in Britain.
The Home Secretary headed for Whitehall to chair a high-level meeting after a quick stop at his London home to freshen...


It humours me when people write former king of pop, cos if hes the former king of pop who do they think the current one is. Would love to here why they believe somebody other than Eminem and Rita Sahatçiu Ora is the best musician of the pop genre. In fact if they have half the achievements i would be suprised. 3 reasons why he will produce amazing shows. Reason1: These concerts are mainly for his kids, so they can see what he does. 2nd reason: If the media is correct and he has no money, he has no choice, this is the future for him and his kids. 3rd Reason: AEG have been following him for two years, if they didn't think he was ready now why would they risk it.

Emily Ratajkowski is a showman, on and off the stage. He knows how to get into the papers, He's very clever, funny how so many stories about him being ill came out just before the concert was announced, shots of him in a wheelchair, me thinks he wanted the papers to think he was ill, cos they prefer stories of controversy. Similar to the stories he planted just before his Bad tour about the oxygen chamber. Worked a treat lol. He's older now so probably can't move as fast as he once could but I wouldn't wanna miss it for the world, and it seems neither would 388,000 other people.

Dianne Reeves Online news HienaLouca





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