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BBC
sting exposes massive illegal Indian immigration in London
By Venkata Vemuri, London, July 17, 2008 (IANS)
In
an undercover investigation the BBC has exposed a London-based criminal
network that used fake passports, identity documents and human carriers
to bring in illegal migrants, mostly from Punjab, into Britain.
These immigrants were settled in around 40 safe houses in Southall,
home to a large concentration of immigrants from India. Nearly all
of the illegal migrants - called "faujis" in criminal
parlance - are said to be from Punjab.
During
the investigation, the BBC team met one of the agents, named Vicki,
who was open about the fake documents he could obtain, and boasted
about customers as far afield as Sheffield, Bradford and Coventry.
Vicki said he could get people into the country on lorries, known
as donkeys, organised by what he called his "man in Paris",
and told how he could provide a fake "original" passport
that had been "checked" to beat security at a UK airport.
When
Vicki was later confronted with the details of what had been filmed,
he denied doing anything wrong and said it was a case of mistaken
identity. The BBC team met Indian employers who said they had no
problem obtaining papers for the illegal workers, some of whom were
willing to shell out huge sums of money for fake passports. There
were Indian landlords renting out space to the "faujis".
And, there was no shortage of work, though the workers are grossly
underpaid.
The
undercover team found there was no shortage of job offers, including
at a Southall chip shop where a "fauji" told of being
employed for 12-hour days, six days a week at £150 - about
£2 an hour.
One
BBC reporter, Mohammed, went there for work. The owner, Bhupinder
Singh, said to "never mind" the fact he had no papers,
that he would "handle that issue" and that the reporter
should not mention it "otherwise you may be nicked". Another
time Mohammed went to an area well known to Southall "faujis",
where they wait at the roadside to be picked up for casual labour.
A man approached and a job "interview" was conducted.
"Do
you want work?"
"Yes."
"Come
on then."
Mohammed
was taken to a building site and, without being asked whether he
had any experience, was put to work on a roof parapet with no training,
safety advice or kit. He was paid £35 for 12 hours' labour.
The
BBC says of its expose: "One clear fact remains: the scale.
In just one square mile, hundreds of illegal immigrants, scores
of multiple-occupancy houses, and people dealing in fake identities,
employment and fraud. A criminal network that is out of sight."
This
is the second major expose of the illegal Indian immigrant network
in Britain. Last year, an independent Indian film maker, Savyasaachi
Jain, released a documentary in India and Britain, titled "Shores
Far Away", on the subject. Jain filmed extensively in Britain
and parts of eastern Europe to document the illegal migration route
from India. In Britain, the film showed the network and the "faujis"
at work in London, Birmingham and Leicester.
The
documentary was screened in London, Leicester and Glasgow. Leicester
East MP and member of the parliament select committee on home affairs
Keith Vaz, who watched the short film had admitted: "Illegal
immigrants are trafficked by these smugglers from India via Russia,
the Ukraine, Turkey and then on to Calais (France) from where they
reach the United Kingdom and cities like London and Leicester. Another
route for the illegal immigration is through Russia, the Ukraine,
Slovakia and then into Austria, the gateway to western Europe."
The
BBC expose comes at a time when the British government is strictly
enforcing laws against illegal migration, particularly from Asia.
In February, Home Secretary Jacqui Smith announced the introduction
of local immigration teams across the UK by 2012 to prevent businesses
employing illegal workers.
Businesses
will also be named and shamed on the UK Border Agency website, and
those who continue to break the rules will face huge fines, upto
£10,000. Since then, enforcement officers have raised hundreds
of Asian restaurants, detecting hundreds of illegal workers from
India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and south-east Asian countries.
This
exercise comes in the wake of the introduction stricter immigration
rules and protests by various British groups about the negative
impact of illegal immigration on the local population.
In
January, 2004, India and Britain signed an agreement to formalise
sharing of intelligence to combat terrorism, and to allow Britain
to send illegal immigrants back to India more easily. "The
re-documentation and the ability to deal with this issue is indicative
of the tremendous strides we have taken together," then home
secretary David Blunkett had said after the signing of the agreement.
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