The Shadow Justice Secretary Robert Jenrick has warned that the “government won’t admit” the situation “in the Channel is a national security emergency.”
Jenrick has voiced his grave concerns as he has three daughters and warned that these illegal migrants being taxied across the English Channel have “deplorable attitudes towards women.”
Tensions across the UK has topped boiling point as furious Brits are protesting outside taxpayer funded hotels that most Britons could not afford to stay in.
Writing in the Mail on Sunday Jenrick wrote, “I certainly don’t want my children to share a neighbourhood with men from backward countries who broke into Britain illegally, and about whom we know next to nothing.”
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He added, “I don’t want anyone else’s family to have this forced on them either,” it is “no wonder fair-minded people are furious.”
Making reference to migrants raping and sexually assaulting young girls and women he said, “My eldest daughter is 14 and already I worry about her safety as she starts to do things independently.
“It’s challenging enough without this to contend with.”
Jenrick added, “If countries won’t take back their citizens, we should suspend the granting of visas and foreign aid until they do.
Just recently it was reported Pakistan was refusing to take back three rapists until the UK allows direct flights between the two countries via its national airline, PA, which were grounded due to safety concerns.
“This is a country we give £133 million in aid to. Enough. Starmer should suspend that money if the Pakistani authorities don’t do the right thing.”
Jenrick said that he is demanding that the Ministry of Justice publishes the true background of these criminals and provide Brits with their nationality and where they were born and how they entered into the UK.
He said that if the Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer fails to this then he is “complicit in a scandalous cover-up.”
Home Office guidance published earlier this year states, “data on returns of foreign national offenders (FNOs) who are subject to return or removal from the UK comes from Home Office administrative data systems.
However, the system used to bring together the detailed data and analysis on foreign nationals subject to deportation or return, such as their convicted crime type, their sentence length and their nationality, currently faces a number of issues which affect the quality of the data held on that system.
These need to be addressed before data from that system can be considered of sufficient standard to be extracted for statistical purposes.
The Home Office are working to improve the recording of the detailed data held on FNOs and an upgrade to the management information system is currently underway.