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This isn't migration it's invasion. on 03:00 - Mar 5 by Humpty
What are your views on people who think the BNP are people we should listen to? Or people who think Serbs should be celebrated for the atrocities they carried out? Or people who think the Germans should have won the Second World War?
A bit more important than my particular tipple of choice.
My view is that the bnp were probably correct on the issue discussed which was swept under the carpet by the other parties in the interest of PC, and should be respected for standing up for that, but that doesn't make them any less of a ridiculous bunch of moronic racist borderline criminal scum bags who nobody should ever consider voting for.
Has anyone mentioned the Serbs?
Has anyone mentioned the Germans?
Hope your hangover isn't too bad.
The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
Nearly 6,000 foreign national criminals who are eligible for deportation from Britain have been released to live in the community, new figures have revealed.
Official Home Office data disclosed how an average of five foreign offenders a day were freed from jail or bailed from immigration detention in the final three months of last year.
Many will be claiming they cannot be deported because of their human rights, including the "right to private and family life" under Labour's Human Rights Act.
Numbers have soared by nearly 900 in a year, with just 4,903 living in the community at the end of 2014 compared with 5,789 at the end of last year - a jump of 18 per cent.
In 2012 the figure was less than 4,000.
The figures, reported for the first time today, emerged in a report by the Commons' home affairs select committee, and showed 1,800 offenders had been living freely in Britain for more than five years.
"MPs are right to highlight an utterly shocking failure by the Home Office."
Keith Vaz, chairman of the all-party committee, said: "The Prime Minister promised to make the speedy removal of foreign national offenders a priority but these figures show the Home Office has failed to do so.
"The public will be alarmed that 1,800 offenders are still here after five years.
"This demonstrates either incompetence, inefficiency or both."
He added: "Given a significant number of these offenders are from the EU, it is absurd that we cannot persuade our so called European partners to take responsibility for their own citizens."
Peter Cuthbertson, of the Centre for Crime Prevention think-tank, said the figures exposed a "risk to public safety".
"MPs are right to highlight an utterly shocking failure by the Home Office," he said.
"There are enough British criminals released onto our streets as it is. Why top them up with foreign criminals who have no right to be here?
"This risk to public safety should be dealt with urgently."
In the first three months of last year 343 foreign offenders eligible for deportation were released into the community, with 389 the following quarter.
From July to September the figure was 429, with a further 416 freed in the final three months of 2015.
David Davies, the Conservative MP for Monmouth, said: "It's very disappointing that thousands of foreign nationals who have broken the law, gone to prison and should be deported are back in the community, no doubt claiming benefits and free housing.
"We need to send a tough message that anyone who wants to come and break the laws of the UK should abide by our rules, or else.
"This is bound to be related to the Human Rights Act and is another good reason to leave the European Union."
ISLAMIC STATE FILES LEAK: Isil's recruiter, banned cleric Omar Bakri who blamed 7/7 on the public
Tolerated by the British authorities until July 7 attacks, the "Tottenham Ayatollah" and his message has grown increasingly sinister. Now he is linked to recruiting for Isil.
Nicknamed the 'Tottenham Ayatollah', Omar Bakri Mohammed was for so many years wrongly dismissed as a comedic figure who seemed harmless enough.
Until the July 7 attacks on London in 2005, he was tolerated by the British authorities, allowed to preach his message of hate to a small band of followers. From the unlikely headquarters of an office on an industrial estate in Tottenham in north London, he would rail against the West, angered by such trivial matters as the short skirts worn by the "Spicey Girls" pop band as much as by the invasion of Iraq by British and US troops.
But over the past ten years, Bakri's influence has grown; his message increasingly sinister. Bakri has been blamed for the radicalisation of a number of young Muslim men, including the killers of the British soldier Lee Rigby hacked to death on the streets of London.
The precise links, however, to home-grown terrorists have always been difficult to establish and Bakri and his key lieutenants have always dismissed connections between his preaching and subsequent atrocities committed by his one-time followers.
The dossier that has leaked from Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) shows Bakri was far more dangerous than authorities previously realised. Four Britons, according to the documents stolen by a disillusioned Isil fighter and smuggled out of Syria, were sent to fight jihad in the region on the orders and recommendation of Bakri.
Assuming the documents are genuine - and there is no evidence to the contrary - Bakri is named as recommending two young men from Cardiff to travel to Raqaa, the Isil headquarters in Syria.
One of those Reyaad Khan, 21, also named on the list under his nom de guerre Abu Dajana al-Britani - was killed in an RAF drone attack in August. Khan travelled to Syria with his old school friend Nasser Muthana, also 21, and who had been training to become a doctor. He was reported killed in fighting in May last year although his death has never been confirmed.
Muthana's younger brother Aseel was just 17 when he left his family home to join his brother fighting jihad in June 2014.
A third man, named on the list as Amin Rahhal, who used the nom de guerre Abu al-Baraa al-Britani was also 'recommended' by Bakri.
A fourth Ahmad Zeidan al-Khatib - also known as Abu Ayesha - is also stated as coming under Bakri's clutches.
For the past decade, Bakri, 57, has been shut out of Britain, exiled to Lebanon after public revulsion to comments made in the aftermath of the 7/7 bombings. The comments, in which he blamed the British public for the 7/7 bombings, were made to this reporter.
But for the previous 20 years, from 1986, he had lived in north London at taxpayers' expense in a council house in Edmonton, where he lived with his wife and their six children. Two of his sons Bilal Omar Bakri and Mohammad Omar Bakri are reported to have died fighting alongside Isil in separate incidents in Syria and Iraq several months apart.
Born into a wealthy family in Aleppo in Syria, Bakri had come to London in the mid 1980s to escape persecution in Saudi Arabia for his support of the Muslim Brotherhood. In those days Britain was a welcome refuge for Islamists, who faced persecution in the Middle East.
Bakri established the British wing of the extremist grouping Hizb ut-Tahrir along with another now notorious hate preacher Abu Hamza al-Masri, the hook-handed cleric who preached at Finsbury Park mosque and who is now languishing in jail in the US.
Bakri went on to found al-Muhajiroun, an extremist group that would set up stalls in high streets in London attempting to radicalise impressionable young men. As long ago as 2003, Bakri was linked to two British men, both members of al-Muhajiroun, who had travelled to Israel where one had killed himself and two innocent civilians in a suicide bombing. Bakri praised the terrorist as a 'martyr'.
Al-Muhajiroun was finally outlawed in 2004 but Bakri would simply set up another group but in a different name. Websites would come and go and his preachings would be posted online. He had briefly gone to Lebanon, to visit family in 2005, giving the Home Office the opportunity to ban him from returning. Bakri's indefinite leave to remain in the UK was revoked and despite his demands to return to London - not least on the grounds his family were living here - it was denied.
Disciples would visit him in his new home in Tripoli in Lebanon and his preachings were posted regularly on social networks and video sharing websites. His wife in London divorced him - she still lives in the family's council house - and Bakri married a second time in Lebanon. He has two children, aged six and five, living in Tripoli.
His preachings did not escape the notice of the Lebanese authorities. He was arrested and charged but later acquitted of terrorism charges in 2010 but re-arrested in 2014. In December last year, he was finally jailed for 12 years. His case has been taken up by Cage, the organisation that once described Mohammed Emwazi, better known as 'Jihadi John', the Isil executioner, as a 'beautiful young man'.
On Thursday night, Bakri's daughter Umm Bilal Fostok, 27, said her father was being needlessly vilified and questioned the documents' authenticity. "I don't think I have ever heard my dad ever saying anything like that [fight jihad]," she said, "he used to say 'support your brothers in any country where people are being killed you should help them'. But I have never heard him tell people to go to Syria.
"I am not in touch with him. It is very difficult to call him in jail."
This isn't migration it's invasion. on 11:45 - Mar 11 by Kerouac
Daily Telegraph
Nearly 6,000 foreign national criminals who are eligible for deportation from Britain have been released to live in the community, new figures have revealed.
Official Home Office data disclosed how an average of five foreign offenders a day were freed from jail or bailed from immigration detention in the final three months of last year.
Many will be claiming they cannot be deported because of their human rights, including the "right to private and family life" under Labour's Human Rights Act.
Numbers have soared by nearly 900 in a year, with just 4,903 living in the community at the end of 2014 compared with 5,789 at the end of last year - a jump of 18 per cent.
In 2012 the figure was less than 4,000.
The figures, reported for the first time today, emerged in a report by the Commons' home affairs select committee, and showed 1,800 offenders had been living freely in Britain for more than five years.
"MPs are right to highlight an utterly shocking failure by the Home Office."
Keith Vaz, chairman of the all-party committee, said: "The Prime Minister promised to make the speedy removal of foreign national offenders a priority but these figures show the Home Office has failed to do so.
"The public will be alarmed that 1,800 offenders are still here after five years.
"This demonstrates either incompetence, inefficiency or both."
He added: "Given a significant number of these offenders are from the EU, it is absurd that we cannot persuade our so called European partners to take responsibility for their own citizens."
Peter Cuthbertson, of the Centre for Crime Prevention think-tank, said the figures exposed a "risk to public safety".
"MPs are right to highlight an utterly shocking failure by the Home Office," he said.
"There are enough British criminals released onto our streets as it is. Why top them up with foreign criminals who have no right to be here?
"This risk to public safety should be dealt with urgently."
In the first three months of last year 343 foreign offenders eligible for deportation were released into the community, with 389 the following quarter.
From July to September the figure was 429, with a further 416 freed in the final three months of 2015.
David Davies, the Conservative MP for Monmouth, said: "It's very disappointing that thousands of foreign nationals who have broken the law, gone to prison and should be deported are back in the community, no doubt claiming benefits and free housing.
"We need to send a tough message that anyone who wants to come and break the laws of the UK should abide by our rules, or else.
"This is bound to be related to the Human Rights Act and is another good reason to leave the European Union."
If that is true and if they are living off the state instead of being deported as we were promised they would be - then it makes the removal of ESA for disabled people in this country even more of a betrayal.
Each time I go to Bedd - au........................
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This isn't migration it's invasion. on 13:42 - Mar 12 with 1515 views
This isn't migration it's invasion. on 09:57 - Mar 12 by Brynmill_Jack
If that is true and if they are living off the state instead of being deported as we were promised they would be - then it makes the removal of ESA for disabled people in this country even more of a betrayal.
I finally managed to work out how to get the Home Office website to display numbers of asylum seekers per local authority area and got the Swansea figure - we had 834 new arrivals in 2015.
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This isn't migration it's invasion. on 07:57 - Mar 14 with 1457 views
Ever played that game with your kids 'The yes/no game'? (The child must answer questions without using the words "yes" or "no" and without nodding/gesturing)
See Jeremy Corbyn's "very good friend" Ibrahim Hewitt playing the yes/no game on Newsnight v tolerant, liberal, Muslim (such a rare thing unfortunately) Maajid Nawaz here;