Britain is now impersonating Australia. It’s all it can do to fend off the far right
Labour’s policy imposes up to 20-year waits for permanent residency and stricter claim rejections to limit far-right influence amid rising immigration concerns.
6 Articles
6 Articles
Britain is now impersonating Australia. It’s all it can do to fend off the far right
British politics seems like a strange echo of our 2010s: that era when our major parties kept axing sitting prime ministers, and asylum seekers were never far from the centre of political debate.
Britain is now impersonating Australia. It’s all it can do to fend off the far right
British politics seems like a strange echo of our 2010s: that era when our major parties kept axing sitting prime ministers, and asylum seekers were never far from the centre of political debate.
Like every Friday, a two-part news show: back on the ground with who's coming back from Afghanistan, and then a round table on the UK, where the Labour Party is moving towards an increasingly repressive migration policy.
With "Lief fir mech" Dutch director Mark de Cloe presents a sensitively told young adult film based on a true story and dealing with two serious issues: incurable illness and imminent deportation. In 22004 the Dutch government declared Afghanistan safe again – a decision that causes panic among long-term asylum seekers. The family [...]
Britain is now impersonating Australia. It’s all it can do to fend off the far right
British politics seems like a strange echo of our 2010s: that era when our major parties kept axing sitting prime ministers, and asylum seekers were never far from the centre of political debate.
Under pressure from the far right, the British Prime Minister turns his back on the asylum tradition that his side was defending, at the risk of violating certain British obligations under international law.
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- 100% of the sources lean Left
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