Hastings gull
Well-known member
- Nov 23, 2013
- 4,652
Not sure of the figures of asylum seekers to the UK but i know that around 95% of people who come to Australia on boats are genuine refugees. The reason for this is that only the rich people from those countries can afford to travel on these rickety leaky boats. The prices charged by people smugglers is incredibly high, most people cannot afford them and end fleeing on foot to neighbouring countries. Many refugees I have spoken to have spent all the money they have on boat fares for one person in the hope that once they get refugee status they will find their families and be able to bring them over on family visas. So actually the further away from the problem you are the more likely you are to get wealthy and well to do refugees.
I agree that it is a difficult situation and one i sadly don't know the answer to. There are many people in Australia who will offer refugees a room to stay in their houses. If i had the room I would certainly do this. Currently i am trying to find the time to offer my services to teach them English to assist them with assimilation. One thing I am certain of (and i am going to get a bit preachy here so i apologise and this is not directed at you) is that we need to start seeing them as people rather than the invading hoards of terrorists or economic migrants that they are often made out to be. The best way to do this I have found is to get involved in helping them and listening to their stories and the problems they are facing. Once people have heard their stories it would take a heart of stone to advocate 'sending them back' as some on this thread have suggested.
Once again i apologise for the preaching and I am not for one moment putting myself forward as some kind of saint on this subject as I could and should do a lot more, but as you say it is a very difficult situation
Thanks for this and I am not in the slightest bit taking it personally. I don't doubt that 95% are genuine refugees, almost by definition, if they have left their own country. But the fact that they are genuine refugees who have afterall left of their own accord (yes. I know -war etc etc) does not necessarily mean that the UK has a duty to take them in, particularly given the stat that we have 300,000 a year already. I see your point about being relatively wealthy to afford the trip to smugglers, but are they all paying these dreadful people? Also, would the journey to OZ be much longer than to the nearest italian island, which may account for the higher fees charged? And also I suspect that the numbers we are talking about are rather different.
The numbers -this to me is the crux of the matter. If it were just a trickle, I imagine that this would elicit far more sympathy and praise for their ingenuity, rather like East German escapees! I am sure that some folk here too would offer assistance, in the way that you do. When you are faced with thousands, however, which I suspect you in Geelong are not, then it is harder to listen to their stories, which I am sure would be quite heart-breaking. And also it is an understandable fear for the future and the risks of civil strife, the danger of which grows as immigrant numbers grow and the areas they "take over" become ever larger. Of course, we should all live together and follow your noble example, I fully appreciate, but sadly life tends not to be like this. It is not all one-way either -my friend's daughter left further education in Leicester due to perpetual and quite threatening insults of "white slut" etc from muslims.