Workingman wrote:I was reading an article on Sky the other day (can't find it now) saying that in the coming decades tens of millions of migrants will leave the tropics as they become unviable places to live and mostly head north.
This problem is not going away and will only get worse. The hordes will overcome and there will be wars.
It began in the Horn of Africa around the millennium and has continued.
But the vast majority of these "migrants" are not escaping climate change. They are attempting to piggy back on our economy and services to side-step their own economic evolution. This does not fall within the scope of the international agreements which were created so that people displaced by war or famine would be turned away at the border of the country next door. It was never for, nor designed for, people who have funded themselves to illegally migrate several thousand miles across multiple countries, to get to the location which will give them the best chance to make their fortune.
If we want to find the refugees of war or famine, no issue, go to the countries next door and you will find the desperate and destitute, having lost all, no money, no mobile phones, little more than the few clothes they managed to take with them when they had to move.
Those paying criminal gangs do not fit into these laws.
However Denmark
appears to be looking for a solution. There has been more than a little interest in that. It certainly would provide a deterrent if everyone who hits the shores of the UK is immediately deported to a facility outside the UK and not under UK law, meaning the UK courts could not force the UK government to bring them back. Also if the UK courts ruled that they were immediately released, they would be released in that third country, but only if that country approves. Final deportation would be from the third country, not from the UK and not under UK laws.