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Tuesday 15 September 2020

This is not Kafka - A review of Welcome to Britain - Colin Yeo

Here is my review of this important and timely book. 

A few weeks ago, a comment on twitter made me choke on my coffee. This was the suggestion from the Home Office that ‘activist lawyers’ were frustrating the removal of unwanted visitors. I have been a lawyer for many years but knew little about what immigration lawyers do. As it was, this timely book then appeared on our shelves. Colin Yeo is an undisputed expert in the field having worked as an immigration barrister for many years.

The first thing that I learned was that such lawyers must be extremely active just to keep up with the sheer volume of laws, regulations and procedures. Colin Yeo points out that we have Acts of Parliament from 1971, 1988, 1999, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2014 and 2016 and counting. Then there are the regulations and other orders – 66 between 2015 – 2017. There is little publicly funded support to enable confused visitors to negotiate this complex maze.

He does not paint the picture of our island that we like to imagine. ‘The image we hold in our minds of Britain as welcoming country is a comforting mirage’. He then gives us pages of real-life stories that has even the most steeled of jaws dropping. At one level we see a ridiculous refusal of asylum because the applicant could not possibly face danger from guerrillas or other primates! At a more obviously disturbing level is the story of the Down’s Syndrome sufferer who was refused leave to remain on the grounds that his UK relatives could send him money. This, like many such decisions, was overturned in the face of negative publicity.

All of this is part of the campaign to reduce net migration at all costs. We have all heard of the hostile environment that led amongst other things to the Windrush scandal. 'The hostile environment has been a disaster. The system encourages race discrimination, the financial costs...have been huge, the wrong people have been catastrophically affected and there has been no discernible decrease in unlawful immigration'

At times Welcome to Britain reads like a Franz Kafka novel. Like the tragedy of Alois Dvorzak an 84 years old Canadian with Alzheimer’s who was still in handcuffs when he ‘took his last breath’ in 2013.

I strongly urge everybody to get a copy of this book and do nothing else until you have read it and grasped the seriousness of the message, and what activist lawyers really do. It is well written, persuasive and topical. Many of my friends will find this in their Christmas stocking this year!

This is the link

https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/customer-reviews/R2YFMGHNNF1TYV/ref=cm_cr_arp_d_rvw_ttl?ie=UTF8&ASIN=1785905775


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