The European Commission has presented its five-year stretegy on migration, which includes incentives for non-EU countries to cooperate in ke

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The European Commission has presented its five-year stretegy on migration, which includes incentives for non-EU countries to cooperate in ke
Harris backs illegal migration leading to the destruction of the country but doesn't want to discuss it in an interview with another liberal. I wonder who she really works for?
I will stop talking about illegal aliens/migrants/immigrants until Donald Trump deported all of them out. I wasn’t thinking about them until 2022 came.
~ Baron Tremayne Caple A.K.A. Foxy Fox/Foxy Kitsune Fox/Fox Man/Fox King/King Fox/Gemini Man/Autism Man/Rainbow Man Is A Metrosexual/God Of Autism/King Of Autism/God Of Asperger/King Of Asperger 🦊
Britain and Mauritius Reach Sovereignty Agreement on Chagos Islands
Britain announced on Thursday a significant agreement to transfer sovereignty of the Chagos Islands to Mauritius. This deal will enable individuals displaced decades ago to return home while allowing London to maintain operational control of the UK-US military base on Diego Garcia.
British Foreign Minister David Lammy stated that the agreement ensures the continued operation of Diego Garcia, a strategically important military base jointly managed with the United States. The deal also paves the way for Mauritius to resettle its population on the islands, which were evacuated years ago.
“This government inherited a situation where the long-term, secure operation of the Diego Garcia military base was under threat due to contested sovereignty and ongoing legal challenges,” Lammy said. “Today’s agreement secures this vital military base for the future and strengthens our role in safeguarding global security, while also shutting down any potential use of the Indian Ocean as a dangerous illegal migration route to the UK.”
Britain has maintained control over the region since 1814, having detached the Chagos Islands from Mauritius in 1965. This move was made to establish the British Indian Ocean Territory, and in the early 1970s, nearly 2,000 residents were forcibly relocated to Mauritius and the Seychelles to facilitate the construction of the airbase.
In 2019, the World Court ruled that Britain should relinquish control of the islands, condemning the forced removal of the population in the 1970s to accommodate the US airbase.
The recent political agreement between Britain and Mauritius has garnered support from both the United States and India.
“Investing in training and development leads to the most significant return on investment a company can have.” - J.P. George
Anti-immigration rhetoric is one of the great rallying cries of the political right. We only have to look at the obsessive way the Tory Party has put illegal boat crossings at the head of its political agenda over the last decade to realise this.
The Tory party, the Reform UK party, and many far-right fringe groups have been spewing out anti-immigrant diatribe for as long as I can remember. Whipping up anti-immigrant feelings is very easy. The immigrant is the "other" and by definition not one of "us". It is they who take our jobs, our houses and overburden our public services. Up to a point, all of these things are true but is it the fault of the immigrant?
For years the right wing press and the Tory Party have directed our attention towards illegal migration but illegal migrants are not the real issue. It is LEGAL immigrants that make up the vast majority of those entering our country and many of these are invited here by big business.
Net migration hit a record 906,000 people for the year ending June 2023. Of these 52,530 were illegal immigrants, a mere 5.7% of the total immigrant population.
Overseas students are counted as immigrants, and for year ending June 2023, 326,000 were resident on study-related visas. Why foreign students are counted as immigrants is a little mystifying as the vast majority go back to their home countries after completing their studies, but if we take this figure away from the 906,000 we are left with 580,000. If we take away the illegal immigrants numbers form this figure we arrive at a total LEGAL immigrant figure of 527,470.
In other words, over half a million immigrants a year are allowed into Britain and many of these are invited here by big business. The excuse business uses for this mass recruitment abroad is that the British people do not have the skills they are looking for. The question then arises as to why British people lack relevant skills.
Professor Brain Bell, the chair of UK’s Migration Advisory Body, states:
“In the last 10 to 15 years there has been a 27% reduction on how much employers spend on training and a 31% reduction in how much the government spends on adult education.” (BBC Today Programme: 29/11/24)
This has resulted in fewer and fewer skilled workers, which on the surface you would think was a bad thing for both employers and government. But austerity obsessed Tory governments and tight-fisted businesses have been able to recruit cheap labour from abroad to fill the gaps. Businesses have not been training British people because it saves money for the shareholders. Tory government hasn’t been training people because it’s dogmatic adherence to neo-liberal economic theory dictates it cut public spending as much as possible.
The Tories have tried to divert our attention away from this policy by highlighting illegal boat crossings and employers have, understandably, simply remained silent concerning their contribution to record immigrant numbers. Yet business’s made 453,000 work visa applications for the year ending September 2024, a figure eight times greater than those arriving illegally.
So next time a right-wing politician or commentator goes rants about immigrant numbers remember it is businesses that are responsible for the large majority of immigrants coming to this country. If they and government had invested in training our young people over the last 20 years then we would not need to import cheaper labour from abroad, but then business would have made less profit and government would have had to spend a little more money on adult education.
Sweeping Raids, Giant Camps and Mass Deportations: Inside Trump’s 2025 Immigration Plans
Former President Donald Trump is planning an extreme expansion of his first-term crackdown on immigration if he returns to power in 2025 — i
Former President Donald Trump is planning an extreme expansion of his first-term crackdown on immigration if he returns to power in 2025 — including preparing to round up people living in the United States without legal permission on a vast scale and detain them in sprawling camps while they wait to be expelled.
The plans would sharply restrict both legal and illegal immigration in a multitude of ways.
Trump wants to revive his first-term border policies, including banning entry by people from certain Muslim-majority nations and reimposing a COVID-19-era policy of refusing asylum claims — although this time, he would base that refusal on assertions that migrants carry other infectious diseases like tuberculosis.
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He plans to scour the country for immigrants living here without legal permission and deport people by the millions per year.
To help speed mass deportations, Trump is preparing an enormous expansion of a form of removal that does not require due-process hearings. To help Immigration and Customs Enforcement carry out sweeping raids, he plans to reassign other federal agents and deputize local police officers and National Guard soldiers voluntarily contributed by Republican-run states.
To ease the strain on ICE detention facilities, Trump wants to build huge camps to detain people while their cases are processed and they await deportation flights. And to get around any refusal by Congress to appropriate the necessary funds, Trump would redirect money in the military budget, as he did in his first term to spend more on a border wall than Congress had authorized.
In a public reference to his plans, Trump told a crowd in Iowa in September, “Following the Eisenhower model, we will carry out the largest domestic deportation operation in American history.” The reference was to a 1954 campaign to round up and expel Mexican immigrants that was named for an ethnic slur — “Operation Wetback.”
The constellation of Trump’s 2025 plans amounts to an assault on immigration on a scale unseen in modern American history. Millions of immigrants living in the country without legal permission would be banned from the U.S. or uprooted from it years or even decades after settling here.
Such a scale of planned removals would raise logistical, financial and diplomatic challenges and would be vigorously challenged in court. But there is no mistaking the breadth and ambition of the shift Trump is eyeing.
In a second Trump presidency, the visas of foreign students who participated in anti-Israel or pro-Palestinian protests would be canceled. U.S. consular officials abroad will be directed to expand ideological screening of visa applicants to block people the Trump administration considers to have undesirable attitudes. People who were granted temporary protected status because they are from certain countries deemed unsafe, allowing them to lawfully live and work in the United States, would have that status revoked.
Similarly, numerous people who have been allowed to live in the country temporarily for humanitarian reasons would also lose that status and be kicked out, including tens of thousands of the Afghans who were evacuated amid the 2021 Taliban takeover and allowed to enter the United States. Afghans holding special visas granted to people who helped U.S. forces would be revetted to see if they really did.
And Trump would try to end birthright citizenship for babies born in the United States to parents living in the country without legal permission — by proclaiming that policy to be the new position of the government and by ordering agencies to cease issuing citizenship-affirming documents like Social Security cards and passports to them. That policy’s legal legitimacy, like nearly all of Trump’s plans, would be virtually certain to end up before the Supreme Court.
In interviews with The New York Times, several Trump advisers gave the most expansive and detailed description yet of Trump’s immigration agenda in a potential second term. In particular, Trump’s campaign referred questions for this article to Stephen Miller, an architect of Trump’s first-term immigration policies who remains close to him and is expected to serve in a senior role in a second administration.
All of the steps Trump advisers are preparing, Miller contended in a wide-ranging interview, rely on existing statutes; while the Trump team would likely seek a revamp of immigration laws, the plan was crafted to need no new substantive legislation. And while acknowledging that lawsuits would arise to challenge nearly every one of them, he portrayed the Trump team’s daunting array of tactics as a “blitz” designed to overwhelm immigrant rights lawyers.
“Any activists who doubt President Trump’s resolve in the slightest are making a drastic error. Trump will unleash the vast arsenal of federal powers to implement the most spectacular migration crackdown,” Miller said, adding, “The immigration legal activists won’t know what’s happening.”
Todd Schulte, the president of FWD.us, an immigration and criminal justice advocacy group that repeatedly fought the Trump administration, said the Trump team’s plans relied on “xenophobic demagoguery” that appeals to his hardest-core political base.
“Americans should understand these policy proposals are an authoritarian, often illegal, agenda that would rip apart nearly every aspect of American life — tanking the economy, violating the basic civil rights of millions of immigrants and native-born Americans alike,” Schulte said.
The Tools to Exploit
Since Trump left office, the political environment on immigration has moved in his direction. He is also more capable now of exploiting that environment if he is reelected than he was when he first won election as an outsider.
The ebbing of the COVID-19 pandemic and resumption of travel flows have helped stir a global migrant crisis, with millions of Venezuelans and Central Americans fleeing turmoil and Africans arriving in Latin American countries before continuing their journey north. Amid the record numbers of migrants at the southern border and beyond it in cities like New York and Chicago, voters are frustrated, and even some Democrats are calling for tougher action against immigrants and pressuring the White House to better manage the crisis.
Trump and his advisers see the opening and now know better how to seize it. The aides Trump relied upon in the chaotic early days of his first term were sometimes at odds and lacked experience in how to manipulate the levers of federal power. By the end of his first term, Cabinet officials and lawyers who sought to restrain some of his actions — like his Homeland Security secretary and chief of staff, John Kelly — had been fired, and those who stuck with him had learned much.
In a second term, Trump plans to install a team that will not restrain him.
Since much of Trump’s first-term immigration crackdown was tied up in the courts, the legal environment has tilted in his favor: His four years of judicial appointments left behind federal appellate courts and a Supreme Court that are far more conservative than the courts that heard challenges to his first-term policies.
The fight over Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals provides an illustration.
DACA is an Obama-era program that shields from deportation and grants work permits to people who were brought unlawfully to the United States as children. Trump tried to end it, but the Supreme Court blocked him on procedural grounds in June 2020.
Miller said Trump would try again to end DACA. And the 5-4 majority of the Supreme Court that blocked the last attempt no longer exists: A few months after the DACA ruling, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg died, and Trump replaced her with a sixth conservative, Justice Amy Coney Barrett.
Trump’s rhetoric has more than kept up with his increasingly extreme agenda on immigration.
His stoking of fear and anger toward immigrants — pushing for a border wall and calling Mexicans rapists — fueled his 2016 takeover of the Republican Party. As president, he privately mused about developing a militarized border like Israel’s, asked whether migrants crossing the border could be shot in the legs and wanted a proposed border wall topped with flesh-piercing spikes and painted black to burn migrants’ skin.
As he has campaigned for the party’s third straight presidential nomination, his anti-immigrant tone has only grown harsher. In a recent interview with a right-wing website, Trump claimed without evidence that foreign leaders were deliberately emptying their “insane asylums” to send the patients across America’s southern border as migrants. He said migrants were “poisoning the blood of our country.” And at a rally Wednesday in Florida, he compared them to the fictional serial killer and cannibal Hannibal Lecter, saying, “That’s what’s coming into our country right now.”
Trump had similarly vowed to carry out mass deportations when running for office in 2016, but the government only managed several hundred thousand removals per year under his presidency, on par with other recent administrations. If they get another opportunity, Trump and his team are determined to achieve annual numbers in the millions.
Keeping People Out
Trump’s immigration plan is to pick up where he left off and then go much further. He would not only revive some of the policies that were criticized as draconian during his presidency, many of which the Biden White House ended, but also expand and toughen them.
One example centers on expanding first-term policies aimed at keeping people out of the country. Trump plans to suspend the nation’s refugee program and once again categorically ban visitors from troubled countries, reinstating a version of his ban on travel from several mostly Muslim-majority countries, which President Joe Biden called discriminatory and ended on his first day in office.
Trump would also use coercive diplomacy to induce other nations to help, including by making cooperation a condition of any other bilateral engagement, Miller said. For example, a second Trump administration would seek to reestablish an agreement with Mexico that asylum-seekers remain there while their claims are processed. (It is not clear that Mexico would agree; a Mexican court has said that deal violated human rights.)
Trump would also push to revive “safe third country” agreements with several nations in Central America and try to expand them to Africa, Asia and South America. Under such deals, countries agree to take would-be asylum-seekers from specific other nations and let them apply for asylum there instead.
While such arrangements have traditionally only covered migrants who had previously passed through a third country, federal law does not require that limit, and a second Trump administration would seek to make those deals without it, in part as a deterrent to migrants making what the Trump team views as illegitimate asylum claims.
At the same time, Miller said, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would invoke the public health emergency powers law known as Title 42 to again refuse to hear any asylum claims by people arriving at the southern border. The Trump administration had internally discussed that idea early in Trump’s term, but some Cabinet secretaries pushed back, arguing that there was no public health emergency that would legally justify it. The administration ultimately implemented it during the coronavirus pandemic.
Saying the idea has since gained acceptance in practice — Biden initially kept the policy — Miller said Trump would invoke Title 42, citing “severe strains of the flu, tuberculosis, scabies, other respiratory illnesses like RSV and so on, or just a general issue of mass migration being a public health threat and conveying a variety of communicable diseases.”
Trump and his aides have not yet said whether they would reenact one of the most contentious deterrents to unauthorized immigration that he pursued as president: separating children from their parents, which led to trauma among migrants and difficulties in reuniting families. When pressed, Trump has repeatedly declined to rule out reviving the policy. After an outcry over the practice, Trump ended it in 2018, and a judge later blocked the government from putting it back into effect.
Mass Deportations
Soon after Trump announced his 2024 campaign for president last November, he met with Tom Homan, who ran ICE for the first year and a half of the Trump administration and was an early proponent of separating families to deter migrants.
In an interview, Homan recalled that in that meeting, he “agreed to come back” in a second term and would “help to organize and run the largest deportation operation this country’s ever seen.”
Trump advisers’ vision of abrupt mass deportations would be a recipe for social and economic turmoil, disrupting the housing market and major industries including agriculture and the service sector.
Miller cast such disruption in a favorable light.
“Mass deportation will be a labor-market disruption celebrated by American workers, who will now be offered higher wages with better benefits to fill these jobs,” he said. “Americans will also celebrate the fact that our nation’s laws are now being applied equally and that one select group is no longer magically exempt.”
One planned step to overcome the legal and logistical hurdles would be to significantly expand a form of fast-track deportations known as “expedited removal.” It denies immigrants living in the country without legal permission the usual hearings and opportunity to file appeals, which can take months or years — especially when people are not in custody — and has led to a large backlog. A 1996 law says people can be subject to expedited removal for up to two years after arriving, but to date, the executive branch has used it more cautiously, swiftly expelling people picked up near the border soon after crossing.
The Trump administration tried to expand the use of expedited removal, but a court blocked it, and then the Biden team canceled the expansion. It remains unclear whether the Supreme Court will rule that it is constitutional to use the law against people who have been living for a significant period in the United States and express fear of persecution if sent home.
Trump has also said he would invoke an archaic law, the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, to expel suspected members of drug cartels and criminal gangs without due process. That law allows for summary deportation of people from countries with which the United States is at war, that have invaded the United States or that have engaged in “predatory incursions.”
The Supreme Court has upheld past uses of that law in wartime. But its text seems to require a link to the actions of a foreign government, so it is not clear whether the justices will allow a president to stretch it to encompass drug cartel activity.
More broadly, Miller said a new Trump administration would shift from the ICE practice of arresting specific people to carrying out workplace raids and other sweeps in public places aimed at arresting scores of immigrants living in the country without legal permission all at once.
To make the process of finding and deporting immigrants already living inside the country without legal permission “radically more quick and efficient,” he said, the Trump team would bring in “the right kinds of attorneys and the right kinds of policy thinkers” willing to carry out such ideas.
And because of the magnitude of arrests and deportations being contemplated, they plan to build “vast holding facilities that would function as staging centers” for immigrants as their cases progress and they wait to be flown to other countries.
Miller said the new camps would likely be built “on open land in Texas near the border.” He said the military would construct them under the authority and control of the Department of Homeland Security. While he cautioned that there were no specific blueprints yet, he said the camps would look professional and similar to other facilities for migrants that have been built near the border.
Such camps could also enable the government to speed up the pace and volume of deportations of people who have lived in the United States without legal permission for years and so are not subject to fast-track removal. If pursuing a long-shot effort to win permission to remain in the country would mean staying locked up in the interim, some may give up and voluntarily accept removal without going through the full process.
The use of these camps, he said, would likely be focused more on single adults because the government cannot indefinitely hold children under a long-standing court order known as the Flores settlement. So any families brought to the facilities would have to be moved in and out more quickly, Miller said.
The Trump administration tried to overturn the Flores settlement, but the Supreme Court did not resolve the matter before Trump’s term ended. Miller said the Trump team would try again.
To increase the number of agents available for ICE sweeps, Miller said, officials from other federal law enforcement agencies would be temporarily reassigned, and state National Guard troops and local police officers, at least from willing Republican-led states, would be deputized for immigration control efforts.
While a law known as the Posse Comitatus Act generally forbids the use of the armed forces for law enforcement purposes, another law called the Insurrection Act creates an exception. Trump would invoke the Insurrection Act at the border, enabling the use of federal troops to apprehend migrants, Miller said.
“Bottom line,” he said, “President Trump will do whatever it takes.”
O fim do mundo sem fronteiras: na pós-pandemia, migrantes estão sendo barrados por drones e canhões sônicos comandados por inteligência artificial e redes de vigilância automatizadas
A Europa está enviando aos migrantes uma mensagem enfática: “Fique longe!” A polícia da fronteira grega está disparando rajadas ensurdecedoras de um caminhão blindado na fronteira com a Turquia. Montado no veículo, o dispositivo acústico de longo alcance, ou “canhão de som”, é do tamanho de um pequeno aparelho de TV, mas pode corresponder ao volume de um motor a jato.
Isso é só parte de uma vasta gama de novas barreiras digitais físicas que estão sendo instaladas e testadas ao longo dos 200 quilômetros da fronteira grega com a Turquia para impedir a entrada ilegal de imigrantes na União Europeia.
Uma nova parede de aço, semelhante à recente construção na fronteira EUA-México, bloqueia os pontos de passagem comumente usados ao longo do rio Evros que separa os dois países.
As torres de observação próximas estão sendo equipadas com câmeras de longo alcance, visão noturna e vários sensores. Os dados serão enviados a centros de controle para sinalizar movimentos suspeitos por meio de análise de inteligência artificial (IA).
A UE investiu 3 bilhões de euros em pesquisas de tecnologia de segurança após a crise dos refugiados em 2015-16, quando mais de 1 milhão de pessoas - muitas escapando de guerras na Síria, Iraque e Afeganistão - fugiram para a Grécia e outros países da UE .
A rede de vigilância automatizada que está sendo construída na fronteira greco-turca tem como objetivo detectar migrantes precocemente e impedi-los de cruzar, com patrulhas fluviais e terrestres usando holofotes e dispositivos acústicos de longo alcance.
Pesquisadores em universidades em toda a Europa, trabalhando com empresas privadas, desenvolveram vigilância futurística e tecnologia de verificação e testaram mais de uma dúzia de projetos nas fronteiras gregas. Detectores de mentira alimentados por IA e bots de entrevistas virtuais com guardas de fronteira foram testados, bem como esforços para integrar dados de satélite com imagens de drones em terra, ar, mar e subaquático. Os scanners de palma registram o padrão único de veias na mão de uma pessoa para usar como um identificador biométrico, e câmeras irão apagar a folhagem virtualmente, expondo as pessoas escondidas perto das áreas de fronteira.
Os testes também foram conduzidos na Hungria, Letônia e em outros lugares ao longo do perímetro oriental da UE. A estratégia de conteção mais agressiva foi desenvolvida por legisladores europeus nos últimos cinco anos, financiando acordos com países mediterrâneos fora do bloco para conter os migrantes e transformando a agência de proteção de fronteiras da UE, a Frontex, de mecanismo de coordenação em segurança multinacional.
Armadas com novas ferramentas tecnológicas, as autoridades policiais europeias estão se inclinando para além das fronteiras. A tecnologia emergente tornará ainda mais difícil para os refugiados que fogem de guerras e dificuldades extremas encontrarem segurança.
Patrick Breyer, um legislador europeu da Alemanha, levou uma autoridade de pesquisa da UE ao tribunal, exigindo que os detalhes do programa de detecção de mentiras alimentado por IA sejam tornados públicos. “O que estamos vendo nas fronteiras, e no tratamento de estrangeiros em geral, é que muitas vezes é um campo de teste para tecnologias que serão usadas posteriormente também em europeus. E é por isso que todos devem se preocupar, em seu próprio interesse ”, disse Breyer à Associated Press (AP).
Ella Jakubowska, do grupo de direitos digitais EDRi (European Digital Rights), argumentou que as autoridades da UE estavam adotando o “tecnossolucionismo” para afastar as considerações morais ao lidar com a complexa questão da migração. “É profundamente preocupante que, repetidamente, os fundos da UE sejam despejados em tecnologias caras que são usadas de formas que criminalizam, experimentam e desumanizam as pessoas em movimento”, disse ela.
Os fluxos de migração diminuíram em muitas partes da Europa durante a pandemia, interrompendo um aumento registrado ao longo dos anos. Na Grécia, por exemplo, o número de chegadas caiu de quase 75.000 em 2019 para 15.700 em 2020, uma redução de 78%.
Mas a pressão certamente retornará. Entre 2000 e 2020, a população migrante mundial aumentou em mais de 80%, chegando a 272 milhões, de acordo com dados das Nações Unidas, ultrapassando rapidamente o crescimento populacional internacional.