How the Invading Savages Exploit EU Rules to Bring Their Whole Tribes into Britain

Daily Mail
June 21, 2014

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Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration John Vine has explained how the invading savages are using Brussels’ free movement rules to get into the UK.

Thousands of migrants are exploiting lax EU rules to bring their families and spouses to Britain by the back door.

Foreign nationals from outside Europe who would be unlikely to gain a visa to live or work in the UK are instead applying for citizenship elsewhere in the EU.

Under Brussels rules, they can then move to Britain and apply for permission to bring in their spouse or children.

Now a damning report by an immigration watchdog has found that the system is suffering ‘significant abuse’ at the hands of migrants who falsely claim they are related or married to a non-European living in the UK.

Yesterday, Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration John Vine called it a ‘growing problem’.

He said: ‘Our findings suggest the European citizenship route is becoming an increasingly important way into the UK for those whose origins lie outside the EEA [European Economic Area], particularly now that the immigration rules have been tightened.’ The report looked at more than 100 sample cases from the Home Office between April and September last year.

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David Cameron vowed to cut net immigration to below 100,000 a year, but has failed miserably to even make a dent in the figures.

It found that more than a third of Western European nationals – 36 per cent – who were applying for citizenship for their partner were born in Africa, Asia or South America and had gained European citizenship before arriving in Britain.

In a quarter of cases the ‘sponsors’ – whose new nationalities included German, Italian and Spanish – were born in the same non-EU country as their partner.

In one case, a migrant who acquired Italian nationality before then moving to the UK received 97 per cent of his income from welfare handouts. Some 60 per cent of those applying for citizenship for a  so-called spouse last year failed because immigration officials feared the relationship was fake – but thousands still slip through the net.

Some had taken part in a sham marriage while in the UK and others claimed they had been wed by proxy, where a couple remain in Britain and both are represented at an overseas wedding ceremony, usually by family members. Most proxy marriages were found to be invalid, according to the report.

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Once one of them manages to gain citizenship in the poorer parts of the EU, they then move to Britain where under EU rules, they can apply to have their entire family move over to join them.

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