Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
June 27, 2014
One of the joys of being a member of the EU is that citizens from other, less wealthy European countries can move to yours. Once there, they can then move all their family over and then claim all the welfare, health and education benefits that were originally intended only for your own kinsmen. As if this wasn’t bad enough, if the immigrant then goes and marries a Negro or a Pakistani, they can then move to your country too, with all their extended family following.
Obviously this state of affairs is very easily taken advantage of, as we see here with this case of two Bulgarian gypsies being hired online over Skype to move to Britain and then marry Non-White criminals in order to get them British passports.
From the Daily Mail:
Bulgarians Nadya Kamenova, 20, and Tamenuzhka Slavcheva, 21, were paid in total more than £4,000 to ‘marry’ two Pakistani men facing deportation.The young mothers were both flown to Manchester after being contacted online by sham marriage organisers.
Now both women have been jailed after admitting conspiring to facilitate breach of UK immigration law.
The women were locked up alongside fake groom, Muhammed Saleem, 28, who married Slavcheva in a ceremony observed by undercover borders officials, called in by suspicious staff, at Manchester Register Office last February.
Saleem, from Rochdale, Lancs, paid Slavcheva £1,000 to marry him after his student visa was rescinded.
Four days earlier, Saleem acted as a witness in the fake marriage of Mohammed Shahbaz to Nadya Kamenova.
Mr Shahbaz, who has so far escaped arrest, is suspected of organising a number of other sham marriages.
Manchester Crown Court heard that his bride Kamenova was recruited by her UK-based aunt, who is suspected of being another of the organisers, via Skype, and paid £3,400 for the job.
Once over here, Kamenova helped make arrangements for her cousin Slavcheva’s arrival
David Toal, prosecuting, said: ‘Before the accession of countries such as Bulgaria and Romania to the EU, most previous sham marriage cases involved “brides” from affluent countries like Holland, and invariably spent only a few days for the marriage in the UK before returning to their lives in their own country.
‘Such transient passage within the UK, gave the marriages the obvious appearance of shams.
‘By choosing brides from poor countries such as Bulgaria, the grooms could be confident that their brides would be more willing to remain within the UK for longer periods of time or come to the UK on repeated visits.’