Unterlassene Asylbewerberfamilien erhielten in einem radikalen Verfahren bis zu 40.000 £ für die Ausreise aus dem Vereinigten Königreich innerhalb von sieben Tagen

https://www.lbc.co.uk/article/failed-asylum-seeker-families-paid-leave-uk-5HjdTrM_2/

Von pppppppppppppppppd

18 Kommentare

  1. > Ms Mahmood said: „Taxpayers should not be footing millions of pounds to accommodate families who have no right to be here, especially when others comply with the rules and leave the UK when required.

    But we still foot the bill to get them to leave? There’s plenty of struggling Brits where £40K would be a life changer.

  2. Stupidest policy I’ve ever heard.

    Get on a boat from France. Get to Dover. Collect £40k. Repeat?

  3. henry_blackie on

    >I will do whatever it takes to remove the incentives that drive illegal migration

    Surely a £10k payout for each failed application is a pretty good incentive, especially if you bring kids and get to keep their payments too.

  4. Deadliftdeadlife on

    At this point I might just rip up my passport and roll up on the beach at Dover.

    I’ll take 40k to leave.

  5. Jaded_Strain_3753 on

    This policy is likely to save money overall and obviously get people to leave quicker so I guess it’s fair enough. They do need to make sure it is implemented in a way that it doesn’t become a pull factor.

  6. AverageOldGuy on

    And what’s to stop them coming back again?

    Maybe if we had better relations with Europe and spent the money on more processing staff then we wouldn’t be in this position.

  7. Monkeyliar95 on

    I swear we are literally living in the most ridiculous country in the world at this point

  8. PerceptionGreat2439 on

    Cut the middleman out and offer 3k to anyone living in the country that has the largest number of people trying to get here. Then lesser amount to other countries in a rank order.

    ‚Dear resident of (insert country here), here’s 3k, please don’t ever come to England.

    Lots of love the British Government‘

  9. For 40k i will leave, i will go to australia as i have the relevant qualifications to go into engineering in Australia.

  10. Trundlenator on

    What’s the policy for those who take the £40k, leave and then come back the next year again to do the same thing?

  11. Silver_Adagio138 on

    The lawyers won’t like it. They get more than that from the government now b

  12. UuusernameWith4Us on

    Imagine if we paid British convicts £££ to go to prison and acted like there was no other way to make them go to prison.

    I understand there being some „carrot“ in the deportation system. But maybe the best way to incentivise someone to accept the current carrot of £3k is a system where they’ll be forced onto a plane anyway if they don’t cooperate. 

  13. JonnotheMackem on

    So when you are requested to pay up or be molested,
    You will find it better policy to say:—

    „We never pay *any*-one Dane-geld,
    No matter how trifling the cost;
    For the end of that game is oppression and shame,
    And the nation that plays it is lost!“

  14. Reverend_Vader on

    If you’ve ever had a costly divorce, this is the same

    My divorce cost me 45k, but Ive saved 3x that since doing it on what the longer term costs would have been (wasn’t married long)

    And just like my divorce, my start point was „they should be booted out with nothing“

    Sometimes pragmatism is painful but you have to play the long game

    The vast majority of these costs are being absorbed back into the UK, as they will be lining the pockets of the people housing and representing these folk

    This is the best option until someone has the balls to change the law

  15. For months I have seen people on this sub say we should look at what Denmark has done, and now the Govenment is people are whinging about that as well.

  16. Lots of people complaining about paying £40k clearly haven’t read the article since it is actually **up to £10k** and LBC are being disingenuous with their headline.

  17. It’s stupid, but sounds cheaper than the current and more expensive contracts in place.

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