UK's crackdown on immigrants inspired by Trump? Indian restaurant workers arrested

Restaurants, nail bars, convenience stores, and car washes were among the targets of what the British Home Office has described as a “UK-wide blitz” on illegal working.
UK's Home Secretary
UK Home Secretary Yvette CooperMint/AFP
Updated on
4 min read

As the British government moves to clamp down on illegal workers, several Indian restaurants and convenience stores have come under scrutiny. Restaurants, nail bars, convenience stores, and car washes were among the targets of what the British Home Office has described as a “UK-wide blitz” on illegal working in the country.

The Home Office said 828 premises were raided in January, a 48 percent increase compared to the previous year. A total of 609 people were arrested, marking a 73 percent rise from the same period a year ago.

Raid on Indian restaurant

British authorities raided businesses that employed unauthorised workers and deported thousands of migrants with no right to stay in the UK. A raid on an Indian restaurant in Humberside in northern England led to the arrest of seven people and four detentions.

What’s billed as a “blitz on illegal working” is part of a pledge by the centre-left Labour government to reduce immigration—a priority for many voters—and stop the growing popularity of the hard-right party Reform UK.

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s government is resorting to Trump-style TV footage of deportation flight processes. The footage showed men being deported, escorted off a bus and up the stairs of a plane.

Raid on eateries

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper’s office said that while its teams respond to illegal working intelligence in all sectors, a significant proportion of January’s activity targetted restaurants, takeaways and cafes, as well as the food, drink, and tobacco industry.

The government said nearly 19,000 failed asylum seekers, foreign criminals and other immigration offenders had been expelled from Britain since the election "following a major escalation in immigration enforcement by the Home Office".

"The immigration rules must be respected and enforced. For far too long, employers have been able to take on and exploit illegal migrants, and too many people have been able to arrive and work illegally with no enforcement action ever taken," said Cooper.

"Not only does this create a dangerous draw for people to risk their lives by crossing the Channel in a small boat, but it results in the abuse of vulnerable people, the immigration system, and our economy," she added.

People smugglers

"We're also working upstream to deter people from entering the UK illegally by launching a new international campaign to debunk people smugglers' lies. Social media adverts went live in Vietnam in December and Albania in January, highlighting real stories from migrants who entered the UK illegally, only to face debt, exploitation, and a life far from what they were promised," the Home Office said.

(By arrangement with livemint.com)

As the British government moves to clamp down on illegal workers, several Indian restaurants and convenience stores have come under scrutiny. Restaurants, nail bars, convenience stores, and car washes were among the targets of what the British Home Office has described as a “UK-wide blitz” on illegal working in the country.

The Home Office said 828 premises were raided in January, a 48 percent increase compared to the previous year. A total of 609 people were arrested, marking a 73 percent rise from the same period a year ago.

Raid on Indian restaurant

British authorities raided businesses that employed unauthorised workers and deported thousands of migrants with no right to stay in the UK. A raid on an Indian restaurant in Humberside in northern England led to the arrest of seven people and four detentions.

What’s billed as a “blitz on illegal working” is part of a pledge by the centre-left Labour government to reduce immigration—a priority for many voters—and stop the growing popularity of the hard-right party Reform UK.

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s government is resorting to Trump-style TV footage of deportation flight processes. The footage showed men being deported, escorted off a bus and up the stairs of a plane.

Raid on eateries

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper’s office said that while its teams respond to illegal working intelligence in all sectors, a significant proportion of January’s activity targetted restaurants, takeaways and cafes, as well as the food, drink, and tobacco industry.

The government said nearly 19,000 failed asylum seekers, foreign criminals and other immigration offenders had been expelled from Britain since the election "following a major escalation in immigration enforcement by the Home Office".

"The immigration rules must be respected and enforced. For far too long, employers have been able to take on and exploit illegal migrants, and too many people have been able to arrive and work illegally with no enforcement action ever taken," said Cooper.

"Not only does this create a dangerous draw for people to risk their lives by crossing the Channel in a small boat, but it results in the abuse of vulnerable people, the immigration system, and our economy," she added.

People smugglers

"We're also working upstream to deter people from entering the UK illegally by launching a new international campaign to debunk people smugglers' lies. Social media adverts went live in Vietnam in December and Albania in January, highlighting real stories from migrants who entered the UK illegally, only to face debt, exploitation, and a life far from what they were promised," the Home Office said.

(By arrangement with livemint.com)

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