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March 20, 2008

Britain Opens Door to Criminals, Slams It on Gurkha Heroes

Posted by Dave Blount at March 20, 2008 7:24 AM

The way the U.K. lets Muslim colonizers overrun the country, you would think national sovereignty is taken no more seriously than at the Mexican border in the USA. However, there are foreigners British bureauweenies won't allow to stay: Gurkhas, the special Nepalese troops who have served the Crown with distinction for nearly 200 years, earning 26 Victoria Crosses.

While Britain slams the door in the Gurkhas' crestfallen faces, these folks are allowed to stay (via Daily Mail):

Learco Chindamo: Italian-born Chindamo will be allowed to stay in Britain despite his 12-year sentence for killing headmaster Philip Lawrence at his school in 1995. An immigration tribunal last year ruled that Chindamo, 27, could not be deported when he is freed because it would breach his right to a "family life". Chindamo, who moved to Britain when he was six, is eligible for parole this year.
Yonis Dirie: In 2006, a judge was told he could not deport the rapist because Dirie had been granted sanctuary in Britain. The drug addict and career criminal, a Somali, was given a ten-year sentence at the Old Bailey for the rape in 1990. Judge Gerald Gordon, QC, had asked if he could recommend the 40-year-old be deported for what he described as "a truly horrendous crime". But he was told that because Dirie had been given indefinite leave to remain in the UK, he could not be sent back to his war-torn home country unless the Home Secretary intervenes.
Carol Ajoh: The asylum seeker, who falsely claimed she was a lesbian, was allowed to stay in Britain in 2006 — despite being a married mother of six. Ajoh was not sent home to the Caribbean after a judge ruled it would violate her human rights. In the High Court, Mr Justice Collins said her 2002 claim that she would be persecuted in Jamaica over her sexuality was "totally bogus". But because she remarried and gave birth to three children while her case was being decided, he said it "lacked humanity" to remove her.
Afghan hijackers: In February 2000, nine Afghans hijacked a Boeing 727 and forced the crew to fly to Stansted so they could claim asylum. After a series of legal battles costing taxpayers up to £15million, they were denied refugee status but told they could stay here on "discretionary leave" for human rights reasons. It gave the men the right to work, housing and a full range of benefits worth tens of thousands of pounds.

A single word suffices to explain this bizarre state of affairs: moonbattery.

On a tip from Panday.