That expresses my feelings as well Ken. Remember the 'Kinder Transports' and the good they did? Now contrast that with say a family of a translator who worked for us in Afghanistan and was promised a safe haven but due to incompetence it never happened. Suppose they used their initiative and managed to get to our shores under their own steam. What happens under this Bill? They are imprisoned in a detention centre and have no recourse to the law for 28 days and then the government pays to have them shipped out to Rwanda. Makes you proud to be British..... NOT!
Leaving aside asylum seekers from countries where they are in danger, there are also the people fleeing from famine and dire poverty who see us as a way out, certainly far better then where they come from. These so called 'economic migrants' are seen as totally unacceptable but the harsh truth is, and we have been forecasting this for a long time now, migration to escape starvation is going to increase as climate change progresses. The view of our government is that we import food from abroad and kick the economic migrants out to Rwanda or some other refuse bin deemed to be 'safe'.
What's the answer? The only one I can see is that we have to stop allowing excessive consumption here and share the available resources with the rest of the world. At the moment, we all ignore the fact that kids are starving every time we eat a meal. I am as guilty as anyone else and it troubles me. If we don't start to change this situation we have to accept that there will be a growing number of deaths from disease and malnutrition world-wide. It's happening now but it will increase.
See
THIS BBC analysis of the motivation for this Bill.
"It was delivered by Suella Braverman, but this was unmistakeably Rishi Sunak's own policy. The prime minister has made "passing new laws to stop the small boats" one of his five priorities. He was conspicuously seated behind his home secretary, visible in the TV coverage, nodding, smiling and voicing his assent at key points as she outlined the new legislation. Delivering the new law is part of his plan to try to turn around the Conservatives' flagging poll ratings before the next election. Ms Braverman spoke of her approach being "supported by the British people" and she made a point of warning of 100 million people "who could qualify for protection under our current laws... they are coming here" aiming to tap into fears about growing numbers of arrivals. So the legislation may be, on the face of it, about stopping boats, it's also squarely aimed at galvanising political support at home. The debate was a divisive one, short on any details about the how this new policy is actually going to work.
In other words, like Brexit itself, this political move is motivated by internal problems in the Tory Party, not by the needs of the country. This is a complete failure of governance and somehow we have to find a way of breaking the strangle hold of these rogue politicians, for that is what they are.
Later.....
The United Nations’ refugee agency has urged MPs and peers to block Rishi Sunak’s “profoundly” concerning plan to tackle small boat crossings. They say it will be illegal.