Southport Stabbing (24 Viewers)

Nick

Administrator
I'm sure there's some money flying about though. Back handers. Winks and nudges.

Lot of money in the people smuggling game.

It's a disgrace.

As I said, spend half an hour in bhandals waiting room. It's an eye opener. (Wallet opener for me though)

It would probably be a different story if it was 300 women and children. Again, it's not.
 

MalcSB

Well-Known Member
How can it be private healthcare if you don’t choose it?

If I buy myself a Routemaster bus off eBay and drive myself to work in it every morning, that doesn’t mean I’m using public transport.
Whether or not you have exercised a choice is not the definition of private health care. You could choose to have your treatment at George Eliot rather than UHCW - doesn’t make GE a private hospital.
 

MalcSB

Well-Known Member
I'm sure there's some money flying about though. Back handers. Winks and nudges.

Lot of money in the people smuggling game.

It's a disgrace.

As I said, spend half an hour in bhandals waiting room. It's an eye opener. (Wallet opener for me though)

It would probably be a different story if it was 300 women and children. Again, it's not.
Surely not under a Labour government😲
 

SBT

Well-Known Member
Whether or not you have exercised a choice is not the definition of private health care. You could choose to have your treatment at George Eliot rather than UHCW - doesn’t make GE a private hospital.
Exercising a choice is not the definition of private health care, but all private health care does have to be exercised by choice…that’s how the private sector works.
 

SBT

Well-Known Member
No it's not at the bus stop, it's just for you. It's allens taxis, stagecoach just rang them up and paid for it for you.
You’re mistaking something that has the appearance/trappings of a private sector service for an actual private sector service. If it’s Stagecoach who are arranging when and where the taxi shows up and travels to, and you don’t have any say in the matter, then you’re using public transport whether you feel like you’re riding in a taxi or not.
 

nicksar

Well-Known Member
I'm sure there's some money flying about though. Back handers. Winks and nudges.

Lot of money in the people smuggling game.

It's a disgrace.

As I said, spend half an hour in bhandals waiting room. It's an eye opener. (Wallet opener for me though)

It would probably be a different story if it was 300 women and children. Again, it's not.
Impossible to get an NHS dentist in Rugby so i go to Stoke Aldermoor dental clinic (part of Bhandals group) they always ask me if i pay for my treatment (which i do,uk pensioner's don't get free treatment)... trust me I'm out of that dental chair in record time on every visit 😂.
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
Just wondering if people think academies are private schools?

Paid for by the state but run separately.
 

MalcSB

Well-Known Member
Exercising a choice is not the definition of private health care, but all private health care does have to be exercised by choice…that’s how the private sector works.
Not when it is being commissioned on behalf of a particular group - the state has made a choice for them.
 

MalcSB

Well-Known Member
Impossible to get an NHS dentist in Rugby so i go to Stoke Aldermoor dental clinic (part of Bhandals group) they always ask me if i pay for my treatment (which i do,uk pensioner's don't get free treatment)... trust me I'm out of that dental chair in record time on every visit 😂.
It pisses me off that when you are entitled to an NHS service which either isn’t available locally or has ridiculously long waits, to get timely treatment you have to pay the entire cost of private provision yourself. The NHS price should be reclaimable.
 

SBT

Well-Known Member
It’s all besides the point anyway - the only reason this healthcare is being described as “private” is because it’s a shortcut to get people to assume asylum seekers are getting (as one person in this thread put it) “five star treatment”. Sounds like that’s just spin but there we are.

The issue of whether asylum seekers can more easily access public healthcare than British citizens is by far the more pressing issue, and imo that’s more of a public services question than an immigration one (though I know those on the right would disagree).
 

Nick

Administrator
The issue of whether asylum seekers can more easily access public healthcare than British citizens is by far the more pressing issue, and imo that’s more of a public services question than an immigration one (though I know those on the right would disagree).
Well in this instance they can, because they have a private contract. Which is my point.

I didn't say it was 5 star, it's probably 4 star like their hotel.

Again. It's hundreds of blokes, not women and children.
 

Gynnsthetonic

Well-Known Member
It’s all besides the point anyway - the only reason this healthcare is being described as “private” is because it’s a shortcut to get people to assume asylum seekers are getting (as one person in this thread put it) “five star treatment”. Sounds like that’s just spin but there we are.

The issue of whether asylum seekers can more easily access public healthcare than British citizens is by far the more pressing issue, and imo that’s more of a public services question than an immigration one (though I know those on the right would disagree).
They shouldn't be entitled to any public health care, one of the reasons they head to the UK in the first place
 

Como

Well-Known Member
Certainly interesting, as far as I know there is no obligation to put up Asylum Seekers in Hotels, or for that matter provide them with free medical care or free anything. I am not sure why the Government does it, not as if there are not plenty of Activists to help.

I thought access to the NHS was based on residency and an asylum seeker is not a resident.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
Certainly interesting, as far as I know there is no obligation to put up Asylum Seekers in Hotels, or for that matter provide them with free medical care or free anything. I am not sure why the Government does it, not as if there are not plenty of Activists to help.

I thought access to the NHS was based on residency and an asylum seeker is not a resident.

Free medical care is provided

Groups that are exempt from charge include:

  • refugees (people who have been granted asylum, humanitarian protection or temporary protection under the immigration rules) and their dependants
  • asylum seekers (people applying for asylum, humanitarian protection or temporary protection whose claims, including appeals, have not yet been determined) and their dependants
  • people receiving support under section 95 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 from the Home Office
  • children looked after by a local council
  • victims, and suspected victims, of modern slavery or human trafficking, as determined by the UK Human Trafficking Centre or the Home Office, plus their spouse or civil partner, and any children under 18 provided they are lawfully present in the UK
  • prisoners and immigration detainees
People whose application for asylum has been rejected may still be exempt from charge if they are supported:

 

Sky Blue Pete

Well-Known Member
Free medical care is provided

Groups that are exempt from charge include:

  • refugees (people who have been granted asylum, humanitarian protection or temporary protection under the immigration rules) and their dependants
  • asylum seekers (people applying for asylum, humanitarian protection or temporary protection whose claims, including appeals, have not yet been determined) and their dependants
  • people receiving support under section 95 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 from the Home Office
  • children looked after by a local council
  • victims, and suspected victims, of modern slavery or human trafficking, as determined by the UK Human Trafficking Centre or the Home Office, plus their spouse or civil partner, and any children under 18 provided they are lawfully present in the UK
  • prisoners and immigration detainees
People whose application for asylum has been rejected may still be exempt from charge if they are supported:

So a functioning home office dealing with applications is a really key part of this
 

Como

Well-Known Member
Free medical care is provided

Groups that are exempt from charge include:

  • refugees (people who have been granted asylum, humanitarian protection or temporary protection under the immigration rules) and their dependants
  • asylum seekers (people applying for asylum, humanitarian protection or temporary protection whose claims, including appeals, have not yet been determined) and their dependants
  • people receiving support under section 95 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 from the Home Office
  • children looked after by a local council
  • victims, and suspected victims, of modern slavery or human trafficking, as determined by the UK Human Trafficking Centre or the Home Office, plus their spouse or civil partner, and any children under 18 provided they are lawfully present in the UK
  • prisoners and immigration detainees
People whose application for asylum has been rejected may still be exempt from charge if they are supported:


I know they get it, but my question was more why, there is no Treaty obligation, it is voluntary.

Who thought this was a good idea?
 

chiefdave

Well-Known Member
Isn't the reason the vast majority of asylum seekers are male is because all safe routes for seeking asylum here have been closed so you're now in the hands of gangs and hiding in lorries, crossing the channel in a dingy or similar.

Pretty sure its a 50/50 split when they look at people fleeing countries and around the same at the point people reach refugee camps.

Think the plan is the men make the crossing, then if their claim is successful they can bring the rest of the family over who were left at a refugee camp via a safe route.

Seems to me what we actually need is a working system for processing people. Get it done quicky, efficiently, and ideally safely, so we're not having to put thousands of people in hotels, provide healthcare etc because they're waiting months, if not years, to be processed. Get the genuine claims processed and integrating while we identify who shouldn't be there and get them processed quickly so they can be removed.
 

Sky Blue Pete

Well-Known Member
Isn't the reason the vast majority of asylum seekers are male is because all safe routes for seeking asylum here have been closed so you're now in the hands of gangs and hiding in lorries, crossing the channel in a dingy or similar.

Pretty sure its a 50/50 split when they look at people fleeing countries and around the same at the point people reach refugee camps.

Think the plan is the men make the crossing, then if their claim is successful they can bring the rest of the family over who were left at a refugee camp via a safe route.

Seems to me what we actually need is a working system for processing people. Get it done quicky, efficiently, and ideally safely, so we're not having to put thousands of people in hotels, provide healthcare etc because they're waiting months, if not years, to be processed. Get the genuine claims processed and integrating while we identify who shouldn't be there and get them processed quickly so they can be removed.
Also how would anyone know someone who has been successful from someone who is appealing from someone who’s case is being dealt with

In Coventry we took Syrian refugees from refugee camps legal route but one wouldn’t know
 

Nick

Administrator
Also how would anyone know someone who has been successful from someone who is appealing from someone who’s case is being dealt with

In Coventry we took Syrian refugees from refugee camps legal route but one wouldn’t know

How would somebody know if it's somebody who came in illegally and has just vanished? What's to stop somebody just walking out of Cov Hill Hotel and going somewhere else?
 

chiefdave

Well-Known Member
which is exactly why we need to sort out processing people and not having them stuck in a queue for years. the reason so many people are in hotels or other private accommodation is that the designated facilities, where you can monitor people, are way over capacity.

or better still we have the processing facilities on the European mainland so we can get them processed before anyone attempts to travel, sure that used to happen, no idea if it was policy or Brexit that ended that.
 

Sky Blue Pete

Well-Known Member
which is exactly why we need to sort out processing people and not having them stuck in a queue for years. the reason so many people are in hotels or other private accommodation is that the designated facilities, where you can monitor people, are way over capacity.

or better still we have the processing facilities on the European mainland so we can get them processed before anyone attempts to travel, sure that used to happen, no idea if it was policy or Brexit that ended that.
Easier to blame foreigners
 

Nick

Administrator
which is exactly why we need to sort out processing people and not having them stuck in a queue for years. the reason so many people are in hotels or other private accommodation is that the designated facilities, where you can monitor people, are way over capacity.

or better still we have the processing facilities on the European mainland so we can get them processed before anyone attempts to travel, sure that used to happen, no idea if it was policy or Brexit that ended that.

There's too much money to be made from it though.
 

wingy

Well-Known Member
which is exactly why we need to sort out processing people and not having them stuck in a queue for years. the reason so many people are in hotels or other private accommodation is that the designated facilities, where you can monitor people, are way over capacity.

or better still we have the processing facilities on the European mainland so we can get them processed before anyone attempts to travel, sure that used to happen, no idea if it was policy or Brexit that ended that.
If only we had some facilities for this!
Maybe all the barracks that got sold off?
 

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