see url: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-56669016
see full report...I find it amazing that our British establishment will
be welcoming all those Chinese rebels, revolutionaries and violent
demonstrators and hooligans and vandals to our British soil...and so
much money will be made available for their welfare, with the burden of
their housing, education falling on the British taxpayer, particularly
local authorities and residential taxes. What happened to all this
Brexit propaganda, where we would be ridding the country of immigrants
who are allegedly taking up our valuable national resources and getting
first place in the queue for services etc.
I say all this rather ironically of course...But this sea change of
government opinion and the Home Office, this complete about turn, is
just amazing. We didn't allow them to come over to the UK in the
hundred years during which we reigned Hong Kong...and just think too, of
all those spies for the Chinese Communist Party who will be smuggled in
under the pretext of needing a home and a place to live...And not a
word, not a dickey bird from all those racists in our society, and,
amazingly the Home Office, one of the most racist institutions in the
world; who fought such a vociferous campaign to keep out immigrants,
limit immigration...and keep those monuments to British Imperialism
which dominated over one third of the world at one time; and saw Brexit
as the haloed ground for English emancipation and preservation of our
British Way of Life...Funny ole world...😉
Quote<<<
Hundreds of thousands of Hong Kong citizens expected to move to the UK
under a new visa scheme will be helped to access housing, schools and
jobs, the communities secretary has said.
Around 27,000 applications have been made for visas brought in after
Beijing imposed a national security law in the former British colony.
The visas give Hong Kong citizens the right to live in the UK for five
years.
Robert Jenrick told the BBC ministers wanted to provide "necessary" help.
"If they struggle, then we're here to support them," he said.
"That means local councils being there to provide them with housing,
with the benefit system standing behind them, with all the support the
state can offer to make sure that no-one gets into difficult times," he
added.
Meanwhile, one of Hong Kong's leading pro-democracy activists, Nathan
Law, has been granted asylum by the UK.
Mr Law said the Home Office had accepted he was "exposed to severe
political persecution" if he returned to Hong Kong.
Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said the UK has a "proud history of
providing protection to those who need it".
>>>End of Quote