Voda for DailyMail: soft Britain with deportation of Albanian immigrants

Rarely, the great British tabolic “Daily Mail”, has published in one day three scriptures for unique Albanian children seeking asylum in Britain. By publishing numerous photos taken by Facebook of young people who pose en route to Britain hidden in trucks or when they arrived for asylum, [...]
Published numerous photos taken by Facebook of young people who pose en route to Britain hidden in trucks or when they have arrived for asylum, the newspaper through its envoy to Krume, Albania, stresses that their families openly admit they send their children to Britain for a better life.
Most of them end up in social care and take refuge in English families or fall into the mercy of criminals, becoming drug dealers.
Named Krumen as London's “Lage”, the British picture with a familiar anti-imgration stance, quoted Albanian Deputy Interior Minister Rovena Voda as saying the Daily Mail that “different from Germany, France or the Netherlands, is Britain's mild stance that does not turn back the unique youth who were rejected asylum, yet returning to the country with an attractiveness for young Albanians”, writes Top Channel.
She suggests that the money Britain spends and that would save them from failing to care for these young people could be invested in projects in Albania, to encourage young people to stay in Albania rather than go to Britain.
According to Albanian Deputy Interior Ministers, these children are not trafficked against their will in Britain, but most are sent by their parents and relatives down the street and do so for economic reasons. According to Rowena Voda, quoting London's Daily Mail, the demands of young people seeking asylum for blood feuds are false.
According to the top Albanian official, social media is a problem because of the false image that portrays life in Britain. Unaccompanied Albanian children last year were second in number, following those from Syria seeking asylum in Britain.
Not only young people, but there are other larger age groups that come to large numbers in Britain to live even illegally.
A Home Office spokesman says that “for most unaccompanied Albanian children seeking asylum in Britain, results in they do not need international protection, and British authorities are working on finding safe and effective ways to restore them to Albania, where in many cases they are reunited with their families”.












