Archive for February, 2017

Theresa May announces 30m package to ease migrant crisis – ITV News

Theresa May made the announcement during an EU summit in Malta.

Britain will help countries in Asia and Latin America to take in refugees in Europe, Theresa May has announced.

The move is part of a 30 million package announced by the prime minister at an EU summit in Malta, which will bring UK humanitarian support regarding the migrant crisis in the Mediterranean to more than 100 million.

The cash will go towards measures to protect vulnerable migrants from freezing conditions and the threat of people-trafficking and sexual violence.

It will also encourage them to return home rather than continue to embark on dangerous journeys to Europe.

UK money will help countries like Egypt, Greece, and the Balkan states to provide for refugees who have reached their territory from places like Syria, and to integrate newcomers into local communities.

And Britain is ready to offer support for countries in Asia and Latin America which need migrants but do not have the required infrastructure in place to receive them.

International Development Secretary Priti Patel said migration challenges cannot be ignored.

International Development Secretary Priti Patel said: "Global Britain is stepping up its support for the most vulnerable refugees who are at risk and need our help.

"Conflict, drought and political upheaval have fuelled protracted crises and driven mass migration. We cannot ignore these challenges.

"This latest support from the UK will help those who decide they want to return home to do so safely, protect men, women and children from exploitation, and ensure that those caught in freezing conditions get the basic help they need to survive."

The new funding will help provide:

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Theresa May announces 30m package to ease migrant crisis - ITV News

May to pledge continued support for EU on Mediterranean migration crisis – The Guardian

Theresa May will pledge the UKs support over the migrant crisis when she meets EU leaders in Malta. Photograph: Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images

The UK will remain a reliable partner for the EU in helping to tackle the Mediterranean migration crisis even after Brexit, Theresa May is to tell her fellow European leaders at a summit in Malta on Friday.

The prime minister will use the meeting to reassure the remaining 27 EU members that Britain will not step back from such international obligations, Downing Street said, while also urging them to spend more on defence in the era of Donald Trumps scepticism about Nato.

The summit, held at the Grand Masters Palace in Valletta, will be Mays first encounter with the other EU nations since a meeting in Bratislava in December, which at one point saw May pictured standing alone as other leaders chatted around her.

May is expected to stay only for the morning session and working lunch, which is focused on how to deal with the number of migrants and refugees seeking to enter Europe via the Mediterranean and Libya, and the human cost, both in terms of assistance and the large numbers who drown trying to cross.

The agenda is directed at trying to stop people smugglers, and seeking ways the EU can better cooperate with the authorities in Libya, a major exit point for those seeking to enter Europe.

A Downing Street statement released in advance of the meeting said May would stress that migration has been one of her political priorities during her time in government and remains so.

It added: She will say that the UK has played a central part in tackling this crisis and will remain a reliable partner.

May is also expected to have some bilateral chats with fellow EU leaders, though details of any plans have yet to be released.

The prime ministers spokeswoman said she wanted to keep strong EU links after Brexit. We are very clear we want to see a strong and successful EU, now and into the future, that we can have a mature and constructive partnership, she said.

The summit comes amid a busy period of international meetings for May. Last week she made a high-profile and controversial visit to Washington to see Trump, before holding talks in Ankara with Turkeys president, Recep Tayyip Erdoan.

On Monday she is due to host the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, at Downing Street.

Her office said she would brief EU leaders over her US visit, and what May said was a guarantee from Trump to be completely supportive over Nato. She will also stress the need for other Nato members to meet the commitment of spending 2% of their GDP on defence, so that the burden is more fairly shared.

May will miss the afternoon session of the Valletta summit, at which the remaining 27 EU leaders will resume discussion of how Brexit can be handled, and preparations for next months 60th anniversary of the Treaty of Rome, which set up the EUs precursor, the European Economic Community.

It comes a day after the UK government set out its longest statement of intent yet on Brexit, with the publication of a 77-page parliamentary white paper about the plans for the process.

In a letter this week to EU leaders, Donald Tusk, president of the European council, who will chair the talks, said the anniversary would be a chance to strongly reiterate these two basic, yet forgotten, truths: firstly, we have united in order to avoid another historic catastrophe, and secondly, that the times of European unity have been the best times in all of Europes centuries-long history.

He added: It must be made crystal clear that the disintegration of the European Union will not lead to the restoration of some mythical, full sovereignty of its member states, but to their real and factual dependence on the great superpowers: the United States, Russia and China. Only together can we be fully independent.

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May to pledge continued support for EU on Mediterranean migration crisis - The Guardian

OVER A BARREL: Libya demands EU taxpayers cough up or face massive migrant influx – Express.co.uk

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The North African country said it would need more money from European nations if it is to strike a deal with them to stop large numbers of asylum seekers crossing the Mediterranean.

Brussels dropped its biggest hint yet today that it wants to seal an agreement with Libya like the one it has with Turkey, under which economic migrants are swiftly deported from the continent.

The EU-Turkey deal has led to a dramatic fall in the number of migrants arriving in Greece, but the pressure has simply switched to Italy instead and the route through Libya.

Libyan prime minister Fayez al-Sarraj visited the Belgian capital today to lay down his demands, after his Maltese counterpart Joseph Muscat warned a fresh migrant crisis could kill the whole EU project.

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Like Turkeys president Recep Erdogan before him Mr al-Sarraj, who is head of the war-ravaged countrys internationally recognised government, seemed to recognise he has Europe over a barrel on the issue of migration.

He told a press conference: Irregular migration is a major problem. It is something dramatic. We hope that the EU mechanisms to help Libya will be more practical.

This will help us to solve the problem and to save the lives of the irregular migrants and return them to their countries of origins, where they should hopefully find some jobs and growth so they dont need to think of leaving and migrating at risk to their lives.

We hope that the EU mechanisms to help Libya will be more practical

Libyan PM Fayez al-Sarraj

He then added: We are not going to mention the amount of money that ... dedicated to Libya for this help because they are very humble, very small amounts.

The EU has already agreed to help bolster Libyas coast guard with extra training and is also set to lay on the cash to persuade the impoverished country to take back migrants caught at sea.

Brussels had to promise Turkey an eye watering 5 billion to get it to agree to a similar deal, although it is believed that Libya would demand less than this.

EU Council president Donald Tusk said: Europe has proved it is able to close down irregular routes of migration as we did on the eastern Mediterranean route.

Now it is time to close down the route from Libya to Italy. I can assure you it is within our reach."

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Migrants try to reach a rescue craft from their overcrowded raft, as lifeguards from the Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms rescue all 112 on aboard

He vowed: What we need is a full determination to do that. We owe it first and foremost to those who suffer and risk their lives but we also owe it to the Italians and all Europeans.

The deadly route across the Mediterranean is now the main gateway to Europe, with some 181,000 arrivals in 2016.

It is run by smugglers who operate with impunity in Libya, which slid into chaos after the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.

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OVER A BARREL: Libya demands EU taxpayers cough up or face massive migrant influx - Express.co.uk

Texas County Demands Fed Payback for Jailing Illegal Aliens – Breitbart News

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The federal State Criminal Alien Assistance Program (SCAAP) requires that the county report criminal illegal aliens that have been housed in jail for four or more days.

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The demand comes after President Donald Trump signed executive orders to withhold federal monies from sanctuary cities, temporarily halt refugeesfrom any country for 120 days, and block travel from seven Muslim-majority nations.

We have decided to be compliant in working with immigration services, and so we turn over all that data to them. But the fact of the matter is they dont pick them up right away and we continue to incur that cost, Bexar County (San Antonio) Judge Nelson Wolff told the local ABC affiliate. Wolff is the county judge of the 17th most populated county in the United States.

A few days ago, Wolffwrote letters to the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) requesting that the federal government completely reimburse the county for costs incurred over the last 12 years for housing criminal illegal aliens, reportedSan Antonio-Express News.

The letter begins:

Bexar County complies with federal laws associated with detainment of undocumented immigrants. The State Criminal Alien Assistance Program (SCAAP) requires Bexar County to report undocumented inmates that have been housed for four or more consecutive days in the Bexar County Adult Detention Center and have either one felony offense or two misdemeanor offenses within one fiscal year. Under the terms of the SCAAP agreement, Bexar County was to be reimbursed for holding federal immigration detainees.

TheExpress-Newsreported that Wolff said,The topic has come up about immigration and state funding I thought it was time to make it public of how much it costs local governments. Its not just a theoretical issue, its an expensive issue.

The county judge was reported to say that he will continue to comply with the law even if the county does not receive reimbursement.

Wolff wrote in his letter, Bexar County is willing to comply with federal immigration laws, but this has created a large burden on local property taxpayers that should be paid for by the federal government. He added, This burden on local government violates the principles of the SCAPP agreement.

The unfunded mandates by the federal government have become even more underfunded, reported the San Antonio area paper citing a report by the National Conference of State Legislatures. When the SCAAP first began in 1995, Congress put aside $130 million for the program, and between 2006 and 2009, that allocation was $400 million a year. The funding has decreased to $238 million, which covers roughly 18 percent of the costs to local jails.

SCAAP payments are not made where local and state entities cannot verify that those jailed are illegal aliens. Costs for unknown inmates are not reimbursed. According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, this accounted for 58 percent of the program in 2010.

Lana Shadwickis a contributing writer and legal analyst for Breitbart Texas. She has served as a prosecutor and associate judge in Texas. Follow her on Twitter@LanaShadwick2.

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Texas County Demands Fed Payback for Jailing Illegal Aliens - Breitbart News

Bill Clinton opposed illegal immigration – Greensboro News & Record

Before Trump, there was President Obamas Iraqi refugee ban and seven nations of terror proclamation. But before Obama there was Bill Clinton, who received a standing ovation for demanding stronger border defenses and deporting criminal illegal immigrants.

Remember Clintons 1995 State of the Union speech?

We are a nation of immigrants ... but we are a nation of laws. ... Our nation is rightly disturbed by the large numbers of illegal aliens entering our country. ... Illegal immigrants take jobs from citizens or legal immigrants, they impose burdens on our taxpayers. ... That is why we are doubling the number of border guards, deporting more illegal immigrants than ever before, cracking down on illegal hiring, barring benefits to illegal aliens, and we will do more to speed the deportation of illegal immigrants arrest for crimes. ... It is wrong and ultimately self-defeating for a nation of immigrants to permit the kind of abuse of our immigration laws that has occurred in the last few years ... and we must do more to stop it.

Its starting to get a little awkward for the identity politics of the left to defend their own history while denigrating Trumps actions, according to the Zero Hedge website.

Editors note: Kathleen Parkers column will continue. She was on vacation that day.

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Bill Clinton opposed illegal immigration - Greensboro News & Record