logo
Opinion: We've been silenced on mass migration in Britain

Opinion: We've been silenced on mass migration in Britain

Daily Mail​2 days ago
I have lived long enough, in Eastern Europe before the fall of the Iron Curtain as well as in the West, to recognise the signs. Serious social unrest is in the air. And you don't have to take my word for it. Even Deputy PM Angela Rayner, a staunch socialist, warned this week that ministers at last need to acknowledge the public's 'real concerns' about mass migration, while Downing Street officials fear the nation is 'fraying at the edges'. At the opposite end of the political spectrum, Reform's Nigel Farage captures the public mood when he warns that Britain is close to 'civil disobedience on a vast scale'.
The atmosphere of discontent seems palpable. Last week's demonstrations in Epping, east London , ignited by reports that a boat migrant sexually harassed a girl in the street, have provoked other protests, at Diss in Norfolk and at a luxury hotel requisitioned for asylum seekers amid the glittering skyscrapers of Canary Wharf, east London. Alarmingly for the authorities, groups of protesters appear to be gathering outside migrant hotels around the country every day.
Yesterday, it emerged that Essex Police had actually escorted Left-wing, pro-migrant counter-protesters to Epping's Bell Hotel, now given over to illegal arrivals. The force has suggested this was to 'facilitate free assembly'. Last year, of course, a wave of riots was set off by the appalling knife attack in Southport, in which three small girls were killed and seven other people – five of them children – were seriously injured by a malevolent teenage psychopath. Now there are concerns such violence could break out again, fuelled by mounting public rage at the seemingly endless tide of young men arriving illegally on small boats. Keir Starmer has spoken about his wish to see our 'social fabric' repaired, but the Prime Minister and his Cabinet simply don't understand that this mounting crisis has been directly caused by their and their predecessors' unwillingness to grasp the concerns of ordinary people.
The traditional values that bind a nation and give it stability – patriotism and loyalty to the whole country instead of splintered communities – have long been deliberately undermined by our political leaders and the State itself. Gus O'Donnell, the most senior civil servant in the country under three Prime Ministers between 2005 and 2011, captured this when he boasted: 'At the Treasury I argued for the most open door possible to immigration... I think it's my job to maximise global welfare, not national welfare.' Again and again, the public have expressed their opposition to such attitudes at the ballot box. Again and again, the politicians have ignored them.
One man I spoke to recently, an ex-serviceman named John, told me: 'I'm fed up with feeling like an alien in my own community.' The Labour Party used to represent people like John. No longer. The Blairite project of 'multiculturalism' has visibly failed. Of course there are exceptions, and of course many migrants make a wonderful contribution to our country. But no one can deny that our society is more fragmented than it was a couple of generations ago. Starmer himself, before he feebly backtracked on his own phrasing, understood this when he referred to our 'island of strangers'.
But he was right. Large parts of Britain, from Tower Hamlets in east London to districts of Bradford in West Yorkshire, have become ethnic enclaves. Assimilation or integration of the second, third or even fourth-generation migrants living there is increasingly unrealistic. The political establishment refuses to admit these profound problems, because to do so would be to accept the failure of their world view, maintained despite its obvious flaws for 30 years or longer.
Why else would Labour ministers be so eager to fight the battles of the past – from reversing Margaret Thatcher's union laws to threatening to prosecute soldiers who served in Northern Ireland in the 1970s and now investigating police actions during the miners' strike more than four decades ago? As this long, hot summer roils on, I fear that events may force our leaders to confront these mounting tensions in our society – whether they like it or not. All it might take is one spark. An online rumour, a viral video clip, perhaps a single inflammatory post on social media – and Tinderbox Britain will go up in flames.
Yes, some far-Right thugs have been present at recent anti-migrant protests. But it is completely dishonest of Labour to pretend that these scenes are purely the work of racist agitators. A report by His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire and Rescue Services into last August's riots in Southport concluded that most people who took part in them lived locally. They were whipped up not by criminal factions or extremists, but by disaffected individuals and online influencers.
Ideology and political views played little part. The riots were a spasm of protest from a people who felt that no one was listening to them. Millions more who took no part in the disturbances still shared some of those concerns. They are ordinary men and women – largely apolitical. They would indignantly reject any suggestion of bigotry, and they are emphatically not racist. And yet they cannot maintain the silence, foisted on them by successive governments, any longer. As prime minister more than 20 years ago, Tony Blair schemed to make mass immigration an acceptable policy, with a 'marketing strategy' to sell multiculturalism to the country. This was despite a report, commissioned by the Home Office, that warned: 'People feel they do not have permission to freely express their fears.'
Even then, in faraway 2004, many Britons believed our borders were 'open and overrun'. Labour's response was to downplay these fears, so that immigration stories were 'no longer automatic front-page tabloid material every time'. That cynical technique has become embedded in Labour's DNA. Starmer cannot imagine doing things any differently. But year after year of enforced silence has not dissipated the nation's fears – or its anger. It has achieved the opposite, by containing them under pressure. Now that pressure is building, and though I hope to God I'm wrong, the ominous sense that something terrible is about to flare up is becoming inescapable. Professor Frank Furedi is the director of the think-tank MCC Brussels.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Donald Trump spotted with son Eric at luxury Turnberry resort during five-day Scotland visit
Donald Trump spotted with son Eric at luxury Turnberry resort during five-day Scotland visit

The Sun

time8 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Donald Trump spotted with son Eric at luxury Turnberry resort during five-day Scotland visit

DONALD Trump has been spotted playing golf at his luxury Turnberry resort this morning alongside his son Eric. The US President, 79, arrived aboard Air Force One at around 8.30pm last night for his five-day private visit to Bonnie Scotland. 1 After waving to the crowds, he met the welcoming committee, which included Scottish Secretary Ian Murray. He was then whisked away in his armoured motorcade to his exclusive Turnberry golf resort on the Ayrshire coast. Villagers waved as the convoy passed through nearby Kirkoswald and later arrived at the resort at around 9.30pm. And he has wasted no time in taking to the green after being seen teeing off at the luxury resort this morning. Donning a white USA baseball cap, he has been joined by his son Eric as he enjoys the Turnberry's Ailsa course. Mr Trump was spotted being escorted down to the course on a golf buggy, with a convoy following close behind. Mr Trump is set to spend the weekend at his two golf resorts - Trump Turnberry and Menie in Aberdeenshire. During his stay, he will officially open his second course at Menie, named in honour of his late mother, Mary Anne MacLeod. His visit is expected to last until Tuesday, July 29. The President is also scheduled to meet Scottish First Minister John Swinney and Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer during his trip. A massive £5million security operation has been rolled out to ensure his safety, with around 6,000 police officers drafted in from across the UK to support the efforts. His visit is expected to spark mass protests around his golf courses and in major Scottish cities. More to follow... For the latest news on this story keep checking back at The Scottish Sun. is your go to destination for the best celebrity news, football news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures and must-see video. Like us on Facebook at and follow us from our main Twitter account at @TheScottishSun.

Inside Fred & Rose West's sordid house of horrors where kids slept above dead bodies & were made to do the unthinkable
Inside Fred & Rose West's sordid house of horrors where kids slept above dead bodies & were made to do the unthinkable

The Sun

time8 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Inside Fred & Rose West's sordid house of horrors where kids slept above dead bodies & were made to do the unthinkable

A FORGOTTEN interview with the son of evil serial killers Fred and Rose West has revealed the torture he suffered at the hands of his parents. This includes sleeping above the bodies of their victims buried under the cellar. 9 9 9 The previously unpublished accounts of Barry West give a harrowing insight into what it was like growing up in Britain's House of Horrors. Fred and Rose West between them committed at least 12 murders of girls and young women between 1967 and 1987 in Gloucestershire. In 1994 the couple were arrested and charged - with Fred taking his own life the following January in prison, while Rose was sentenced to 10 life terms with a whole life order. Journalist and author Howard Sounes has shared his unearthed interview with Barry, two years before he died of an overdose in 2020, aged 40, for the first time. 'My dad was a solid monster,' Barry told Sounes, reports The Mirror. 'But she [Rose] was a complete psycho. That's what people don't know: My mum was, child abuse-wise, the main person. "My mum was completely sick in the head. She beat me way more than my dad did, and enjoyed it, absolutely enjoyed it.' The West children were made to sleep in the cellar of the family's home in Cromwell Street, Gloucester, under which they buried many of their victims. Sometimes they were strapped to their beds - and Rose wore a the cellar keys around her neck like a prison guard. The evil mum would regularly snap and lash out - hitting and slapping, as well as stabbing and strangling her kids. Her weapon of choice was often a novelty giant wooden spoon, which she'd wield like a baseball bat. Barry told Sounes his nose is "on a slant" due to the amount of times Rose broke it, and has "massive scars" on the back of his head where he was struck over and over again. He went on to describe the "intense enjoyment" his mum got out of "beating the s*** out of me". Barry recalls how one Christmas Day he hid some sprouts in a tissue on the back of a chair, and when Rose found them days later she forced him to eat the rotting vegetables. He said she put her hand over his mouth and made him swallow his own sick. Anna McFall The nanny of Fred and Rena West's children, McFall was believed to have been murdered in 1967. She was pregnant when she died, with West believed to have been the father. Her body was found in June 1994 in a shallow grave. Fred West denied murdering McFall but he is said to have confided to a visitor after his arrest that he stabbed her following an argument. This happened before Rosemary West met him. Charmaine West With Fred in prison for the theft of car tyres and a vehicle tax disc, Rosemary was left to look after eight-year-old Charmaine. A neighbour is said to have found Charmaine tied to a wooden chair with her hands behind her back with Rosemary standing with a large wooden spoon. Rosemary claimed she'd been taken by her mother Rena but her skeleton was found at the Midland Road property, hidden and missing bones. Rena West Rena is believed to have been murdered by strangulation to avoid an investigation into Charmaine's whereabouts. Rosemary was not charged for this murder. Lynda Gough Lynda Gough, 21, was the first sexually motivated killing conducted by the Wests. She moved into Cromwell Street in April 1973, having had affairs with several lodgers. The Wests later claimed she'd been asked to leave after hitting one of their children. Strangulation and suffocation were the likely causes of death. Carol Ann Cooper Cooper was murdered in November 1973 aged just 15. She was allowed to spend the night at her grandmother's house before a doctor's appointment the next morning. But she somehow ending up on Cromwell Street and was killed by the couple. Her body was found more than twenty years later. Lucy Partington A 21-year-old medieval English student at Exeter University, she returned home for Christmas in December 1973. She left a friend's house in a rush to get the last bus from Cheltenham to Gretton on 27 December, and was abducted. She was found more twenty years later, her dismembered body in the cellar of Cromwell Street. Therese Siegenthaler A 21-year-old Swiss sociology student at Woolwich Polytechnic. She had planned to hitch-hike to Ireland in Easter 1974. Her family reported her missing having not heard from her for some time. Prosecution believe she was abducted before being killed, with Fred West later building a fake chimney over her grave. Shirley Hubbard Just 15 at the time of her death, Hubbard is believed to have been abducted by the Wests. Her body was found following an excavation in the concrete and plastic membrane of the cellar floor. Juanita Mott In the summer of 1974, Mott, 19, moved into 25 Cromwell Street but later went missing when she was living in Newent. Her body was found in March 1994, 19 years later, with West having concreted over the floor of the cellar. Shirley Robinson The first victim buried outside the house, Robinson had an affair with Fred West, and by autumn 1977, she was pregnant with his child. It was initially claimed the 18-year-old had moved to Scotland but her body was later found. When questioned, Rosemary West, herself pregnant with her daughter Tara at the time of the murder, claimed she did not remember her, which was described as 'ludicrous' by the prosecution. Alison Chambers The last murder with a sexual motive established. She disappeared just before her 17 th birthday, having been seen at 25 Cromwell Street throughout the summer. Her body was buried underneath the patio. Heather West The first child born to Fred and Rosemary West, there is no evidence the 16-year-old was aware of the killings. Sexually abused by her parents and having told friends, she suddenly went missing in 1987, with Rosemary claiming she had gone to Wales to be with a lesbian partner. The couple would joke to their other children that they would 'end up under the patio like Heather' if they misbehaved. This - and Fred's abuse of his other daughter - led to the search warrants for the property, and subsequently to their arrests. Barry and his brothers were forced to grow their hair long and wore their sisters' hand-me-downs to school - while their sisters were made to cut their hair short and wear boys' shoes. He said he and all his siblings had speech impediments growing up, a sign of child abuse. Barry would get his "face punched in" at school every day, but was scared to go home. He recalled how Fred would constantly talk about sex in front of his kids and about wanting to take his daughters' virginity, as well as the family tradition of incest, and sex with animals. 9 9 9 Fred's main ambition was to see Rose mounted by a bull. Barry said he was forced into sexual situations with his mum aged eight or nine. The kids were often forced to make phone bookings for "Mandy" - Rose's prostitute alias, and Barry was even offered as an extra for clients. A "giant man" became a regular who would rape Barry at the house. He said the children were even made to watch homemade porn featuring their mum and she kept different underwear in labelled jars for each client. There is a chance, according to some reports, that Fred was not Barry's biological father at all, and he was the product of an incestuous relationship between Rose and her own dad Bill Letts. He had allegedly abused her since she was a child, and regularly visited the Cromwell Street house, according to Rose's notes from prison. The Wests' murder victims were usually attacked and killed, then often dismembered in the family bathroom. Most of their children maintained they had no idea what was going on. How horror unfolded JANUARY 1968: Mary vanishes aged 15 while waiting for a bus to meet her boyfriend. FEBRUARY 1968: Scotland Yard detectives called in to investigate Mary's disappearance return to London with no sign of her. FEBRUARY 1994: Police search garden at Fred and Rose West's home, 25 Cromwell St, Gloucester, over their teenage daughter Heather's disappearance. Nine bodies are found and Fred West is charged with murder. Police are then informed of a potential link to Mary's disappearance and the café. APRIL 1994: Rose West is charged with murder. JANUARY 1995: Fred West kills himself in jail while awaiting trial for 12 murders. NOVEMBER 1995: Rose convicted of ten murders, including Fred's step-daughter from previous marriage Charmaine, pictured, who vanished aged eight. JANUARY 2012: Police reject a petition by Mary's friends to search café. MAY 2021: TV documentary makers find new evidence of Mary's remains at café. Police begin a dig at the scene. One child, who Sounes does not identify, however, claimed years later they were locked in a cupboard under the stairs and could hear shouting and screaming. When they came out, fresh concrete had been poured in the cellar, they claimed. Barry said the children didn't run away because they considered their dad "like God" who would "find you". His older sister Heather vanished aged 16 in 1987 after saying she wanted to leave the house - before later being found dismembered under the patio. It was a long-running family "joke" that Heather was buried in the garden which became a sick reality when police diggers later moved in. However, Barry recalled how he once tried to kill Fred with a screwdriver when he was 11, but his dad just laughed at him. But they did get some revenge on Rose by banding together as she came at them with the wooden spoon. It was when the police investigation had begun into the Wests had begun and just before the children were put into care. They piled on top of their mum and she hit them until she was "knackered" and then "broke down", with Barry saying it was the first time they "saw weakness". 9 9 9

Woman turned away from Wetherspoons for wearing Union Jack dress ‘absolutely disgusted' over policy
Woman turned away from Wetherspoons for wearing Union Jack dress ‘absolutely disgusted' over policy

The Sun

time8 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Woman turned away from Wetherspoons for wearing Union Jack dress ‘absolutely disgusted' over policy

A WOMAN sporting a Union Jack dress was turned away from a Wetherspoon's pub amid anti-immigration protests. Tanya Ostolski said she had been refused service from The Picture House in Sutton-in-Ashfield, Nottinghamshire for her patriotic style on Friday. 2 2 At first the 54-year-old said she was refused entry for carrying a St George's cross flag. However, even after she'd put the flag in her bag, they still refused to let her in which she said was attributed to her Union Jack dress. It has left her concerned that she might be barred in future. She told Nottinghamshire Live: "It's our flag, it's our nation's flag. I wasn't being aggressive or anything, I didn't get lairy or anything. "I put the flag back in my bag, and they said I can't come in because of my dress." Wetherspoon spokesperson Eddie Gershon said: "Pub managers have a duty under the licensing laws, and as a matter of common sense, to judge every situation on its particular circumstances. 'In this case, the pub manager felt that it was important not to increase tensions. 'Therefore, on this occasion the manager asked customers not to enter with flags or any placards.' It came amid an anti-illegal immigration demonstration in the town, as protesters gathered 50 metres away from the pub. Protests began at around 4.30pm and had ended by around 7pm. 'Epping migrant protester' is arrested at home as ring of steel ramps up They were sparked by local Reform MP Lee Anderson who has made an unfounded claim that a man charged with rape in the area is an asylum seeker. The claim regards a man who was arrested after reportedly raping a woman at Sutton Lawn. Anderson made the claims on X, despite being advised against it by Nottinghamshire Police as it could interfere with the justice proceedings. An estimated 300 people attended the protest, with around a dozen counter protesters from Stand Up To Racism present. Anger was directed towards Sir Keir Starmer, with people chanting "stop the boats". At one point in the evening, police guarded the entrance to the Wetherspoon pub after protesters like Tanya complained about being turned away. The popular pub chain's "no-flag policy" has seen it face backlash in the past. During the 2018 World Cup it faced backlash after several of its venues were asked not to display England flags, or any other nation's flag. Instead, all 32 nations were represented on bunting decorating the pubs. This policy was changed for the 2024 Euros, during which the pubs were permitted to display flags.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store