logo
The hidden underbelly of Wales where exploitation is rife

The hidden underbelly of Wales where exploitation is rife

Frantic shouting in Mandarin erupts from behind a curtain separating the front desk from the kitchen at the Red Hot Goodies Chinese takeaway. Waiting customers are turned away.
Upstairs is a modest, cramped flat which is searched by five officers clad in stab vests emblazoned with "'Immigration Enforcement". They swiftly locate each individual in the building, including one who was evidently serving customers moments before. The takeaway in Blackwood, Gwent, is shut down for the evening.
The suspected illegal worker, a Chinese woman who only provides her first name and denies working at the takeaway despite being spotted behind the till, is not the person the officers are seeking. She is detained nonetheless. It emerges the young woman, a former marketing student who arrived in the Caerphilly town two months earlier, had entered the UK legally on a skilled worker's visa.
She is performing what is considered unskilled work by assisting behind the till at the takeaway. Her stay is therefore unlawful and she is informed she will have to depart the UK as soon as possible.
The unassuming takeaway operates on a quiet residential street. Its young male owner informs officer Richard Johnson, who's leading the raids, that the woman chanced upon his family online.
He claims he has never paid her, showing the officers the company's bank statements. These reveal the woman is paying him £280 a month to live in the flat upstairs with the family.
Attempting to ignore the owner's mother, who persistently yells over the officers in Mandarin, they ascertain she's essentially receiving reduced rent in exchange for her work. Join the North Wales Live WhatsApp community group where you can get the latest stories delivered straight to your phone
The proprietor insists he knows nothing about the woman beyond her name, age, and the validity of her passport, reports Wales Online.
Richard asks: "The only reason she came here was to help you in this shop?" The owner responds: "I think she was homeless and had nowhere to go." Richard questions: "Why did you think she was homeless?" "I just took a guess," he answers.
It transpires the takeaway has previously been penalised for employing an illegal worker. The owner is issued a referral notice and warned he could face another potential fine of up to £60,000.
Penalties now stand at £45,000 for a first-time offence and can rise to £60,000 for subsequent offences. Once a notice is issued, it is handled by a central immigration office in Manchester which conducts further investigations and determines the appropriate penalty.
The young woman provides evidence that she has arranged a flight back to China for the following week and assures the officers she will leave the country. As we exit the takeaway, Richard explains the background. "You get people who've come over on small boats and in the back of lorries or in through the backdoor through Ireland," he says. "But often the people we're dealing with have entered the country legally but then they breach the terms of their visa.
"That woman had come in on a skilled worker visa and was clearly carrying out unskilled work, so she's broken the rules of the system. The skilled worker visa is strictly for people to come to this country and contribute skilled work. We regularly encounter people who've come in using the skilled worker visa and they're behind a till serving in a restaurant or takeaway or a corner shop.
"If we arrest someone we have to ask them first, 'Are you prepared to return voluntarily?' And if they book a flight and show evidence that they've booked it, they may not get detained. More and more now when we catch them, they tend to book a flight and go. We don't get much hassle."
Richard continued: "We don't often get hassle really. We sometimes do at the car washes. There is a car wash we've done a few times and you always know it's either going to kick off there or people are going to run. You've always got to be prepared for people to run but sometimes it still catches you by surprise.
"Or in a restaurant they might not run but they'll take their aprons off and go out to the back. There are some peculiar ones. We often find illegal workers cooking in restaurant kitchens and they claim they're cooking for themselves."
Just hours before arriving at the Chinese takeaway, the officers visited the Bella e Buona Italian restaurant in Brynmawr. During their previous two surprise visits to the restaurant, they had discovered Albanian illegal workers in the kitchen – some of whom fled when the officers arrived.
With the threat of closure hanging over the restaurant, this time there were no illegal workers to be found. "It seems they've learned their lesson," said Richard before heading to his next assignment in Cardiff.
Over the past week Richard, from Port Talbot, and his Wales and west of England immigration enforcement team have been busy busting illegal workers across various sites.
Their crackdowns ranged from a Tenby construction site, where five illegal workers were detained, to Treforest's Choices Express takeaway, leading to a Sri Lankan man's arrest. At a Premier Stores in Pontypridd, an Indian man was detained for violating immigration bail.
It's part of a clear trend. Between July 5 last year, and May 31, 2025, the Wales and west of England squad arrested 1,057 illegal workers, up an astounding 114% on the previous year. The number of visits was up too, by 96% to 1,477, matching a surge in illegal migrant landings in the UK.
During a January operation at a dairy farm in Llangedwyn, Powys, six Romanians were arrested for visa infractions. Another visit to a solar farm in Anglesey on March 20 led to 16 arrests and a referral notice being served on the subcontractor.
Particular focus has been on tackling employers who facilitate illegal working, often subjecting migrants to squalid conditions and illegal working hours below minimum wage. Restaurants, nail bars and construction sites have been among the hundreds of businesses targeted.
"In the last financial year we arrested more illegal workers than any immigration enforcement team in the country," Richard revealed. "In the first eight weeks of this financial year we've done more than double the arrests than the same period last year. So we're looking at well over 2,000 (arrests) if we keep on the same trajectory."
Is that a positive development or a cause for concern? "It depends which way you look at it I suppose," said Richard." I think at least it shows our commitment to prioritise and target illegal working."
A recent raid on a distribution centre uncovered so many undocumented workers that it overwhelmed a computer system used by officers known as Pronto. For each individual case, the system logs details such as name, date of birth, arrival date in the UK, visa information, contact information, any mitigating circumstances, and what the employer has told visiting officers.
Richard observed that the nature of the job is becoming much less predictable. "Our activity has rocketed. Now there are far more jobs because illegal working has grown and evolved.
"It's still the usual suspects – barbers, takeaways, restaurants, corner shops – but it's not always like that anymore. It's rife too in the care sector, construction sector and even farming. We're now doing farms in Wales with some success."
Richard, who has a 25-year tenure in immigration enforcement, shed light on the devastating reality for many who are led to the UK by people smugglers with false promises of an improved life with ample opportunities. Instead, they often find themselves in deplorable living conditions, earning scant wages for long, harsh hours under the perpetual risk of arrest and expulsion.
"A lot of them, I think, see a better future than is the reality when they get here," said Richard. Hopeful migrants often pay hefty sums for transport, sometimes up to £10,000, which they then strive to repay only to encounter bitter disappointment.
"There are often some really sad cases," he said. "We went to a brothel and encountered three Brazilian sex workers. I believed them when they said they never had any intention of being sex workers but they came here and fell into it and the money was better than what they got at home.
"One had made £10,000 and we seized it all because it had clearly been gained unlawfully. All three of them went back to Brazil with nothing. They'd clearly been duped.
"The incentive mainly is financial. If someone is illegal they'll more than likely work for less money or, in certain cases, will work for no money at all and would just get accommodation or food in return. Sometimes they're told when they get here they'll be working and earning money beyond their wildest dreams and often that's not the case. They realise the streets aren't paved with gold.
"It's clear exploitation but sadly they don't always see it like that because life might be so difficult for them back home. In many cases they're living in awful conditions, sharing a room with four or five others, and they're sending the majority of the money back to their families."
The team has now been alerted by a local tip-off that another Chinese takeaway in Caerphilly borough may have illegal workers. Upon visiting the establishment, the officers encounter a visibly distressed family of five.
The father, who runs the takeaway, struggles to find his words initially and invites the officers to check every corner of the premises, hastily asserting, "No-one is hiding here." Sign up for the North Wales Live newsletter sent twice daily to your inbox
During my time with the enforcement team, I've noticed their consistent calmness and respectfulness on these operations. Quickly realising that no laws are being broken, they offer their apologies and depart from the property. "That one is most likely a malicious report," Richard remarks.
When asked what he means, he explains: "Someone who doesn't like them. We call it malicious intel. We do always try and corroborate checks to rule out a possibility of malicious intel but if that isn't possible.
"If we haven't visited the premises in years we tend to decide it's probably worth looking at just in case. It's always difficult because it can be worrying for the owners, particularly if there are children involved."
He said officers often receive valuable information via anonymous tips by the public. "Sources remain completely anonymous but they tend to be from police, members of the public, or other times it's us targeting known problem areas," Richard said.
"At the moment it's delivery drivers that is a big one for us. They'll stop to pick up an order and we'll intercept. But many of them are in a WhatsApp group together and word will get around about where we are, so it can be tricky. It can sound straightforward but it definitely isn't."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Evil couple kill 12-year-old daughter by drugging and suffocating her
Evil couple kill 12-year-old daughter by drugging and suffocating her

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

Evil couple kill 12-year-old daughter by drugging and suffocating her

A cruel couple told police their daughter had disappeared from their family home - but it became clear they'd drugged and suffocated her, leaving her for dead on a country road To the outside world, they looked like the perfect family - Rosario Porto and her husband Alfonso Basterra were in their mid-30s when they adopted a baby girl. ‌ According to The Guardian, Punto, a lawyer from Santiago de Compostela, northern Spain, and Basterra, a journalist from the Basque Country, had had no trouble persuading local Spanish authorities that they would make good parents. ‌ The wealthy Spanish couple adopted Asunta Fong Yang as a baby, but when she was just 12 years old, she was found dead beside a country road. ‌ READ MORE: Man murdered by ex-girlfriend on Christmas Day tragically predicted his own death Porto even appeared on local television to share her wisdom and experience about adopting. ‌ At first, things were great - Asunta was so bright she skipped an academic year, and the family's privilege meant she could enjoy private classes in English, French, Chinese, ballet, violin, and piano. 'She once told us what her Saturdays were like,' Asunta's ballet teacher, an English woman named Gail Brevitt, recalled. 'She got up at 7 am, did Chinese from 8 until 10, came to ballet from 10.15 to 12.30, then did French until lunchtime. And then there was violin and piano.' To the outside world, everything looked like a dream. Carmen González, the family's cleaner and nanny, said: 'To me they seemed an idyllic family." ‌ But behind closed doors, things were far from perfect. In 2009, Porto spent two nights in a private psychiatric hospital, saying she felt suicidal, apathetic, and guilty. Then, in 2013, she and Basterra divorced after Porto lost both her parents in the preceding 18 months and admitted to having an affair. Despite their struggles, no one suspected they were capable of murdering the child they had adopted. But on September 22, 2013, Rosario Porto and Alfonso Basterra reported Asunta missing. The police record noted that Asunta had been left at her mother's apartment doing her homework at 7 pm while Porto went to the family's country house 20 minutes away. ‌ Even though there was no physical evidence, such as fingerprints or fibres, linking Porto to the girl's corpse, the police had CCTV evidence from a camera at a petrol station near her apartment. The footage showed Porto driving the family's car towards their country house with a long-haired girl sitting beside her. The timecode revealed the footage had been taken at a time when, according to Porto's versions of events, Asunta was meant to be at home. When shown the video, Porto admitted the passenger was her daughter, but claimed Asunta felt ill and was later taken home. But police noted that when they had taken her to the country house hours after the body was found, the mum rushed towards a room that contained a wastepaper basket with bits of orange baler twine inside. ‌ The twine was similar to some found next to the body, which, investigators concluded, must have been used to tie Asunta's limbs together. However, forensic scientists were unable to prove bits found on the corpse came from the house. In addition to the CCTV footage, forensic results suggested Asunta had been drugged and then smothered. Tests of Asunta's blood and urine revealed toxic levels of lorazepam – the main active ingredient in the Orfidal pills that Porto had been prescribed to help with her anxiety attacks. ‌ Meanwhile, teachers at two music academies recalled that in the months before her death, Asunta had been unable to read her sheet music or walk straight. 'I took some white powders,' she told Isabel Bello, who ran one of the academies. 'I don't know what they are giving me. No one tells me the truth,' she complained to a violin teacher. Forensic scientists tested a strand of Asunta's hair and discovered the presence of lorazepam along the first three centimetres and concluded she had also been ingesting smaller doses of the drug for three months. Investigators believed Porto murdered Asunta, but she wouldn't have been able to lift the body alone, as she was slight and only 4ft 8in tall. ‌ In October 2015, the prosecution laid out its case before a jury, claiming the couple devised a plan to kill their own daughter – though they eventually downgraded the charges against Basterra, saying he was an accomplice to his ex-wife's murder plot. Asunta, the jury was told, had somehow been made to swallow at least 27 ground-up pills – nine times as powerful as a strong adult dose – on the day she died. The judge handed Basterra and Porto 18-year sentences, as the crime was committed before a new law introduced life sentences for child murderers. Both have appealed to have their convictions overturned.

Human remains found in house confirmed as dad missing for six years
Human remains found in house confirmed as dad missing for six years

Daily Record

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Record

Human remains found in house confirmed as dad missing for six years

Police have launched a murder investigation after missing person Richard Dyson's remaisn were found. Human remains found in a house have been confirmed as a dad who vanished s ix years ago. ‌ Richard Dyson, 55, was reported missing in 2019 but on July 14 a grim discovery was made inside a property in Barnsley, South Yorkshire. ‌ Officers carried out tests after the human remains were reovered and police confirmed today, Saturday, August 2, that they belonged to the missing father. His family were informed, and are being supported by trained police officers. ‌ Detectives have now launched a murder investigation. Two men, aged 72 and 71, were rearrested on suspicion of murder after the discovery, and have been released on bail. An investigation into the death is ongoing, reports the Mirror. South Yorkshire Police's Detective Inspector Adam Watkinson said: "Our thoughts today are with Richard Dyson's family on what is an extremely difficult day for everyone who knew and loved him. ‌ "We have supported Richard's loved ones throughout our investigation into his disappearance, and will continue to do so following this tragic news. Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community! Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today. You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland. No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team. All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in! If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'. "We're urging the public and members of the media to please respect their privacy at this time. "Our investigation into Richard's death is very much ongoing and I'd urge anyone who has information which could help our investigation to share it with us if you have not done so already." The force has asked anyone who could help with their inquiries to quote incident number 459 on November 25, 2019.

Biggest ever drug dealer named as Royal Family member who overshadowed Pablo Escobar
Biggest ever drug dealer named as Royal Family member who overshadowed Pablo Escobar

Daily Mirror

time12 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Biggest ever drug dealer named as Royal Family member who overshadowed Pablo Escobar

Queen Victoria reigned for 63 years but the monarch was also major player in the opium trade, and she has now been named the biggest drug dealer in history by Time magazine Queen Victoria, an English monarch, has been dubbed the greatest drug kingpin in history. The Queen was known for her fondness for alcohol, particularly a peculiar blend of whisky and red wine. ‌ However, long before the birth of notorious drug lord Joaquín Guzmán (El Chapo) and Pablo Escobar, Victoria had a well-known interest in drugs. One of her preferred beverages was Vin Mariani, a concoction made by infusing cocoa leaves in French red wine, to which cocaine was added. According to the BBC, Victoria, who ascended to the throne at the tender age of 18 in 1837, is said to have enjoyed 'cocaine gum' with a young Winston Churchill. ‌ It's worth noting that cocaine was legal at the time, and Europeans were starting to experiment with this new substance. Cocaine chewing gum was touted as a self-esteem booster and a remedy for toothaches. ‌ The queen also believed it was a health drug with no adverse effects. Victoria, who presided over the British Empire, also used a liquid form of cannabis for menstrual pain and chloroform during childbirth. Tony McMahon, writing in Smithsonian magazine, stated: "Queen Victoria, I think by any standard, she loved her drugs." ‌ In addition to cocaine and cannabis, Victoria also consumed a glass of laudanum every morning, a mixture of opium (the dried residue of poppies) and alcohol. And it was her connection with opium that saw her branded the biggest drug dealer in history by Time magazine, who even claimed she made "Escobar and El Chapo look like low-level street dealers". The young monarch encountered conflict with China from the earliest moments of her reign. The Chinese supplied tea-loving Brits with their favourite beverage, but there was nothing to exchange in return, meaning only one nation was making money. ‌ Yet opium quickly became the solution, and it was conveniently cultivated in British-controlled India. Consequently, the British East India Company conducted business with China throughout Victoria's rule. This opium commerce wasn't unprecedented, but according to Time, it "grew exceptionally" following her ascension to the throne. ‌ Opium was considered a valuable painkiller, so the British East India Company reaped enormous profits from it, particularly when the Chinese became dependent, making them prepared to pay increasingly higher prices for the habit-forming substance. Following this reversal in economic power from China to Britain, the Chinese chose to clamp down on the narcotic, which was illegal in the nation but this was typically overlooked. This ultimately sparked the notorious Opium Wars. Academic Lin Zexu penned a letter directly to Queen Victoria declaring it was unethical to be saturating China with substances that were causing millions of their "elites" to become addicted. ‌ However, the drug trade reportedly accounted for up to 20% of the empire's annual revenue, so the aforementioned letter was never even opened. According to AlJazeera, a Chinese official wrote: "He who sells opium shall receive the death penalty and he who smokes it also the death penalty." Victoria was soon compelled to address the escalating situation after Lin Zexu ordered the interception of a fleet of British ships in 1839, before a staggering amount of opium (2.5 million pounds) was dumped into the South China Sea. Victoria declared war on China (known as the First Opium War), resulting in the deaths of thousands of Chinese citizens. Utterly defeated, a "peace treaty" was signed, which saw Britain take control of Hong Kong and more opium ports were established in the region. This brutal defeat, during Victoria's reign, was seen as the "century of humiliation" for China. Despite the loss of innocent lives, Victoria, who ruled for 63 years, ruthlessly ensured the opium money kept flowing. It was for this reason that she has been labelled by Time as the most powerful and successful drug lord in history.

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