The flood of immigrants that faild to materialise (uk)
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3/1/2007- The cameras were ready. Reporters stood poised to intercept the vanguard of Britain's latest invasion from eastern Europe. The only thing missing was the migrants.
The feared flood of workers from
Bulgaria and Romania failed to materialise at Heathrow airport
yesterday as citizens of the European Union's two newest member states
appeared to prefer to stay at home. Flights arriving at terminal one
from Bucharest yesterday carried visitors from the Indian sub-continent
and crestfallen representatives of certain newspapers who had been sent
to the Romanian capital to chronicle the expected influx, only to find
no takers. As one photographer for a red-top newspaper put it:
"Complete waste of time. No one wanted to fly. We even offered to help
with the fare." The slow start to what one campaign group has said it
expects to be a wave of 180,000 UK-bound Romanians and Bulgarians in
2007 was greeted by some as proof that the flood - according to some
more alarmist reports likely to include HIV-infected teenagers,
Bulgarian gangsters and child thieves - is going to be more of a
trickle. The Government is offering 22,000 work permits to citizens
from both countries after refusing to grant an unrestricted right to
work in the UK following the arrival of 600,000 migrant workers from
new EU members such as Poland in 2004. The Home Office has refused to
give a projection of how Romanian and Bulgarian workers it expects. But
Simona Tatulescu, a Romanian tax expert who arrived in Britain in 2002
and works as a consultant advising new migrants, said: "When people
return to their offices this week expecting to see lots of Romanian
plasterers or Bulgarian cleaners, they will be disappointed. "The
people who want to come here want a better life and they want to
achieve it by setting up their own business or working for themselves.
They don't want to come here to live on benefit and be miserable. "If
they come to do a more basic job, such as agricultural work, then they
are not here to stay. They are fulfilling a demand to do very hard
physical work and then returning home."
The high cost of flying from Bulgaria and Romania, where the average
wage is about £150 per month, as well as the celebration of the
Orthodox Christmas this week means that many of those planning to come
to Britain will not travel until mid-January. A new budget airline,
Wizz Air, starts direct flights from Bucharest to Luton on 15 January
with its cheapest fare costing £35. Travel by coach from Bucharest and
the Bulgarian capital, Sofia, which takes up to three days, is cheaper.
Among those who have already arrived, there was a mixture of enthusiasm
for the higher wages in Britain and bemusement over the concerns in
their host country at their arrival. The Government launched an
advertising campaign in Romania and Bulgaria before Christmas warning
that anyone wanting to come to the UK would need a work permit and
those breaking the rule face a £1,000 fine. Ion Gabriel, 35, had given
up his job in Bucharest as an insurance clerk to work on a flower farm
in Surrey. He said: "I've come to work for six months. I'm very happy -
the work will be hard but the money will be good. I will then go back
to university in Bucharest. Romania is my home, I don't want to stay in
Britain. "What is so wrong with people like me coming here to work? It
is work that the British don't want to do." It is a question which
Britain's horticulturists, who contribute £1.76bn a year to the
economy, are also asking. Under new rules brought in by the Department
for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, a long-standing permit scheme
for agricultural workers must give 40 per cent of its places to
Bulgarian and Romanian citizens. From next year, all 16,500 places on
the seasonal agricultural workers' schemes must be first offered to
Bulgarians and Romanians.
But critics say that it is unclear whether there are enough Bulgarians
or Romanians who want to come to Britain to meet the demand. Martin
Howarth, director of policy for the National Farmers' Union, said: "The
new rules have thrown a system that worked extremely well into chaos.
Last year, there were dramatically fewer Bulgarian and Romanian workers
than the 40 per cent mark. "Farmers are scratching their heads about
what will happen when that quota reaches 100 per cent. It is a complete
mess."
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