Over a thousand people taking part in or supporting anti-mass migration protests in the United Kingdom have been arrested—far higher than the number of people-smugglers detained last year. On Tuesday, British police boasted that over 1,024 people had been arrested and 575 charged for taking part in or inciting disorder or “stirring up hatred” on social media.
In some cases, protesters have been convicted for as little as shouting at police. Others have been arrested for posting “inaccurate information” about the migration-background suspect in a deadly mass stabbing in Southport, which sparked the current unrest. Some of those arrested are children, including at least two boys aged 12 and another aged just 11.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer threatened draconian measures against the protesters when the disorder began. Some accuse the premier, prosecutors, and police of implementing two-tier justice, with mobs of Muslim counter-demonstrators able to harass journalists and attack white Britons as the police adopted a hands-off approach in consultation with so-called “community leaders.”
ILLEGALS NOT ARRESTED.
People smugglers have been arrested at a far lower rate by the British government. Home Office statistics show only 246 were arrested last year, when the notionally right-wing Conservative Party was still in government, along with just 86 pilots of small boats transporting illegals across the English Channel.
Last year, nearly 30,000 illegals crossed the English Channel in small boats, but very few were actually arrested for the offense of “illegal arrival.” Even factoring in arrests for illegals working without a permit, arrests totaled just 380 in 2023.
Moreover, the new Labour government has already scrapped the Rwanda deportation plan, which would have seen illegal aliens transported to the African country to claim asylum, wasting hundreds of millions of taxpayer pounds already spent readying the scheme.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer claims he will take action on the Channel crisis, but so far this year, over 33,000 illegals have attempted to or succeeded in reaching England, with a significant uptick in crossings since Labour took over from the Conservatives.