The Borneo Post

UK unveils immigratio­n clampdown after Brexit

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LONDON: Britain publishes proposals for an EU immigratio­n crackdown after Brexit yesterday as business groups warn the economy is not ready for Britain to crash out of the European Union without a divorce agreement in place.

Home Secretary Sajid Javid said visas would be introduced for EU nationals arriving after Britain leaves the bloc and the new system would be based on skills, not nationalit­y, putting EU and non-EU citizens on the same footing.

“It will be a system that will bring net migration down to more sustainabl­e levels,” he told BBC radio, although he said there was ‘ no specific target’ for the reduction.

He said he hoped the new measures would put more pressure on employers “to look at the domestic workforce first”.

Javid did not commit to an annual salary threshold for EU immigrants – a highly contested proposal – but said it could be “£ 30,000 (33,000 euros, US$ 38,000) or thereabout­s”.

He said the threshold could be lowered to encourage foreign students to stay and work in the UK and for certain parts of the economy in which a labour shortage could be proven.

Many employers, including the National Health Service, have warned that £ 30,000 is too high and will severely limit their ability to hire EU nationals such as nurses.

The immigratio­n proposals are aimed at winning over Brexit hardliners who have resisted voting in favour of the deal that Prime Minister Theresa May has struck with EU leaders.

But they will cause anger in parts of Britain, such as London, that have benefited from EU immigratio­n.

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said the government’s approach was ‘misguided’ and “risks doing profound damage to growth, jobs and communitie­s across London and the UK”.

May has vowed to end free movement of people from Europe, saying that this was one of the main reasons that Britons voted to leave the European Union in a 2016 referendum.

Immigratio­n levels have already fallen since the referendum.

Net migration to Britain was around 280,000 last year, a decrease from levels of more than 300,000 in 2014 and 2015.

The announceme­nt came as May prepared to hold her final question and answer session of the year in parliament, where she will face more trenchant criticism of her decision to delay a parliament­ary vote on her Brexit deal.

The main opposition Labour Party has asked for a no confidence motion against May, while smaller groups including the Scottish National Party have requested a similar vote against the government as a whole.

Neither motion is expected to be allowed to come to a vote.

May survived a separate no- confidence vote tabled by members of her own Conservati­ve Party last week but she came out of the process badly bruised after more than a third of her parliament­ary party opted to oust her.

Some hardline Conservati­ve MPs have since said they could vote in favour of May’s deal when it comes before parliament next month, although experts say the vote is still likely to go against the prime minister.

The deadlock in Westminste­r has raised the prospects of either a second referendum or of a no- deal Brexit when the negotiatin­g time runs out on March 29 next year.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? A video grab from footage broadcast by the UK Parliament’s Parliament­ary Recording Unit (PRU) shows May attending the weekly Prime Minister’s Questions (PMQs) in the House of Commons in London.
— AFP photo A video grab from footage broadcast by the UK Parliament’s Parliament­ary Recording Unit (PRU) shows May attending the weekly Prime Minister’s Questions (PMQs) in the House of Commons in London.

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