Malta Independent

More Kenyan Asians flee to Britain

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Another 96 Indians and Pakistanis from Kenya have arrived in Britain today, the latest in a growing exodus of Kenyan Asians fleeing from laws which prevent them making a living.

The party included nine children under two, and all flew in on cut-price one-way tickets costing about £60 - less than half the normal single fare.

Omar Sharmar, an Indian who was forced to close his haulage business in Mombasa when the government refused to grant him a licence, estimates he has lost £2,000.

“Only Kenyan citizens are being allowed work permits,” he said. “I was forced to sell my fleet of lorries and come to Britain to look for a new life.”

An airline official in Nairobi estimated that the charter flights had taken between 1,200 and 1,500 Kenyan Asians in to Britain.

“We did find some difficulty filling the planes until last week,” he said.

“But in the last two or three days that attitude has changed, and there doesn’t seem to be any difficulty at all now. At the present rate I think this will continue for at least a year, if not more.”

Immigratio­n laws in Kenya are becoming increasing­ly draconian. Foreigners can only hold a job until a Kenyan national can be found to replace them: and more and more cities, including Nairobi, are demanding that the government bans non-Kenyans from owning a shop or trading in municipal markets.

If the Kenyan government caves in to such demands, the result is likely to be chaos, as most shops are owned by foreigners, and not enough citizens have the capital or knowledge to run small businesses.

Already, the tens of thousands of Asians, who have until now dominated commerce, industry and most key jobs in the country, are finding their lives made impossible.

Although most turned down the chance to take Kenyan nationalit­y when it was offered to them, more than 100,000 did take up the chance to get British passports.

They are now arriving at the rate of more than 1,000 a month to start a new life in the UK, a country which most have never seen.

The mass immigratio­n of thousands of Kenyan Asians caused a major crisis for the UK government of Prime Minister Harold Wilson.

The Home Secretary, James Callaghan, rushed through new legislatio­n aimed specifical­ly at curbing the flow of immigrants from East Africa.

The 1968 Commonweal­th Immigratio­n Act introduced a requiremen­t to demonstrat­e a “close connection” with the UK.

There were deep cabinet splits over the legislatio­n: cabinet papers have since quoted the then Commonweal­th Secretary, George Thomson, saying that “to pass such legislatio­n would be wrong in principle, clearly discrimina­tion on the grounds of colour, and contrary to everything we stand for.”

The criticisms, as well as growing tension on the issue provoked by Conservati­ve MP Enoch Powell’s infamous “Rivers of Blood” speech in April 1968, brought the issue of immigratio­n to the fore, and ultimately led to the Race Relations Act of 1976.

There are currently about 70,000 Indians in Kenya - about 0.25% of the population. Many have been there for four generation­s, yet they remain politicall­y powerless, and there is still pressure in some quarters to expel them from the country altogether.

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