Times of Oman

Post Brexit, Sturgeon aims to boost immigratio­n to Scotland

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ABERDEEN

(Scotland): Nicola Sturgeon’s pro-independen­ce Scottish National Party is leading a push to boost immigratio­n to the sparsely populated northern tip of Britain, an opposite tack to the UK government which aims to limit the number of new arrivals after Brexit.

Sturgeon, who is also first minister, will close the SNP’s conference on Saturday with a plea to give Scotland more control over what her party argues is the key challenge facing the economy.

Scotland’s population, much of which is rural and dispersed unlike the rest of the UK, is ageing more rapidly than other parts of the country. Boosting immigratio­n is essential to keep providing the workforce needed to drive economic growth, as well as to shore up public services such as in health.

Immigratio­n, however, is the thorniest political issue in the Brexit negotiatio­ns, and limiting the number of foreigners who enter the UK was a key element on which Britain’s overall 2016 vote to leave the European Union rested.

“Scotland is a welcoming country - our prosperity and our public services depend on it,” Sturgeon will tell delegates.

“If Westminste­r cannot or will not act in our best interests, it is time that our own parliament was able to do so ...It’s time for powers over migration to come to Scotland,” Sturgeon will say.

The British government has said it will not devolve powers over immigratio­n to Scotland, but pressure to abandon unrealisti­c targets to limit immigratio­n has been coming from many sides, including British businesses and from the ruling Conservati­ve party’s own ranks.

Ruth Davidson, leader of the Conservati­ve party in Scotland, has criticised the government’s targets as impractica­l.

Scotland voted to stay in the EU but will be taken out as part of the UK, which overall voted to leave.

Brexit has not been a catalyst for Scottish independen­ce but it has not dampened separatist fervour either, polls find, meaning that Sturgeon has to continue to balance her political act carefully despite being the biggest single vote winner in Scottish politics.

Forecasts from the Scottish government show that over the next 25 years the working population of Scotland will grow by only one per cent, compared with an increase of 25 per cent in the pension age population. Despite that, research by respected pollster John Curtice earlier this year found Scots overall do not support the idea of a different immigratio­n policy from the rest of the UK, and most Scots want the same policy nationwide.-

 ?? - Reuters ?? BRIEFING: First Minister Nicola Sturgeon speaks on the 20th anniversar­y of Scotland voting to establish its own Parliament, in Edinburgh, Britain, September 11, 2017.
- Reuters BRIEFING: First Minister Nicola Sturgeon speaks on the 20th anniversar­y of Scotland voting to establish its own Parliament, in Edinburgh, Britain, September 11, 2017.

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