The Sun (Malaysia)

Immigratio­n plans slammed

Britain’s govt faces backlash over move to cut ‘cheap labour from Europe’ in favour of high-skilled English speakers

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LONDON: Britain’s government yesterday faced a backlash over its new post-Brexit immigratio­n plans, which are designed to cut “cheap Labour from Europe” in favour of high-skilled English speakers.

The points-based system is due to start on Jan 1, 2021, and was billed as “taking back control” of Britain’s borders, a key demand of anti-EU campaigner­s in the divisive Brexit debate.

Interior Minister Priti Patel called the sweeping reforms “firm and fair” and said it would make it easier for higher-skilled workers to get visas, and harder for low-skilled migrants to do so.

“We need to shift the focus of our economy away from a reliance on cheap labour from Europe and instead concentrat­e on investment in technology and automation,” she said.

The plans are the biggest change to immigratio­n policy in 50 years and will go before parliament, where Prime Minister Boris Johnson has a comfortabl­e majority.

But the Conservati­ve government was accused of failing to assess the impact of the reforms on the economy, while businesses heavily reliant on foreign labour, questioned the feasibilit­y of the policy.

The main opposition Labour party said some sectors’ reliance on foreign workers would force the government to make numerous exceptions, rendering the new rules “meaningles­s”.

Its home affairs spokesman Diana Abbott called it a “salary threshold system”, which would hit the already hard-pressed staterun National

Health Service and social care sector.

“If they are all shortterm visas, only the most desperate workers will come and will have the effect of creating a twotier workforce,” Abott said.

Her opposite number at the smaller Liberal Democrats said the policy was “based on xenophobia, not the social and economic needs of our country”.

“Too many businesses are already struggling to hire the workers they need. Now the Tories want to stop them recruiting all but the highestpai­d employees from abroad,” said Christine Jardine.

Britain left the EU after 47 years of membership on Jan 31.

EU rules are still in place until the end of the year as London and Brussels thrash out a new trade deal.

But Jardine and others warned that 10 months was not enough time for businesses to prepare for the end to free movement of EU nationals to other member states.

The plans do not affect more than 3.2 million EU citizens who have applied to stay in Britain under the official settlement scheme.

The proposals require each foreign worker to earn 70 points to be eligible and a set number of points for each qualificat­ion or skill.

A maximum 20 points are awarded for prospectiv­e migrants who will earn at least £25,600 (RM138,726) and no points for those who will make the required minimum of £20,480. Twenty points also go to people with an “appropriat­e skill level” and another 20 for those who speak English “at required level”. – AFP

 ??  ?? A flower picker from Romania harvesting daffodils on a farm near Holbeach in eastern England.
A flower picker from Romania harvesting daffodils on a farm near Holbeach in eastern England.

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