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A new asylum policy announced Monday by the UK Labour Party will allow authorities to confiscate the jewelry and other belongings of asylum-seekers in order to pay for their claims to be processed.

The policy, which some critics said was "reminiscent of the Nazi era," was just one part of the Labour Party's total overhaul of the nation's asylum system, which it says must be made much more restrictive in order to fend off rising support for the far-right.

In a policy paper released Monday, the government announced that it would seek to make the status of many refugees temporary and gave the government new powers to deport refugees if it determines it to be safe. It also revoked policies requiring the government to provide housing and legal support to those fleeing persecution, while extending the amount of time they need to wait for permanent residency to 20 years, up from just five, for those who arrive illegally.

The UK government also said it will attempt to change the way judges interpret human rights law to more seamlessly carry out deportations, including stopping immigrants from using their rights to family life under the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) to avoid deportation.

In an article for the Guardian published Sunday, UK Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood called the reforms "the most significant and comprehensive changes to our asylum system in a generation." She said they were necessary because the increase in migration to the UK had stirred up "dark forces" in the country that are "seeking to turn that anger into hate."

Nigel Farage, the leader of the far-right Reform UK Party, is leading national polls on the back of a viciously anti-immigrant campaign that has included calls to abolish the UK's main pathway for immigrants to become permanent residents, known as "leave to remain."

Meanwhile, in September, over 100,000 people gathered in London for an anti-immigrant rally led by Tommy Robinson, a notorious far-right figure who founded the anti-Muslim English Defence League (EDL). The event saw at least 26 police officers injured by protesters.

Last summer, riots swept the UK after false claims—spread by Robinson, Farage, and other far-right figures—that the perpetrator of the fatal stabbing of two young girls and their caretaker had been a Muslim asylum-seeker. A hotel housing asylum-seekers was set on fire, mosques were vandalised and destroyed, and several immigrants and other racial minorities were brutally beaten.

Mahmood said that if changes are not made to the asylum system, "we risk losing popular consent for having an asylum system at all."

But as critics were quick to point out, the far-right merely took Labour's crackdown as a sign that it is winning the war for hearts and minds.

Robinson gloated to his followers that "the Overton window has been obliterated, well done patriots!" while Farage chortled that Mahmood "sounds like a Reform supporter."

Many members of the Labour coalition expressed outrage at their ostensibly Liberal Party's bending to the far-right.

"The government should be ashamed that its migration policies are being cheered on by Tommy Robinson and Reform," said Nadia Whittome, the Labour MP for Nottingham East. "Instead of standing up to anti-migrant hate, this is laying the foundations for the far-right."

In a speech in Parliament, she chided the home secretary's policy overhaul, calling it "dystopian."

"It's shameful that a Labour government is ripping up the rights and protections of people who have endured unimaginable trauma," she said. "Is this how we'd want to be treated if we were fleeing for our lives? Of course not."

The UK has signed treaties, including the ECHR, obligating it to process the claims of those who claim asylum because they face persecution in their home countries based on race, religion, nationality, group membership, or political opinion. According to data from the Home Office, over 111,000 people claimed asylum in the year from June 2024-25, more than double the number who did in 2019.

The spike came as the number of people displaced worldwide reached an all-time high of over 123.2 million at the end of 2024, according to the Norwegian Refugee Council, with desperate people seeking safety from escalating conflicts in Sudan, Ukraine, Myanmar, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and across the Middle East.

In her op-ed, Mahmood lamented that "the burden borne by taxpayers has been unfair." However, as progressive commentator Owen Jones pointed out, the UK takes in%20(Figure%207).) far fewer asylum-seekers than its peers: "Last year, Germany took over twice as many asylum-seekers as the UK. France, Italy, and Spain took 1.5 times as many. Per capita, we take fewer than most EU countries. Poorer countries such as Greece take proportionately more than we do."

The Labour government, led by Prime Minister Keir Starmer, already boasts that it has deported more than 50,000 people in the UK illegally since it came to power in 2024, but it has predictably done little to satiate the far-right, which has only continued to gain momentum in polls despite the crackdown.

Under the new rules, it is expected that the government will be able to fast-track many more deportations, particularly of families with children.

The jewelry rule, meanwhile, has become a potent symbol of how the Labour Party has shifted away from its promises of economic egalitarianism toward austerity and punishment of the most vulnerable.

"Labour won't redistribute wealth from billionaires," said former party leader Jeremy Corbyn, who is now an independent MP. "But they will seize belongings from those fleeing war and persecution."


From Common Dreams via This RSS Feed.

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Channel: DirtFish Published: 2025-08-23 22:38 UTC

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dEiMm8tWxYE


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Channel: DirtFish Published: 2025-08-23 16:37 UTC

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ejmB4g4uTlU


Posted by BlueFlagBot - Quality Score: 70/100

[–] NGnius@lemmy.ca 2 points 6 months ago

Nobody won a rally, it's just a headline that can be parsed to get more than one meaning. I presume this is the correct parsing:

(Subject) [verb] {object}

(Albertans 'crushed' by Liberal election win) [rally] {to separate from Canada}

or phrased less ambiguously:

Albertans who were 'crushed' by the Liberals winning the election went to a rally about separating from Canada

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MARTA’s Five Points overhaul is officially back on (soon) Josh Green Thu, 04/03/2025 - 16:03

Following a year-long saga of dueling audits, canopy disputes, (alleged) intentional permit holdups, tweaked construction plans, delayed progress, an opposition rally, and other frictions, MARTA announced today its Five Points station transformation has a firm restart date. 

The transit authority’s conversion of the concrete-heavy, bunker-like, 1970s facility into a more opened-up and accessible transit hub will resume May 17, beginning with the detour of numerous downtown bus routes. 

The $230-million project’s first phase—the deconstruction of the Five Points station concrete canopy—was paused last summer to allow for “additional planning to ensure continued station access,” as MARTA officials put it this week. 

Other impacts of construction will include closing station entrances at Alabama Street, Broad Street Plaza, and Peachtree Street and relocating station offices. MARTA leaders say dates for those closures will be shared once finalized. 

As deconstruction moves forward, MARTA officials stress that street-level station and elevator access will remain open on Forsyth Street. Ditto for bus access on Forsyth Street. 

alt A refined preview depicting how the opened-up transit hub could look and function. Courtesy of MARTA

During construction, Five Points rail service and transfers will operate as scheduled and won’t be impacted, per MARTA. The same goes for bus routes around Five Points operated by regional transit providers CobbLinc, Ride Gwinnett, and Xpress. 

MARTA say the broader goal remains to convert Five Points station into “a vibrant city center with improved transit connectivity, increased safety, and enhanced customer amenities.” 

Future phases will include erecting a new canopy and improving the station’s bus hub and pedestrian connection to Broad Street. Other facets will see new community spaces, public art, and agriculture components, per MARTA. No revised timeline for completion has been specified. 

The $230-million price tag for Five Points’ overhaul is being largely funded by the More MARTA Atlanta half-penny sales tax approved by Atlanta voters in 2016. Other funding sources include $13.8 million from the State of Georgia and a $25-million Federal RAISE Grant.  

MARTA has said 17,000 pedestrians and bus riders rely on Five Points to access the MARTA heavy rail system each day. 

Detractors, including several city councilmembers, have publicly come out against MARTA’s redesign plan on the basis, in their view, it will detract from a town-square feel and restrict pedestrian and cycling access in favor of infrastructure for 10 bus routes that connect there. (Find a refresher of what MARTA has planned for Five Point in the gallery above, via the latest renderings available.) 

Regarding bus routes, MARTA outlined the changes scheduled to begin next month as follows:  

BUS SERVICE IMPACTS BEGINNING MAY 17:

The following routes will stop at Five Points on Forsyth Street:

  • 3 – Martin Luther King Jr. Drive/Auburn Avenue
  • 40 – Peachtree Street/Downtown
  • 813 – Atlanta University Center
  • 21 – Memorial Drive
  • 49 – McDonough Boulevard
  • 55 – Jonesboro Road
  • 107 – Glenwood
  • 186 – Rainbow Road Drive/South DeKalb

Three bus routes will be detoured to maintain service to downtown and no longer stop at Five Points:

  • 26 – Marietta Street/Perry Boulevard
  • 42 – Pryor Road
  • 816 – North Highland Avenue

The following routes will terminate at Georgia State station:

  • 21 – Memorial Drive
  • 42 – Pryor Road
  • 49 – McDonough Boulevard
  • 55 – Jonesboro Road
  • 107 – Glenwood
  • 186 – Rainbow Road Drive/South DeKalb

The following routes will terminate at King Memorial station:

  • 26 – Marietta Street/Perry Boulevard
  • 813 – Atlanta University Center
  • 899 – Old Fourth Ward

The following route will terminate at Civic Center station:

  • 816 – North Highland Avenue

...

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MARTA City of Atlanta Five Points MARTA Transit MARTA Audit Mauldin & Jenkins Atlanta Transit Alternate Transportation Alternative Transportation Atlanta City Council More MARTA More MARTA Atlanta Program MARTA Oversight Committee KPMG

Images

alt A refined preview depicting how the opened-up transit hub could look and function. Courtesy of MARTA

alt MARTA

alt MARTA

alt MARTA

alt MARTA

alt MARTA

Subtitle Street closures, bus route changes on tap during “vibrant city center” transformation, says MARTA

Neighborhood Downtown

Background Image

Image A rendering showing a large downtown Atlanta train station with a new canopy and open plazas with many trees.

Before/After Images

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