sexta-feira, 18 de abril de 2025

Imigrantes e crime - percepção ou realidade?

 

Durante os últimos anos, assistimos a uma manipulação vergonhosa, por parte dos media, no que toca a crime e criminosos. Inventou-se, inclusivé uma nacionalidade que não existe: a nacionalidade estrangeira, para identificar todos os criminosos que não fossem caucasianos. 

O Governo admitiu - mas ainda não concretizou - a inserção, no dito RASI, da raça das vítimas de crime. Mais importante do que isto seria colocar também nesse território a raça dos criminosos. Nada como chamar os bois pelo nome e colocar no terreno políticas de segurança dirigidas a comunidades criminalizadas. Pelo menos, alguns jornais, como o Correio da Manhã, parecem estar a mudar de orientação. Já lá vi algumas notícias sobre crimes cometidos por indivíduos de nacionalidade indiana ou nepalesa. 

É pouco, mas é um princípio. Que irá aumentar, agora que estamos à beira dos dois milhões de imigrantes.

Não esquecer aqui as declarações recentes de um responsável do Observatório das Migrações, Pedro Góis, director científico daquela instituição que, em entrevista à Rádio Renascença, afirmou que "enquanto que a população nacional pode permanecer em casa dos pais mais uns anos, quem chega precisa de um espaço para habitar"...


 

 

Lista das principais Zonas Urbanas Sensíveis (eufemismo para gueto...)

 


Grande Lisboa

  1. Bairro da Cova da Moura (Amadora)
    – Maioritariamente de origem cabo-verdiana.

  2. Bairro da Jamaica (Seixal)
    – População maioritariamente de origem africana (Cabo Verde, Angola, Guiné-Bissau).

  3. Bairro da Quinta do Mocho (Loures)
    – População predominantemente africana, sobretudo cabo-verdiana e guineense.

  4. Bairro do Zambujal (Amadora)
    – Comunidade significativa de origem cabo-verdiana e cigana.

  5. Bairro da Bela Vista (Setúbal)
    – População mista, com presença significativa de comunidades ciganas e africanas.

  6. Bairro do Talude (Lisboa)
    – Presença de comunidades africanas e ciganas.


Área Metropolitana do Porto

  1. Bairro do Cerco do Porto (Porto)
    – Comunidade maioritariamente portuguesa, com presença de população cigana e africana.

  2. Bairro do Aleixo (Porto)
    – População maioritariamente portuguesa, com inclusão de famílias ciganas realojadas.

  3. Bairro da Pasteleira (Porto)
    – Diversidade étnica, com presença de população cigana e portuguesa em situação de exclusão.


Outras zonas

  1. Bairro da Estrada Militar (Loures)
    – Comunidades africanas e ciganas.

  2. Bairro do Rego (Lisboa)
    – Forte presença de imigrantes de origem africana.

  3. Bairro do Pendão (Queluz, Sintra)
    – Comunidade mista, com presença de famílias de origem cabo-verdiana.

Cria corvos que te comerão os olhos (velho ditado espanhol)

 


Jovem processa os pais por a terem feito nascer sem pedir licença

 


Requerentes de asilo, na Áustria, já não podem pedir o reagrupamento familiar

 


quarta-feira, 16 de abril de 2025

The truth about polygamy: A special investigation into how Muslim men can exploit the benefits system

 

Ghulam is a taxi driver who lives in Blackburn, a once-booming textile town in Lancashire. He has a terrace house near his local mosque (one of 53 in the area), a silver Nissan car and a very complex private life.

For he has so many children that he struggles to remember their names, and five wives from various countries, including Yemen, Egypt, Turkey and his own birthplace, Pakistan.

Ghulam’s latest bride is a shy 20-year-old called Hafeza. He brought her to Britain from Morocco, soon after his 45th birthday earlier this year. They married in an Islamic wedding ceremony called ‘the Nikah’ in her village, with Hafeza’s pleased parents among the guests. 

Thirty miles across the Pennines in Yorkshire, pizza delivery driver Wasim, 27, has an equally complicated domestic life.

He lives in a part of Dewsbury called Savile Town, a network of 11 terrace streets dominated by one of the biggest mosques in Europe, where most residents are Asian with origins in Pakistan or India.

Wasim has three wives, the first of whom lives with him and their three teenage sons. His other two wives have separate houses in Savile Town, one down the road and another round the corner. He visits each two nights a week.

The women have had several of Wasim’s children and he hopes the youngest bride (aged 19) will soon present him with another baby. 

I learned of Ghulam and Wasim this week while investigating a subject that is taboo in politically correct Britain. It is the huge rise of bigamy (having two wives) and polygamy (more than two) in our Muslim communities.

The issue was recently bravely highlighted by Baroness Flather, a crossbench life peer who was herself born in Lahore, now part of Pakistan.

She warned the Lords (and also wrote an article for the Mail on the subject) about how our shambolic benefits system is being exploited by men hailing from Pakistan and other Muslim nations who indulge in multiple marriages — with taxpayers forced to foot the bill.

As Baroness Flather explained: ‘The wives are regarded by the welfare system as single mothers, and are therefore entitled to a full range of lone parent payments.

'As a result, several “families” fathered by the same man can all claim benefits, as they are provided for by the welfare state, which treats them as if they were not related,’

Lady Flather also lamented the reluctance of politicians to address the issue: ‘It is certainly difficult to discuss this phenomenon of serial marriage and exploitation of the benefits system, with few people in Britain seeming to want to confront the disturbing truth.’

Two years ago, another peer, Baroness Warsi, born in Dewsbury to Pakistani parents, and now a Coalition Cabinet Minister, also voiced her concerns. She said cultural sensitivity was stopping politicians addressing the problem.

Yet this week I found those — from within the heart of the Asian communities — who were prepared to speak out.

Although the Government says there are only 1,000 such bigamous or polygamous unions in the UK, two experienced Lancashire social workers — one of Indian-English heritage and the other with Pakistani origins — told me that, although it’s difficult to be precise, in their estimation the figure is closer to 20,000.

The social workers said the multiple marriages are encouraged by a welfare system which allows a second, third or fourth wife to be treated as a single mother who gets a house and an array of other state payments for herself and her children.

Controversially, it means that a man can take a new spouse (from anywhere in the world), sire any number of children with her, and yet have no responsibility for this family’s upkeep or care.

To avoid breaking Britain’s matrimony laws, the men marry their extra ‘wives’ in an Islamic Nikah ceremony, either in their own homes or a mosque.

These marriages are not recognised officially, so they do not appear in government statistics or have  any status under the law. They  also do not count when assessing welfare payments.

Another technique is for a couple to marry legally under British law but then divorce, leaving them then to have a Nikah ceremony and continue living together. The woman will then be entitled to welfare payments as a single mother and the man can then bring another woman from abroad and legally marry her in Britain.

Men also cheat the system by bringing brides from abroad as nannies for their children, or as carers for a sick relative. The bride gets a year’s visitors’ visa, disappears into a tight-knit local community, and is entitled to receive welfare hand-outs.

While it has long been a cliche for men to complain that their wives and children take up most of their income, the reality for polygamous husbands is that the more babies he sires, the more money pours in for him and his wives.

As Tariq Ali, the 45-year-old co-founder of Project BME (Black Minority Ethnics), a charity based in Darwen, Lancashire, admits: ‘There are thousands of bigamous and polygamous marriages in the UK’s Pakistani community — the same community into which I was born.

'Every single man of my age who I bump into seems to have a third, fourth or fifth wife.

‘The issue is going unreported but in the Asian communities this is becoming a way of life. I think the number of polygamous relationships must be 20,000. 

(Continue)

 




 

Polícia inglesa proibida de usar cães pisteiros em suspeitos muçulmanos

 


Quase dois milhões de imigrantes em Portugal

 

Quase dois milhões de imigrantes em Portugal (A maioria muçulmanos....) - 1.932.000 imigrantes, em Abril de 2025, segundo fontes da AIMA, que preferem manter o anonimato.

Fraudes no reagrupamento familiar de imigrantes vão continuar

  Uma simulação de um pedido de reagrupamento familiar, numa família composta por residente em Portugal, mulher e filho menor, alvo do pedid...