Trinidad is sick of Britain’s lax asylum system
From our UK edition
As political speeches go, it struck familiar themes. An island nation was being overrun by dangerous criminals, taking advantage of its asylum system. Word was spreading that the country was a soft touch. And as ever, millions of ordinary folks were paying the price. The violence is largely confined to the ghettoes, and many struggle to see why Britain’s asylum system classifies Trinidad as a warzone from which its citizens deserved sanctuary Nigel Farage, on the stump in Clacton-on-Sea in 2024? Or Home Secretary Shabana Mahmoud, perhaps, unveiling her tough new Danish-style migration policy earlier this month? No, the speaker was Keith Rowley, the prime minister of Trinidad and Tobago, 3,000 miles away in the Caribbean. But the island he was talking about was indeed Britain.