Vanuatu government says its shocked at unilateral action by the UK over UK-bound migrants

Vanuatu government says its shocked at unilateral action by the UK over UK-bound migrants

The UK government is shocked at the unilateral action by the UK-bound migrants on one of the biggest islands in the Pacific and is calling on its Asian neighbours to avoid taking advantage of the situation.

British authorities have already confiscated the boats and the immigration officers who are ferrying the migrants have been given strict orders to avoid them if they do not give up the ships.

A decision is also being considered by the British embassy in the tiny Pacific nation to restrict the movement of the migrants in the event of a dispute with the British government.

The UK has been forced to issue an executive order for the island of Vanuatu to close down its immigration processing centers after Britain has imposed an immediate ban on all fore바카라ign vessels passing through the island since August.

There are about 2,500 British citizens living on Vanuatu but many of them have been staying for months at a time on tiny boats that are ferrying migrants with little to no legal documentation.

A spokesman for the British foreign secretary said he was shocked at the decision.

카지노 사이트We have always tried to do things in a way that helps the people living in those circumstances and it’s obvious that that hasn’t worked.

“We must always remember that people who바카라사이트 are in this situation in the first place, and who have gone through the process in the first place, are people who are in the wrong place at the wrong time.

“I know there are many, many people who’ve already been through this process, but we have asked them for the advice and assistance of British people to help them deal with this new situation, and that is what they have been given.”

But he confirmed that Britain will apply new regulations on all people who come to Vanuatu, including those trying to flee the conflict in their home countries of Syria or Eritrea.

He warned that it was an “unprecedented move” and would be “unacceptable” to continue “exceptionally harsh measures” for people who are seeking to reach the UK.

The island nation is already suffering severe poverty and its population, like that of most Pacific island nations, is expected to fall below 500 by next year.

“It seems as if we have come to the brink of a humanitarian crisis which, if we are to make that progress, we have to use all of the necessary means. That’s what we do in a number of other nations,” he said.

Comments are closed.

Prof. Manuela Almeida
×