Nigel Farage proposed Operation Restoring Justice to deport migrants who arrive without permission and those who entered illegally, targeting tens of thousands. The plan would offer cash incentives for voluntary departure and detain refusers in camps for deportation to countries of origin or alternative locations funded by the exchequer. The proposal would withdraw the UK from international treaties and bar the European Court of Human Rights, replacing universal protections with bespoke British rights. The scheme allows deportation even if deportees face likely torture or death and frames immigration as a criminal threat with courts potentially instrumentalised to redress perceived bias.
So begins another chapter in the liberation struggle. Released from bondage to the EU, Britain finds itself subjugated to a more insidious foe. The border that should have been sealed is wide open. The foreign hordes are still coming, but their passage is no longer directed by bureaucrats from Brussels. This time, national emancipation depends on breaking the tyranny of human rights lawyers.
The Reform UK leader laid out plans for mass deportation of migrants all who arrive without permission, plus those who are here already and came by illicit channels. Tens of thousands will be targeted. There would be cash incentives for anyone volunteering to leave. Refusers would be rounded up, detained in camps and flown to their countries of origin or, if those places won't have them, some other place. A remote island, maybe.
If deportees face the likely prospect of torture or death on arrival, well, that would be unfortunate but not sufficient grounds to stop the flights. There would be no legal recourse to sanctuary because the UK would withdraw from international treaties and conventions that grant protection to refugees. The European court of human rights would have no say. The universal principles it upholds would be expunged from domestic statute, to be replaced by custom-made British rights.
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