Wednesday, July 1, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Three British Sikhs Smuggled 70 Afghans In Turbans Into UK

Darpan News Desk, 11 Jul, 2017 12:42 PM
    Three British Sikhs helped about 70 Afghan illegal immigrants sneak into the UK using real passports of Sikhs in a 600,000 pounds scam, a court here has been told.
     
    Cousins Daljit Kapoor and Harmit Kapoor, and Davinder Chawla, all three in their 40s, pleaded guilty before their trial at Inner London Crown Court in March.
     
    The three men appeared at the court yesterday for the start of a Newton hearing after disagreements between the prosecution and the defence over their level of involvement in the scam, The Sun reported.
     
    Border officials were unable to distinguish between the illegal immigrants who masqueraded as the genuine passport holders because Sikh men are allowed to wear turbans in their ID documents, the court was told.
     
    The gang would travel to France and hand over stolen or genuine passports to waiting immigrants which looked like them.
     
    Once the immigrants got to the UK, the gang would recycle the passports passing them on to others trying to sneak into the country, the report said.
     
    They provided Sikhs from the war-torn country with stolen passports or those of their own family members who most looked like them, so they could pass themselves off as British citizens.
     
     
     
     
    The court heard the total value of the conspiracy was around 620,000 pounds.
     
    However, the court was told there would be no Newton hearing in relation to Daljit Kapoor, following an agreement between the prosecution and defence over his basis of plea.
     
    For the conspiracy, the trio were paid up to 9,300 pounds to get entry into the UK, the report said.
     
    In total 69 individuals who travelled to the UK on the passports were identified and 59 did not make an asylum application, it said.
     
    Prosecutor Alexandra Felix was quoted as saying that, "The central aim was to gain financially. At least one of conspirators with a passport would travel to France to enable to asylum seeker to travel to the UK using this passport."
     
    "These were passports with identities belonging to their families or others which were reported lost or stolen in the days before their use. The result of the conspiracy was there was entry into the UK that must have been in breach of immigration Law," he said.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    NASA Finding Bolsters Indian Theory On Black Hole

    NASA Finding Bolsters Indian Theory On Black Hole
    According to mainstream astrophysicists, extremely massive stars collapse into ultra compact objects called black holes whose gravitational field is so powerful that even light cannot escape from its imaginary boundary called "event horizon".

    NASA Finding Bolsters Indian Theory On Black Hole

    'Lady Padre,' The Mexican Priest Who Dances At Mass Goes Viral

    'Lady Padre,' The Mexican Priest Who Dances At Mass Goes Viral
    A Mexican priest, who dances the "Alleluia" in church as if doing a folk dance, has gone viral on social networks, where he is now known as "Lady Padre".

    'Lady Padre,' The Mexican Priest Who Dances At Mass Goes Viral

    Liberals Say Details On Refugee Resettlement Plan Coming Tuesday

    How the Liberal government intends to bring thousands of Syrian refugees to Canada by year's end will become clear Tuesday with the rollout of the plan for the largest rapid resettlement program in the country's history.

    Liberals Say Details On Refugee Resettlement Plan Coming Tuesday

    Whisky Bible Says Manitoba's Crown Royal Northern Harvest Rye Is Best Spirit In World

    Whisky Bible Says Manitoba's Crown Royal Northern Harvest Rye Is Best  Spirit In World
    WINNIPEG — A whisky made in Manitoba is the best in the globe, according to an expert.

    Whisky Bible Says Manitoba's Crown Royal Northern Harvest Rye Is Best Spirit In World

    Supernaturally Silly Japanese Hit 'Yo-Kai Watch' Looks To Make Waves North America

    Supernaturally Silly Japanese Hit 'Yo-Kai Watch' Looks To Make Waves North America
    The Nintendo 3DS title has become big business in Japan, spawning a television show, comic books and a popular line of toys.

    Supernaturally Silly Japanese Hit 'Yo-Kai Watch' Looks To Make Waves North America

    Kit And Ace Fur Fight Highlights Need For New Rules On Clothing Labels

    Kit And Ace Fur Fight Highlights Need For New Rules On Clothing Labels
    A fur fight between animal-rights advocates and B.C. fashion retailer Kit and Ace over a line of cashmere toques has put a fresh spotlight on Canada's fur-labelling laws.

    Kit And Ace Fur Fight Highlights Need For New Rules On Clothing Labels