Friday, May 17, 2024
ADVT 
International

3 British Sikh Men Admit Selling Afghan Asylum Seekers Documents To Enter The UK

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Mar, 2017 12:53 PM
    Three British Sikhs have admitted to a scam under which they misused the passports of their family members to help Afghan asylum seekers enter the UK in 2014 wearing the traditional turbans to hide identity.
     
    Cousins Daljit Kapoor and Harmit Kapoor, and Davinder Chawla, all three in their 40s, pleaded guilty before their trial at Inner London Crown Court on Tuesday.
     
    They admitted two charges of conspiracy to help asylum seekers from Afghanistan to enter the UK illegally between May and June 2014 and will be sentenced later this month.
     
    "We say these three men are the facilitators in this... organised crime, where they are using genuine British passport holders within the Sikh community.
     
    It's a Sikh conspiracy and it's occurring because it's very difficult for the authorities at the border control to distinguish who's who on the passports," prosecutor Edward Aydin had said at an earlier hearing at Camberwell Green Magistrates' Court.
     
    The passports shown by the Afghans all had photos of Sikhs wearing their turbans and border staff failed to spot the difference.
     
     
    Around 30 Afghans are said to have successfully claimed asylum after paying the three fraudsters 12,000 pounds per family to enter the UK.
     
    A gang member would drive to Paris with genuine passports of family members and hand them over to the Afghan families so that they could get through airport security.
     
    Once in the country, the gang retrieved the passports and reused them with new families.
     
    Harmit Kapoor also admitted booking flights between June 8 and June 21, 2014, for the asylum seekers to get to Britain and Chawla admitted hiring a vehicle to facilitate their entry into Britain when he drove to Paris.
     
    He had been jailed for his part in an identical crime in February 2011, along with four other men.
     
    Airline staff are believed to have suspected something was wrong and alerted French authorities, leading to the immigration racket being busted.
     
    A fourth suspect, 41-year-old Joginder Dawan, pleaded not guilty to one count of conspiracy to help asylum seekers enter the UK and one charge of assisting the offence by allowing his passport to be used to book flights and travel.
     
    Not guilty verdicts were recorded for both counts and he was discharged.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Canadian Students Asked To Design Google Doodle For Canada's 150th Birthday

    Canadian Students Asked To Design Google Doodle For Canada's 150th Birthday
    Students from kindergarten to Grade 12 have until May 2 to submit a Google doodle based on the theme "What I see for Canada's future is…"

    Canadian Students Asked To Design Google Doodle For Canada's 150th Birthday

    US Senate Confirms Indian-American Seema Verma To Head Medicare And Medicaid

    US Senate Confirms Indian-American Seema Verma To Head Medicare And Medicaid
    Indian-American Seema Verma has been confirmed by the US Senate to head the government's insurance programmes putting her in a pivotal role to steer President Donald Trump's controversial healthcare reform.

    US Senate Confirms Indian-American Seema Verma To Head Medicare And Medicaid

    Fired By Trump Administration, Preet Bharara Gets Resounding Farewell From Staff; Colleagues

    Attorney Preet Bharara was fired last week by Donald Trump's administration.

    Fired By Trump Administration, Preet Bharara Gets Resounding Farewell From Staff; Colleagues

    US Applications For New Zealand Citizenship Jump By 70 Percent After Trump's Election

    US Applications For New Zealand Citizenship Jump By 70 Percent After Trump's Election
    It's one thing to talk about changing allegiance to another country when a new president is elected. It's another thing to go ahead and do it.

    US Applications For New Zealand Citizenship Jump By 70 Percent After Trump's Election

    Indian-American Panel Launches Campaign Against Hate Crimes

    Indian-American Panel Launches Campaign Against Hate Crimes
    Chicago-based Indian-American Public Affairs Committee (IAPAC) has launched a campaign across the US to spread awareness about hate crimes against the community.

    Indian-American Panel Launches Campaign Against Hate Crimes

    Employers Allowed To Ban The Hijab, Rules European Union's Top Court

    Employers Allowed To Ban The Hijab, Rules European Union's Top Court
    Companies may bar staff from wearing Islamic headscarves and other visible religious symbols under certain conditions, the European Union's top court ruled on Tuesday, setting off a storm of complaint from rights groups and religious leaders.

    Employers Allowed To Ban The Hijab, Rules European Union's Top Court