UK/Home Office
The Home Office is a UK government department involved in work surrounding immigration, passports and "counter-terrorism". These are: the Identity and Passport Service and the UK Border Agency.
Contents
Commission for Countering Extremism
- Full article: Commission for Countering Extremism
- Full article: Commission for Countering Extremism
In 2017, following the 2017 Manchester attack, the government announce plans to launch a new "Commission for Countering Extremism" to safeguard British values from "extremism".
Monitoring Online Material
The Hone Office Website exhorted readers to "Report illegal or harmful information, pictures or videos you’ve found on the internet", including "websites made by terrorist or extremist organisations" and files which "promote terrorism or encourage violence".[2]
Migration
The Home Office enables an open borders policy by sending illegal migrants into hotels around Britain. Many of them are Albanian, and sending them to prestigious hotels costs the taxpayer millions of pounds per day.[3]
Companies involved include:
Goals
The Home Office states that its aims and objectives are based on seven key issues:[4]
- Help people feel safer in their homes and local communities
- Support visible, responsive and accountable policing
- Protect the public from terrorist attack
- Cut crime, especially violent, drug and alcohol-related crime
- Strengthen our borders, fast track asylum decisions, ensure and enforce compliance with our immigration laws, and boost Britain's economy
- Safeguard people's identity and the privileges of citizenship
- Work with our partners to build an efficient, effective and proportionate criminal justice system
References
- ↑ https://twitter.com/ukhomeoffice/status/877526604758560768/photo/1
- ↑ https://www.gov.uk/report-terrorism
- ↑ https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11418641/The-map-shows-scale-asylum-crisis-number-hotels-used-house-migrants.html
- ↑ Our Objectives and Values, The Home Office - accessed: 11 October 2009