Exactly, naomi. The government of the UK is elected (and paid) to look after the best interests of UK citizens. Everything else comes a not very close second.
Actually, Jim, I could not give a tinker’s cuss about the situation in other countries. How they view and treat the problem is their affair, as it should be ours to deal with it in the way we think fit. However, I accept that the problem is not confined to the UK and that other nations accept greater numbers of asylum seekers than we do. Since you mention three specific countries it might be worth taking a look at their population densities. Sweden has around 60 people per square mile, France 306 and Germany 585. The UK figure is 679. I don’t doubt that similar features apply to the other countries but the UK figure is somewhat misleading. The equivalent figure for England (where most of them seem to want to settle) is well over 1,000.
This is indeed a Europe wide problem but Europe (by which I mean the EU) is not dealing with it in the best fashion. In particular the Schengen Agreement simply exacerbates the problem. This agreement (I was castigated for continually calling it “ridiculous” a couple of months ago so I’ve stopped doing that – but that has not stopped it being ridiculous) allows free movement of people across the area (which thankfully does not include the UK). It was designed to facilitate the movement of those entitled to be in the area. But of course the abandonment of internal borders has meant that it also facilitates the movement of those not entitled to be here (a problem that was widely highlighted – and brushed aside in the usual fashion - before it was signed). So we have scenes of mass arrivals in Italy on decrepit abandoned cattle boats. There the government is “proud” to be the destination of choice for African migrants but not so proud as to refrain from quickly ushering them across the border into France and thence all points north (including Calais).
We will never agree on this because I do not believe that the UK has the capacity to absorb any more migrants from anywhere for any reason. The pressure on healthcare, schools, housing and infrastructure is simply too great and is worsening daily. Accommodating illegal entrants in agreeable hotels and providing them with meals is not the way to deter them from coming here. If they were to be accommodated temporarily (for, say, a week or two at most) prior to them being returned either to France or elsewhere as the rules permit I would agree that it may be more acceptable than to see them wander the streets (and quickly disappear into the ether). But that’s not going to happen. Your suggestion that we address the conditions in their homelands so as to make them more likely to want to remain there is very laudable but hardly practical. It took England some four or five centuries to progress from the state that some of those nations are currently in to how it is today and that was with the benefit of progression, not the regression that many of those nations exhibit. In the meantime we should make it as uncomfortable as possible for them to remain here. It won’t stop them trying to come but it will make taxpayers here, who are constantly being urged to tighten their belts, feel a little less aggrieved.