Hotel Britain: A Resort for the Criminals of the World to Plunder and Enjoy, By Richard Miller (Londonistan)

In a provocative piece published by The Telegraph and echoed by The Daily Sceptic on July 5, 2025, journalist Guy Dampier warns that Britain is becoming a "hotel for the world's criminals." The claim, backed by a new analysis from the Conservative Party, suggests that illegal immigrants arriving via small boats across the Channel are disproportionately involved in crime, with some nationalities, such as Afghans, Albanians, and Iranians, showing alarmingly high incarceration rates. The narrative paints a grim picture: an asylum system exploited by foreign criminals, overburdened prisons, and a public left vulnerable to rising crime. It is a tale of the beginnings of aCamp of the Saints invasion force.

The cornerstone of Dampier's argument is a Conservative Party analysis claiming that illegal small boat immigrants are 24 times more likely to go to prison than the average British citizen. Specifically, the study estimates that 3.4% of small boat arrivals could end up incarcerated, compared to a baseline imprisonment rate for British nationals. Among certain nationalities, the figures are even starker: 12% of Somali passport holders in Britain are reportedly in jail, based on March 2025 prison data. With approximately 20,000 small boat arrivals in 2025, the analysis projects that around 700 could end up in prison, a number likely underestimated, as not all crimes lead to convictions or custodial sentences.

The analysis also draws on prior research by the Centre for Migration Control, which found that foreign nationals account for over a quarter of successfully prosecuted sexual assaults on women. Nationalities like Iranians and Afghans, who are over-represented among small boat arrivals, feature prominently in the top 10 for such crimes. A national audit by Baroness Casey further links illegal immigration to group-based child sex abuse, reinforcing the narrative of a crime wave tied to specific migrant groups.

High-profile cases amplify these concerns. The Afghan double-murderer and drug dealer Lawangeen Abdulrahimzai, who entered Britain on a small boat, concealed prior crimes and later murdered 21-year-old aspiring Royal Marine Thomas Roberts. Such examples fuel the argument that lax border controls allow dangerous individuals to slip through, exploiting Britain's asylum system as a gateway to criminal activity.

The Home Office has pushed back against the Conservative analysis, arguing that small boat arrivals are disproportionately young and male, a demographic naturally more prone to crime, regardless of nationality. This suggests that the high incarceration rates may reflect demographic skew rather than inherent criminality. For instance, young men aged 15–34 are statistically more likely to engage in violent or impulsive behaviour, a pattern seen globally. The Home Office contends that this factor, not migration status, drives the disparity, though it concedes that small boat migrants are "likely to be more criminal" than the general population, a tacit admission that undermines their argument.

The "hotel for criminals" narrative taps into a broader public frustration with illegal immigration, particularly the small boat crisis. Since 2018, over 100,000 migrants have crossed the Channel in small boats, often facilitated by smuggling gangs. The government's response, housing asylum seekers in hotels at a cost of billions, has fuelled resentment, especially when paired with high-profile crimes. Britain is becoming a haven for foreign criminals.

https://dailysceptic.org/2025/07/05/britain-is-turning-into-a-hotel-for-the-worlds-criminals/

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/07/04/britain-is-turning-into-a-hotel-for-the-worlds-criminals/

"Britain risks becoming a hotel for the world's criminals, warns Guy Dampier in the Telegraph, as new analysis by the Conservative Party reveals that illegal small boat immigrants are 24 times more likely to go to prison than the average British citizen. Here's an excerpt.

Although the rate at which foreign nationals are sent to prison is only slightly higher than that for British nationals, the rate at which some nationalities are imprisoned is much higher. That includes nationalities which are among the largest groups of small boat arrivals, such as Afghans, Albanians, and Iranians.

Some 3.4% of small boat arrivals could go to prison, according to the research, which is 24 times higher than British nationals and 18 times higher than for all migrants. Not only is our asylum system being abused to allow foreign criminals to enter, it is being dominated by those groups of foreign nationals most likely to commit crime.

That means that around 700 of the 20,000 small boat arrivals this year could go to prison. As there is more crime than is ever detected or solved, and as many successfully prosecuted crimes do not result in a custodial sentence, the actual number of small boat migrants who commit a crime will be even higher than that. …

Among some nationalities, the rates are even higher. Based on prison data from March, 12% of all people with Somali passports in Britain are in jail.

This is only the latest data analysis to show the over-representation of some migrant groups when it comes to serious crime. Prior analysis by the Centre for Migration Control has found that foreign nationals accounted for over a quarter of sexual assaults on women that are successfully prosecuted. The top 10 nationalities for sexual assault of a woman included Iranians and Afghans, who are over-represented among small boat arrivals." 

 

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Wednesday, 09 July 2025

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