Asylum map of Britain

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If a comment offends you - don't quote it, report it - it makes my job a lot longer to clean up the posts, and I want to go back to the sun with my beer :p
 
FTM said:
15. SOUTH TYNESIDE: Farsi, French, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Kurdish, Latvian, Lingala, Polish, Tigrean, Tamil, Arabic, Turkish, English.


hmmm they cant have tried to research this very hard...we have a large Bangladeshi population but managed to have missed them off the list..in fact all our delicious currys are made by Bangladeshis...

plus I thought Bangladeshis used Bengali

I don't know why, but the high number of immigrants in the North East really surprised me.
 
Rich_L said:
Does a single person being sent to a town counts as that language being present?

Probably a threshold, defined by local government and reflected in the translation budget so that all their regular letters can be translated to effective deal with those that refuse to or feel they cannot learn english...
 
fozzybear said:
I don't know why, but the high number of immigrants in the North East really surprised me.

Again, I see no map... I dont see how you are working out the number of immigrants (also, the artcle claims to deal with asylum seekers rather than immigrants)
 
Freefaller said:
If a comment offends you - don't quote it, report it - it makes my job a lot longer to clean up the posts, and I want to go back to the sun with my beer :p

Here's an interesting idea Freefaller, as a foreigner do you feel that such 'anti-immigration' comments also reflect on you?
 
sr4470 said:
Some train and underground stations near me have the signs in 5 different Asian languages...

Why is that a bad thing?

In the States there are signs in spanish nearly everywhere now.

On the continent most signs have translations in english and german and sometimes spanish.

Is that really such a big deal?

As long as they integrate themselves into our society whilst sharing some of the fun parts of theirs, and behave like good citizens, where's the fuss?
 
cleanbluesky said:
Probably a threshold, defined by local government and reflected in the translation budget so that all their regular letters can be translated to effective deal with those that refuse to or feel they cannot learn english...
You mean like the Welsh ? :p
 
Freefaller said:
Why is that a bad thing?

In the States there are signs in spanish nearly everywhere now.

On the continent most signs have translations in english and german and sometimes spanish.

Is that really such a big deal?

As long as they integrate themselves into our society whilst sharing some of the fun parts of theirs, and behave like good citizens, where's the fuss?

I was just making an observation, stop reading into it so much.
 
2. LEICESTER: Gujerati, Polish, Latvian, Ukranian, Kishwahli, Swahili, Serbo Croat (Serbian only), Hindi, Mandarin, Turkish, Romanian, French, Somali, Arabic, Pushtu, Farsi, Czech, Dari, English.


A Fair few :p
 
Freefaller said:
It's not here. :) You're on a British board remember.

I know.
I just didnt think that people over in the UK would have taken it as an offensive word.
Down here its used a lot and we have the biggest population of Greeks out side of Greece.
They use the word, the italians, Croats yugoslavs use it, so do most other people that the word would be used for. Its perfectly normal for people to use it.

It wasn't used in a derogatory term or trying to be funny either
 
cleanbluesky said:
Again, I see no map... I dont see how you are working out the number of immigrants

OK, so perhaps the list (not strictly a map, i know!) just shows the mix of people rather than numbers.

cleanbluesky said:
(also, the artcle claims to deal with asylum seekers rather than immigrants)

So i WAS correct with my OP after all!? :p
 
30. BRIGHTON: Mandarin, Hindi, Arabic, French, Somali, Swahili.

Disagree with some of those..if anything, we have a lot of Spanish here, very few Hindi and Arabic...and Somali? :confused:
 
cleanbluesky said:
Here's an interesting idea Freefaller, as a foreigner do you feel that such 'anti-immigration' comments also reflect on you?

Nope not really as I'm also english by blood. However my mother used to often be treated as "a stupid foreigner" as she has a somewhat strong French accent - despite being a British hard working tax paying citizen. I think this comes about from very ill educated people reading rubbish newspapers, and that haven't got the power to think themselves and are spoonfed rubbish through the media as if it is the ultimate truth. Lack of education and ignorance is no excuse in my opinion for such animosity towards other people.

Anyway, I'm going back to my beer and the sun - I'll carry on with this later if I can be bothered. :p
 
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