Former Communities and Local Government Secretary Sir Eric Pickles yesterday criticised UK's "relaxed approach" to taking in immigrants since the migrant crisis last summer.
Speaking to Sixth Form Students at JFS, based in Kenton, the Conservative MP said: “Frankly I find it really difficult to take a relaxed approach."
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| Sir Eric Pickles |
In response to the "small numbers" who have been welcomed in UK, the MP for Brentwood and Ongar recalled “major contributions” of the “Kinder Transport” and those children who were evacuated from Nazi persecution in their homelands during the Holocaust. He also recognised the contributions to British society made by many of “the people who came from death camps.”
But he identified the "fine line" between accepting too many or too few immigrants in the UK. "The Prime Minister has treated it well," he said.
And speaking about his lack of regret at having been "moved on" from his former Secretary job in May last year, the recently appointed "Sir" said that sometimes "you've had your chips and got to go." Instead he said he is "proud" of his work as Chairman of Conservative Friends of Israel (CFoI).
Pickles, who had addressed CFoI’s Parliamentary reception the night before, referred to Israel as a “bastion of liberty and democracy” and “a good ally to this country.” He emphasised that “our economy is extremely linked with Israel’s” and impressed students with the statistic that “one out of six prescriptions in the UK” is based on pharmaceutical knowledge from Israel.
The MP also highlighted his most recent appointment as the UK’s Special Post Holocaust Envoy. “Views of the Holocaust… is forever faced with contemporary politics,” he claimed. And he added that “there is a surprisingly large amount of Nazi loot floating around Europe now" and promised he is using “democracy, charm and damn-right blood rudeness at times” to educate and affect change.
He vehemently criticised “people who want to rewrite their own history” and “the majority of people who obviously didn’t [do anything].” And when similarly asked his views on the controversy over the Cecil Rhodes statue in Oxford, the Special Envoy said: “No we shouldn’t [pull it down]… you can’t re-write history.” He added: “It’s like ISIS” smashing ancient artefacts in a museum in Mosul.


