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  1. #1
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    "Refugees" from Australia Not Doing so Well in El Cajon, CA, Others Ask to Go Back!

    ‘Refugees’ from Australia Not Doing so Well in El Cajon, California; Others Ask to Go back!

    June 24, 2019 ~ Ann Corcoran

    This story from a couple of months ago exposes again a big lie that the Open Borders Left never mentions—not all ‘refugees’ are thrilled to be in the land of opportunity.







    Detention is an illegal alien deterrent! Australia’s detention camps for mostly Muslim (refugee wannabes) are on Nauru and Manus Island.



    Since 2007, when I first became aware of the Refugee Admissions Program, I have heard stories like this one and continue to be amazed that the virtue-signalling do-gooders, who promote refugee resettlement in American towns and cities, don’t ever seem to ask themselves if what they are doing is really good for the ‘refugees’ involved.

    We know they don’t consider if the wholesale movement of third worlders to the US is good for Americans!

    Before I give you the story, I assume most of you know about Obama’s “dumb deal” (that is what Trump called it when he first learned about it.)






    In a 2017 phone call with then Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, Trump is alleged to have called the refugee deal a “dumb” one. He went along with it nonetheless.


    If not, then briefly, Australia instituted a policy of sending anyone trying to break into their country by boat to offshore islands for detention. It was an excellent deterrent once the word got out!

    But public pressure by the Australian Left forced the government to find a home for these mostly Muslim men.

    Enter then President Obama who told the Aussies in 2016, just as he was leaving office, that we would take a few thousand of their rejected asylum seekers to America. Trump (foolishly in my opinion) went along with the deal and said we would take 1,250.

    However, so far, we haven’t brought in nearly that number (hard to find any reports on exactly how many). Today’s story says we took 500 and this one says we rejected 300.

    Today’s post is about an unhappy family of Sri Lankan Tamils (they are not Muslims) who were placed in Arabic-speaking El Cajon, California by a US resettlement contractor—the International Rescue Committee.
    Thanks to reader ‘ganjagrandma’ for sending me the story from The Sydney Morning Herald.
    Needless to say, news about unhappy ‘refugees’ isn’t something our media is going to pick up and promote.

    Such news goes against the biased media meme that all refugees are so very grateful for their good fortune to be placed in America’s ‘melting pot’ communities (by Democrats and Leftist do-gooders.)

    Nauru refugees struggling with life in the US ‘Valley of Opportunity’

    El Cajon, California: Strolling down Main Street in El Cajon, a city of 100,000 people in southern California, it’s easy to see why locals have nicknamed the area “Little Baghdad”.
    [….]

    But the six members of the Prabhakar family* are not Iraqi and do not speak Arabic. [They don’t want to use their real name.—-ed]
    [….]

    They are Tamils who fled Sri Lanka during the civil war and spent a decade living as refugees in India. In July 2014, they were part of a boatload of 157 of their countrymen and women who sought to make it to Australia.

    Under the Abbott government’s policy, they were intercepted at sea and held for a month on an Operation Sovereign Borders vessel while authorities worked out what to do with them.

    Scott Morrison, then the immigration minister, said the asylum seekers were “economic migrants” who did not face persecution in India and should be returned there. They were taken to the Curtin Detention Centre in Western Australia and then to Nauru.

    For the next four years that was their life and then, last year, they became among the lucky 500 or so who have flown to the United States as part of the resettlement “swap” deal Australia negotiated with Barack Obama.

    “When they said we passed we were so happy,” says Niwali, a lively, articulate and strong-willed woman striving to keep her family together.

    “We said any place is fine as long as we get off Nauru.”
    The reality, they have found, has been much more difficult than expected.

    [….]

    Niwali has excellent English. But when she went looking for jobs in El Cajon, she found that wasn’t enough: many employers also wanted their staff to speak Arabic.
    “I almost never see an American here,” Niwali says. “Arabic speakers will live a good life here.

    [….]

    Their experience is not unique, says Fleur Wood, the co-founder of Ads-Up, a group of Australian expats who help refugees from Manus Island and Nauru to resettle in the US. [Pretty outrageous isn’t it that Australians living in America are working to diversify us! These migrants are Australia’s problem!—-ed]
    She says many of the refugees have arrived in the US full of optimism. But they soon find life in America is more challenging than they had imagined.

    “A lot of the refugees are very unprepared for life here,” she says. “Very few have come and really landed on their feet.
    If we took 500 and 40 want to return to the island of Nauru—what does that tell us! I guess it wasn’t so bad there after all!

    Indeed a number the feds never provide is the number of ‘refugees’ who come to America and find the streets here are not paved with gold and want to go HOME! Or, in this case Nauru!

    Last year the president of Nauru said 40 refugees who had resettled in the US had asked to return to the island country. Wood says a small number of refugees have expressed an interest in returning to Nauru, most because they want to be reunited with romantic partners or family still living there.
    I guess being with loved ones trumps being placed in multicultural (in this case Arabic) neighborhoods in struggling US cities working at some low wage job and living off of food stamps!

    Continue reading the story here and see that the parents in this family, both in their 50s, are too infirm to work. Guess who is picking up their medical tab?

    But, as soon as they put some money together they plan to head to New Jersey to be closer to their own kind of people—other Sri Lankan Tamils. So much for melting pot propaganda we hear about from the diversity is beautiful cabal.

    This post is filed in my ‘Leftwing Propaganda‘ and ‘Immigration fraud’ categories.

    Just so you know, this whole set-up—the US taking in another country’s asylum seekers (they were not determined to be refugees!) is way outside of the normal refugee resettlement process and is setting a very bad precedent. Will we be taking the overflow from Italy and Greece next?


    https://fraudscrookscriminals.com/20...sk-to-go-back/
    ILLEGAL ALIENS HAVE "BROKEN" OUR IMMIGRATION SYSTEM

    DO NOT REWARD THEM - DEPORT THEM ALL

  2. #2
    Moderator Beezer's Avatar
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    Send them all back to their home countries. Nothing by lying, ungrateful, economic migrant parasites!

    It is expensive to live in this country, we have housing shortage, they overbreed and cannot afford to pay their bills.

    El Cajon called "Little Baghdad"...WOW!!!

    Get them off government assistance and OUT of our country ASAP.

    WE NEED TO DECLARE THIS NATION AS "ENGLISH ONLY"...
    READ, WRITE AND SPEAK IT OR NO JOB AND NO DRIVERS LICENSE, NO MORE 50 LANGUAGES IN OUR PAMPHLETS!
    ILLEGAL ALIENS HAVE "BROKEN" OUR IMMIGRATION SYSTEM

    DO NOT REWARD THEM - DEPORT THEM ALL

  3. #3
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    El Cajon Arab population

    Many business signs are written in Arabic — not surprising, as El Cajon is home to the largest population of Iraq War refugees in the world.

    It hosts the second-highest population in the United States of Chaldeans — Aramaic-speaking Christians from Iraq.
    Roughly 50,000 Chaldeans live in El Cajon.
    Apr 20, 2016


    50,000 Chaldeans live in El Cajon | San Diego Reader
    https://www.sandiegoreader.com/news/...-box-el-cajon/
    Last edited by JohnDoe2; 06-24-2019 at 09:06 PM.
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  4. #4
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    El Cajon, CA | Data USA
    https://datausa.io/profile/geo/el-cajon-ca/

    El Cajon, CA is home to a population of 103k people,
    from which 82.4% are citizens.

    As of 2017, 29.8% of El Cajon, CA residents were born outside of the country.
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    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Little Baghdad, California - Progressive.org
    https://progressive.org/dispatches/l...ad-california/

    Apr 8, 2013 - With his family, he immigrated to El Cajon, California, in July 2011. ... home, and for decades El Cajon has become a magnet for many of Iraq's ... Main Street is nicknamed "Little Baghdad" for the proliferation of Arab-language ...
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    NO AMNESTY

    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


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    'Even God can’t help you here': Nauru refugees describe a life devoid of hope

    In covert interviews, refugees settled on Nauru under Australia’s asylum policy tell of fear, desperation and a profound sense of helplessness

    Karl Mathiesen @karlmathiesen Email
    Thu 19 Mar 2015 02.31 EDT

    R
    efugees who have been settled on the Pacific island of Nauru under Australia’s offshore asylum policy have told the Guardian in covert interviews of their deep sense of helplessness, and fear of Nauruans who resent their presence.



    Since May, more than 400 people who were detained after trying to arrive in Australia by boat have been found to be refugees and released into an island population of less than 10,000. Their arrival has convulsed Nauruan society and there is growing antipathy towards them.


    Graffiti scrawled on the side of a shipping container has been altered in an attempt to hide the original meaning. Some of the Nauru locals have a strong animosity towards refugees.

    They live in several guarded camps dotted around the island. Their cramped quarters provide the basics, but little more. In the following interviews they describe a monotonous and unsafe existence devoid of hope. Many are escaping through a heavy regimen of sleeping pills. Depression is ubiquitous.

    The refugees’ future is uncertain. The Nauruan government has given them five-year visas; Australia has said they will never be allowed to settle there.


    Tony Abbott’s government has pursued the policy vigorously, but the Australian stance is essentially bipartisan. It was the former Labor prime minister Kevin Rudd who made the announcement that still defines Australia’s treatment of asylum seekers:

    “Arriving in Australia by boat will no longer mean settlement in Australia,” he said before the 2013 election (in which Abbott eventually trounced him). Rudd’s policy drew criticism from the UN’s refugee agency who warned the policy was likely to harm the “physical and psycho-social wellbeing of transferees”.


    Nauru is one of the smallest countries in the world, home to less than 10,000 people. Photograph: Remi Chauvin for the Guardian

    The date Rudd made his speech, 19 July, 2013, has become notorious among asylum seekers – an arbitrary marker of the capricious immigration politics that has left them in limbo. Many have family or friends who left Indonesia days before them and are now settled in Australia.

    The policy achieved its goals.
    The boats to Australia have (mostly) stopped.But not without a cost.


    The following interviews were conducted in the refugees’ accommodation on Nauru while local security guards slept outside. Nauru has effectively banned foreign journalists, making it difficult for refugees to explain their plight, or for the Australian public to scrutinise the consequences of its government’s immigration policy.


    All names have been changed to protect the refugees. The refugees pictured have covered their faces for safety, not for religious reasons.


    Amineh



    Amineh has struggled with mental health problems since arriving in Nauru. After a period in a Brisbane psychiatric ward she was sent back to Nauru against a doctor’s recommendation. Within three days of being sent back she had fallen back into crisis. Photograph: Remi Chauvin for the Guardian
    Amineh’s family fled Iran after her husband told a Narcotics Anonymous meeting that he held political and religious views that were contrary to the country’s authoritarian Shia government.

    She was diagnosed with breast cancer during her 18-month incarceration on Nauru. She also developed acute depression. After successful cancer surgery in Brisbane she was admitted to the psychiatric ward of Brisbane’s Toowong private hospital in a “flat, non-reactive” state.

    After a month’s treatment she was cleared for release with a letter from her doctor advising she should not be returned to Nauru.

    “Given the severity of her illness, [Amineh] is a significantly high risk of relapse with further risks to herself (such as emaciation/starvation, significant decline in personal hygiene, disrupted relationships with her husband and children and passive suicidal ideation which may well escalate into active suicidal ideation)... should she return to the immigration detention centre at Nauru.”

    The letter was ignored.

    I didn’t want to live in this world any more. I don’t want to be alive the next day. I didn’t want to get up. I didn’t want to open my eyes.

    No hope. Disappointed. Even I couldn’t bear my family. My children, my husband. I didn’t want to see them. I couldn’t bear to hear them. I was embarrassed in front of my children because I felt guilty because I did something horrible to my children [by bringing them to Australia].

    My doctor in Brisbane tried to help me. He tried to give me hope again. He forced me to exercise. He made me like life again. He said ‘I will send immigration a letter. I won’t allow them to send you back to Nauru’.

    One day in the hospital, 5am, [immigration officers] knocked on the door. They said that you can go inside the camp, you should go back to Nauru. And then that made me mad and that made me crazy. I spoke to immigration, I begged them. I told them my situation. I showed them my letter. But they said nothing. They forced me get in a plane and get back to Nauru.


    When I arrived again in Nauru, for two days I was better because I saw my old friends and that was not bad. But after three days, I got back to my bad days. My sickness was returned.


    They isolated me in a room. The doctor was so scared. He didn’t know what to do with me. I had shivers and my hands shook. I was dreaming that someone was trying to smother me. I couldn’t breathe.


    After a week they released us into the community. I locked myself up into this room.

    I spend all my time in this room and I have nowhere to go. I feel like I’m not a normal person. I’m like a machine. The medicine made me act like a machine. If I don’t have my medicine, I’m terrible.

    Hawo


    Hawo said she was attacked twice in the days before she was interviewed by the Guardian. Photograph: Remi Chauvin for the Guardian
    Hawo and 10 other Somali women live in Anibare camp on Nauru. Without the protection of men, they are vulnerable both inside and outside the detention system. Most have experienced sexual or physical violence while on Nauru.

    In the detention centre, there was direct and indirect sexual assault. Because the security, the Wilsons* and the locals, they bring stuff for you. The stuff that’s really important like shoes and then they start bargaining with you.

    ‘When you get accepted as a refugee you’re going to have sex with me and I’m going to enjoy with you.’
    And actually you need these things but you can never promise them. Because of this we knew that outside [detention] would not be safe and we expressed to the immigration this feeling.
    Three days ago I was going to get my financial support. There was a motorcycle going along the road and he grabbed me and threw me on to the road. The next day I was going to the supermarket. A guy came face to face with me and tried to grab my hands. He wanted to give me a hug. I think he wanted to rape me. I screamed and he jumped on a motorcycle.
    I came from my home country due to rape and torture but this stuff still exists here.
    * The Australian company Wilson Security is contracted to maintain order in the centres.

    Annisa


    Annisa told authorities she did not feel safe in the community in Nauru and wanted to return to the detention centre, but was told it was not possible as it was only for asylum seekers. Photograph: Remi Chauvin for the Guardian
    Annisa is another Somali woman who came to Australia alone. She and the women she shares Anibare camp with say Nauruan men sneak around the back of the camp at night and knock on their windows. They sleep in jeans to make it harder to be raped.

    I never had a life in Somalia. My husband was killed and my baby boy was taken away. I was kidnapped for five years by the Al-Shabaab militia. They wanted to cut my hand off because they wanted me to marry but I refused. I stayed five years with them and then I escaped.

    I came to search for a new life. But I am in fear. At what time will the local men break into my room?
    My body is here but my mind is not. I think back to my husband and my kid and think of how I have been treated. I’m tired of crying. All the time at the moment I cry. Because there is no safety in Somalia and there is no safety here in Nauru too.
    I expressed to the [Australian] immigration that I don’t feel safe in Nauru: ‘Let me stay in the [detention] camp because the camp, at least, is better than outside.’
    They said: ‘You’ll never be returned to the camp. The camp is for asylum seekers, you’ll stay here five years.’
    You can never imagine how people live here. Sometimes we are unable to buy drinking water and so we drink the bathroom water. Three days ago I had a stomach problem. Sometimes I run out of money for food and I don’t eat for days. Everything is expensive**. You can imagine $180 for two weeks, it is not enough.
    ** A 1 litre bottle of water costs $2-3 in Nauru, where the average maximum temperature is around 30C. Refugees live on an allowance of about $12 a day.
    Ali


    Ali and his wife Khorvash sleep in a bunk bed in their room in Anibare camp. Photograph: Remi Chauvin for the Guardian
    Ali and his wife Khorvash came from Ahwaz in southern Iran. They were released from detention four months ago and live in the Anibare refugee camp.

    I really have problems with opening my eyes. I normally wake up at nine and I pretend that I’m asleep till 11 sometimes 12. I start to ask God for help for two or three hours and when there is no response from God I get up and say ‘OK there is no God, let’s get up’.

    My wife and I are not going out much. We are not even talking to each other much. We are just like ghosts. Sometimes we watch TV. Yeah, that’s it. I really don’t know what I’m doing during the day.
    I contemplated suicide millions of times. I didn’t have enough courage to do it because I’m a Muslim and unfortunately there is only one unforgiven sin in my religion and that is committing suicide. I’m ready to give them a signature for giving me a verdict like execution or something. I’m really happy if the Australian government kills me.
    Even if you have the best psychologist in the world, he can’t help you. In the best scenario, you’ll meet someone who has a sense of sympathy for you and is trying to help you. But this is still five years in Nauru, with or without the shrink.
    When I wanted to leave my country, my dad told me not to do it. He said: ‘Democracy and human rights is a joke. No one will respect you in Australia or any other western country. Stay here and die with honour.’
    And I told him: ‘No Dad, you don’t know anything about these things, let me try.’
    I did. And I find that my father was right. Nauru is another part of our conviction. This is jail. Even God can’t help you here.
    Benjamin


    Nineteen-year-old Benjamin was released from detention in November and now lives with his father and two sisters (aged 13 and 15) in the newly built Nibok camp. Their mother is still in Iran. While they were in detention Benjamin’s father, Haji, was charged with assault and placed in solitary custody after a scuffle with a security guard.

    My father got a stroke when he was in custody. He was paralysed on his left side. They sent him alone to Darwin.

    I was 18 at the time and my sisters were both minors but they left us in the camp and my sisters they got lots of problems. They couldn’t sleep at night. I couldn’t control this. It’s lots of pressure. My father was somewhere else. I was trying to talk to the Wilsons because my sisters were crying all the night.
    One day I went [to the Australian immigration department psychologist]. I was so angry because my sisters weren’t in a good situation. They needed to know what’s happening to my father because we just saw him once after he come out from the custody.
    I warned them that if they don’t at least tell me how my father is, I will suicide. And she laughs at me and says ‘do what you want, no one will stop you’. And I cut my wrists. I couldn’t control it anymore, it was too much for me.
    I didn’t do it for protest. I was trying to kill myself. I wasn’t in control of the situation. I wasn’t that much adult to take care of my sisters and try to motivate my father to get healthy and try to control the awful situation of the camp. I just wanted to die. I tried to do it silently. So I cut it and I was feeling dizzy and my sisters came and saw there was lots of blood and they called the Wilsons.
    When my father came back he was placed back in jail. He was still paralysed on his left side. We kept having to go to the court but in the end they found that my father wasn’t guilty.
    Now I don’t care if something’s going to happen for the future or if I go to Australia. I don’t have any plans for my future right now because I still feel that I’m captured. I still feel that I’m not human after a year-and-a-half. I just need to get my freedom first and then I’ll try to find my way somehow.

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...devoid-of-hope
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  9. #9
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    El Cajon Ca Language 2019

    56.24% of El Cajon Ca residents speak only English,

    while 43.76% speak other languages.

    The non-English language spoken by the largest group is Spanish,

    which is spoken by 19.97% of the population.

    http://worldpopulationreview.com/us-...ca-population/
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  10. #10
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    I left California many years ago. Thank goodness! It has got to be unrecognizable now.

    Like a 3rd world DUMP, destroyed by foreigners, illegal aliens and thousands of homeless people.

    What a shame!

    We need a 10 year moratorium on ALL immigration and start sending these people back home!

    ENFORCE PUBLIC CHARGE AND GET THEM OFF OUR SOIL!!!

    THIS CANCER IS SPREADING ALL ACROSS OUR BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY!
    ILLEGAL ALIENS HAVE "BROKEN" OUR IMMIGRATION SYSTEM

    DO NOT REWARD THEM - DEPORT THEM ALL

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