+ All Categories
Home > Education > The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

Date post: 21-Oct-2014
Category:
View: 733 times
Download: 2 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
A powerpoint telling the story of the fate of the Chinese cockle-pickers of Morecambe Bay. Leads into an investigative inquiry into who was responsible.
Popular Tags:
35
3 p.m. Image © John Hawkins
Transcript
Page 1: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

3 p.m.

Image © John Hawkins

Page 2: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

Millions finishing school

Image © John Hawkins

Page 3: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

Tens of millions still at work

Image © John Hawkins

Page 4: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

Thousands wondering what to do this evening…

Image © John Hawkins

Page 5: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

And 23 starting work here…

Page 6: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

This is Morecambe Bay, South Cumbria. Strong currents from the Rivers Kent and Keer, deep channels and treacherous quicksand combine to make it a lethal landscape.

Page 7: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

Image © Corbis

Page 8: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

Hundreds of people make their living from the bay, picking cockles from the

mud to sell in restaurants and supermarkets

Image © View Images

Page 9: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

3pm, February 5th, 2004

Imag

e © ht

tp://w

ww.gho

sts.uk

.com/

A group of cockle pickers make their way across the bay to begin work…

Page 10: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

Image © http://www.ghosts.uk.com/

The bay is a treasure-trove of cockles. If every one could be harvested, they’d be worth £6m a year.

Page 11: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

Image © http://www.ghosts.uk.com/

The group hurry out to the bay – the tide is out and they don’t have much time. For some, it’s their first day on the bay…

Page 12: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

Inexperienced, the group work for as long as their ‘gang’ boss tells them…

Image © Getty Images

Page 13: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

As darkness falls, the tide begins to come in…

Image © Getty Images

Page 14: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

They realise too late. They are trapped.

Image © http://www.ghosts.uk.com/

Page 15: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

Many cannot swim.

The water is freezing.

They have no safety equipment.

Page 16: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

One man calls his wife on his mobile phone and says:

"Tell the family to pray for me. It's too close. I am dying.”

Page 17: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

The alarm is raised.

Emergency services rush to the scene.

Page 18: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

Some make it to higher ground. They are rescued and brought ashore

Image © BBC News

Page 19: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

People are rushed to hospital

Image © Phil Noble, Press Association

Page 20: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004
Page 21: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

The next morning, the extent of the tragedy becomes clear.

Image © Bryan Heard

Page 22: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

23 people have lost their lives.

Page 23: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

Who were they?

Image © kingsdude, Flickr.com

Page 24: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

whose families lived 5000 miles away

23 people

Page 25: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

Each of the victims paid £12,000 to be smuggled across

borders into the UK. Here, they were paid a tiny

wage by their ‘gangmaster’ who would reduce their

money with deductions for housing and travel.

A bag of cockles picked by the workers would fetch

£15, but the gangmaster, Lin Liang Ren, would take

£10 of that. The cockle pickers would receive £5,

but it was easily more than the average income of

£40 a month back home in rural China.

Page 26: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

Liu Qin Ying was a farmer and Xu Yu Hua was a driver in Fujian. They are husband and wife, and were drowned together on the same night at Morecambe Bay. They have one son of 18 and a younger disabled daughter. Xu Yu Hua came to Britain a year before his wife. He didn't want her to follow him. But she was determined. She died on the first day when she joined her husband in cockling. Her body was never found.

“They left to go to work in England and endured a subhuman working life, just to improve our lives at home. Their deaths have brought so much pain to all of us. And since then, we have been living in debt."

Family File

Xu Yu Hua’s elderly sister says:

Image © http://www.ghosts.uk.com/

Page 27: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

The Morecambe Bay Tragedy: Who is responsible?

A SPECIAL PUBLIC INQUIRY BY COMMISSION

Page 28: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

The Morecambe Bay Tragedy: Who is responsible?

Cockle PickersSupermarkets

‘SnakeHead’ smuggling gang

The gangmaster

The UK GovernmentUK Shoppers

Write in a percentage representing how responsible you think each group is. Your total must = 100%.

Page 29: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

Lin Liang Ren: The Gangmaster• On 24 March 2006, a Chinese gangmaster, Lin Liang Ren,

from Liverpool, was convicted of the manslaughter  of the 21 cockle pickers

• With his girlfriend, Lin forged false cockling permits for all the cockle pickers

• Lin Liang Ren had been aware of what was happening, but for his own reasons failed to alert the emergency services for some 50 minutes.

• He was jailed for 12 years for manslaughter, and six for immigration offences

• Mr Lin had been warned by one worker of the dangers of Warton Sands, the cockle beds off Morecambe Bay. In an earlier incident, several months previously, he had told same man he would leave their safety “to God”.

The Morecambe Bay Tragedy: Who is responsible?

Page 30: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

• Article from The Telegraph, 7th February 2004:

• The desperate immigrants are charged £15,000 by criminal gangs to help them reach their destination and then accept a pittance for their labour once in the country.

• Those who died in Morecambe last week are understood to have received as little as £1 for a nine-hour shift of cockle-picking.

• The "snakeheads", as the gangs are known, provide them with safe houses along the way and forged documents.

The Morecambe Bay Tragedy: Who is responsible?

The ‘Snakehead’ Smuggling Gang

Page 31: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

• The young people did decide to go to the UK themselves.

• Before they decided to go, many were told of the huge amounts of money they could earn by the gangs. In the film ‘Ghosts’, a potential migrant is shown a picture of a person with a BMW and told it is another migrant who has already gone to the UK.

• Julia Hodson, Lancashire's Assistant Chief Constable, said she hoped the victims would not be "criminalised": "These people are the victims of despicable gangs. They have been through a dreadful trauma and we should remember that they all have families who don't know what has happened.” (The Telegraph, 7th February 2004)

The Morecambe Bay Tragedy: Who is responsible?

The Cockle Pickers

Page 32: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

• Supermarkets try to keep the price they buy products for (from fishermen or farmers, for example) as low as possible, so they can make a bigger profit.

• This means the people who supply supermarkets like the cockle buyers have to lower their costs, and the best way to do this is to cut the cost of employing people.

• It means only people who are prepared to pay people BELOW the minimum wage can succeed . And that means gangmasters.

The Morecambe Bay Tragedy: Who is responsible?

Supermarkets

Page 33: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

• The year before the disaster, the immigration minister sent a letter to local Chinese restaurants (who used to employ irregular migrants) saying the owners would be put in prison for 2 years if they continued doing this. This meant the Chinese workers had to find alternative work… as Cockle Pickers on Morecambe Bay

• During the trial of the Gangmaster, it was discovered that Officials from UK Immigration Services and the Department for Work and Pensions allowed Chinese Cockle Workers to work at Morecambe Bay – they turned a blind eye to it.

• The group which represents the Families of the victims believes the government is responsible for the tragedy, saying: “We believe that the Morecambe Bay tragedy was caused by the lack of protection [for migrants] against exploitation.”

The Morecambe Bay Tragedy: Who is responsible?

UK Government

Page 34: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

1. Shoppers in the UK want things cheap.

2. This means they need to be made cheaply.

3. So supermarkets pay their suppliers less

4. And their suppliers pay their workers even less…

5. This means only people who will accept little money will do the work – and these are usually migrants.

The Morecambe Bay Tragedy: Who is responsible?

UK Customers

Page 35: The Migration Conundrum - 5th February 2004

• GHOSTS by Nick Broomfield http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hNBwat6RT-0&feature=related


Recommended