At least we still deport some illegals and good on the authorities for kicking her cancer filled ass out of the UK.
The fact that she died unable to clog up our hospital resources here in the UK, taking up the time of hospital staff - none of which she had paid taxes towards by the way - has got the Guardian reading classes in a tizzy.
Their are howls from the chattering classes about how the cancer treatment was not available in Ghana, well not true. What they mean is that there was no free treatment in Ghana. No Ghana NHS for her, had she been able to pay and friends had raised some 70K I am sure that their would have been medical staff available either in Ghana or some other part of Africa.
The arguement is that the drug thalidomide was not available there for her in Ghana. Well so what? How is that our problem? The woman had money raised some 70K in fact, enough I am sure to buy her more than enough drugs on the open market.
Ms Sumani arrived in the UK five years ago on a student visa but began working in contravention of her visa regulations. So on the one hand we have the howls of outrage that she was deported and on the other we are supposed to ignore her working and in doing so breaking the law.
So a well done to all who deported her and hopefully we will see a lot more health tourists, shiftless dole drawers, jihadists and other undesirable types removed from our fair shores.
The death of a cancer victim only two months after she was deported while receiving treatment at a Cardiff hospital is “on the nation’s conscience”, the Archbishop of Wales said yesterday.
Ama Sumani, 39, was removed from the hospital by five immigration officials who drove her to Heathrow and put her on a flight to her native Ghana. Mrs Sumani, a mother of two, died because the treatment she needed was not available in her home country.
One down another million to go...
.
0 people have spoken:
Post a Comment