The Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, has got more front than South End. He’s playing the victim.
One of the asylum seekers that Justin Welby’s church reportedly vouched for tried to blow himself up surrounded by pregnant women and newborn babies in Liverpool. And he’s the one who feels under threat. Is he?
Welby says that he’s carrying a panic alarm. Where from? The House of Lords, in a chauffeur driven car to an Abbey, then to Lambeth Palace?
Welby may have presided over a dangerous conveyor belt of bogus asylum claims that has put every single one of us at risk. Obviously he should never come to any harm himself, and I certainly hope he doesn’t.
But we should not take lectures in personal safety from a man whose organisation let’s at least one terrorist into Britain.
The Church of England published a guide to clergy outlining to them how they could help asylum seekers beat the Home Office.
Then one ex-vicar revealed that at his church there were Muslim men raking in bags of cash from other Muslim asylum seekers trying to stay in Britain.
As soon as the baptism had taken place, the law firms were on the phone asking the vicars to vouch for them.
40 Bibby Stockholm migrants have apparently been baptised. There have been mass asylum seeker baptisms in the sea. The vicar involved revealed most of them, and this is a shocking bit, never bothered to go to church again after they had their passport.
How many dangerous, violent, threatening terrorists have wandered into Britain using Welby’s church as their welcome mat?
The church initially distanced themselves from any wrongdoing, but the clock is ticking now for Welby and he knows it.
They have now launched an urgent review into their asylum seeker conveyor belt and the real comeuppance is likely to come next week when the Home Affairs Select Committee speaks to the vicar who exposed the asylum baptism scam.
Justin Welby has said that MPs need to be more respectful to each other. This is the bloke who brought up the Nazis when referring to the Rwanda plan.
Rise in international human rights law grew out of the horrors of the 1940s, where a government that in 1933 in Germany had been legally and properly elected passed horrific laws that did terrible things.
I can’t help but wonder if this guy is just trying to drum up sympathy before the reckoning. Cry me a river, Archbishop. A river big enough that you could baptise a fake asylum seeker in it.