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British expert: Rama is behaving like Fidel Castro, he doesn't see mass criminality

British expert: Rama is behaving like Fidel Castro, he doesn't see mass

Prime Minister Rama, during his two-day visit to Great Britain, held a meeting with the British Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak. The focus of the meeting was the issue of Albanian immigrants who cross the Channel illegally to Britain.

From London for BBC Radio, Rama called the statements of the Secretary of the Interior, Suella Braverman, a crime, as he said that normal Albanians should be separated from those he called "rotten apples".

The British expert Steven Woolfe told the British network GB News that the Albanians have taken control of the marijuana market from the Vietnamese. According to Woolfe, in fact there is more than one "bad apple" in Britain.

"It appears that there are more than just a few 'bad apples', as we know from our security services and the police, who acknowledge that a large number of those who have crossed the channel have left the centers of detention or from hotels and have entered into criminal activity. They have underlined that, when it comes to cocaine, the Albanians are the biggest criminal organization in this field. That the Albanians have taken control of the marijuana market from the Vietnamese.

As for sex crimes and prostitution, they are now one of the main organizations. And as for the theft of luxury cars from this country, the Albanian gangs are also determined in this direction.

So you can't say it's just a few 'bad apples', I always think of it as 4 or 5, but when we talk about 12 thousand and thousands involved in crimes, then I think Edi Rama should reflect why leave his country, why didn't he say where they are escaping from" , said Woolfe.

The British expert drew a parallel between Rama and Fidel Castro. Woolfe said that Rama is not yet at the level of Castro, but still the prime minister is not accepting the fact that he is dealing with a massive criminality.

"We always go back to that issue in Cuba during the 80s, when Fidel Castro released a large number of criminals in the US and instigated a mass criminality that has been reflected in the great movies we've seen at the time. I don't think he's at that level, but at the end of the day, he's just not recognizing or accepting that this is mass criminality, and maybe today, after this conference with Rishi Sunak, he'll come out and say what we we want them to address the issue of illegal immigrants and criminal elements and support our deportation policies. Maybe he then arrests them and puts them in prison if they are involved in crime ," said the expert.

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