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24 September 2014
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Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ News investigation uncovers criminal network


A team of reporters has spent months in Southall, West London, living and working as "faujis" – the Punjabi term used to describe the hidden community of young, mostly male, poor farmers from the Punjab working in this country illegally.

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Recording hours of footage in this hidden, illicit world, the team found a thriving trade in fake documents, widespread illegal job practices, and squalid housing – in just one square mile, more than 40 houses packed with faujis were identified.

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Many faujis choose to come here knowing the risks and knowing they are commiting a crime; arriving on the backs of lorries or outstaying their visit visas and buying fake documents to work here.

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Their invisible status also means they are locked out of the system, with no rights and no protection, surrounded by forgers, criminals and ruthless employers.

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One man says he has lived in the UK as an illegal immigrant for a number of years. He was open about the fake documents he could obtain and boasting about customers in Sheffield, Bradford and Coventry.

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He told the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ team he could get people into the country with a fake "original" passport, that it could be "checked" at City Airport by paying someone working there Β£250 to scan it through the passport machines.

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Another supplier of fake documents boasted of his thousands of pounds of business and shows his stash of forged and real ID documents kept hidden inside a loudspeaker in his house.

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He said he could supply "any form of Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Office ID, any NI [National Insurance] number, any Health and Safety, any [driving] licence, any European licence, and any bill, BT, gas, electricity. And if anybody needs an original provisional or original licence that is also available – but very expensive. And any passport."

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Later, talking about the lower quality, fake driving licences he can supply for Β£250, he said: "Believe you me, people are driving buses with this."

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The Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ also recorded him offering to open bank accounts, and on the phone to his forger, casually "ordering" a genuine passport for the next morning.

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He claimed that, armed with the right documents, he could get our man employed in a warehouse "or if you want catering work, I can get you a job at the airport".

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One of the faujis laughs and says: "The whole of Southall came on the back of the lorries, not only us. Ask anybody, but no-one tells the truth around here."

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The same men said they had come to the UK illegally through Russia. The journey took a year and they survived on a diet of bread and eggs.

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Documents are important because they provide a sort of legitimacy. What the Faujis fear is simple: being caught and sent home. But with the documents they can get a bank account and do better paid work.

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The undercover team found a chip shop where a fauji said they had been employed for 12-hour days, six-days a week at £150 – or about £2 an hour.

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The Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ undercover reporter told the owner that he had no paperwork. The owner told him "do not mention this, otherwise you may be nicked".

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After working hard for a 14-hour day without any break the owner then refuses to pay the man because he said he left before two weeks of being employed.

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Our man then says he arrived with other faujis at a building site in North London and was put to work at height with no interview, training, safety advice or equipment.

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He earnt Β£35 for a 12-hour day, that's less than Β£3 an hour.

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The Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ confronted the men who had sold us fake documents – they both denied it and said we had the wrong person.

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One even tried to show the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ his original driving licence, confident that would reassure us of his innocence – yet on secret camera he had previously revealed it to be an expensive fake.

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The owner of the fish and chip shop in Southall has told the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ that he does not employ illegal immigrants and that all his staff have the correct paperwork and permission to reside and work in the UK and that he did not pay our man because it was a training day.

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Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ News Publicity

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Category: News
Date: 17.07.2008
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