Nonetheless, the Department for International Development (DFID) has felt it necessary to take UK taxpayers’ money and “invest” it there through a private company — while domestic cuts bite at home.
To make matters even more bizarre, Singapore's prime minister announced over the past weekend that foreign
workers are becoming a problem and that the government will be clamping down on immigration.
"We will control the inflow, to ensure that it is not too fast and not too large," Prime Minister Lee Hsien
Loong said during a speech. "And we will make clear that citizens come first."
According to Gillian Koh, a senior research fellow at Singapore's Institute of Policy Studies, a poll last year found that 63 percent of Singaporeans believed the government's immigration policy was “weakening national unity.”
Another report quoted Kenneth Jeyaretnam, secretary general of the opposition Reform Party, as saying that
the government's immigration policy has “provided cheap labour for companies and depressed wages for Singaporeans.
"The government continues to treat Singapore as a business rather than a country," Mr Jeyaretnam said. "As
long as the government permits a relatively elastic supply of labour from abroad while the cost of other
domestic inputs, like land, continue to rise, then the real wages and salaries of our own workers will get
squeezed, and this has indeed happened."
* Other recipients of British tax money in “foreign aid” include Slovenia, Malta, the Czech Republic and
Hungary, all developed First World countries and members of the EU.
British taxpayers also provided £380,000 in aid to the oil rich sheikhdom of Saudi Arabia which is so
wealthy it does not even have personal income tax.
The DFID also paid £40.2 million last year to China, now officially classified by the World Bank as
a "middle-income country." Among the items funded were "storytelling projects" to encourage Chinese children
to campaign against climate change.
Original article...
HERE