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#21
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Clive D. W. Feather wrote to uk.transport.london on Tue, 24 Aug 2004:
In article , Roland Perry writes Except that the Home Office Immigration department has a list of people who are in the country legally, so if you can reliably establish someone's name, you can check it against that list. I don't recall any scanning of EU passports at Waterloo last time I came that way, and I don't think either Paris or Brussels did so either. And I'm sure there was no scanning last time I used a ferry. Last time I came into Waterloo there was a massive long queue for passport control. I can't remember whether or not they scanned them, though. And at the various Shuttle passport controls, they barely glance at your passports, although sometimes I think they do scan them. -- Annabel - "Mrs Redboots" (trying out a new .sig to reflect the personality I use in online forums) |
#22
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This I very much doubt. Why else is there such a drive for a new
National Population Register and ID card, for which we shall be charged £40? It's all a device to avoid charging the great data-clean exercise to the general taxation budget. PJW In article , Roland Perry writes Except that the Home Office Immigration department has a list of people who are in the country legally, so if you can reliably establish someone's name, you can check it against that list. |
#23
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In message , at 17:27:52 on Wed, 25 Aug
2004, PJW remarked: Please don't top-post, it breaks the flow... This I very much doubt. You doubt that the Home Office has a list of legal immigrants? Despite all of those legal immigrants having filled in copious Home Office paperwork and had Home Office stamps added to their passports? Why else is there such a drive for a new National Population Register and ID card, for which we shall be charged £40? It's all a device to avoid charging the great data-clean exercise to the general taxation budget. PJW In article , Roland Perry writes Except that the Home Office Immigration department has a list of people who are in the country legally, so if you can reliably establish someone's name, you can check it against that list. -- Roland Perry |
#24
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In article , Roland
Perry writes Except that the Home Office Immigration department has a list of people who are in the country legally, so if you can reliably establish someone's name, you can check it against that list. I don't recall any scanning of EU passports at Waterloo last time I came that way, and I don't think either Paris or Brussels did so either. And I'm sure there was no scanning last time I used a ferry. Very interesting, but in what way is that relevant to Americans being legally entitled to live in the UK? Nothing. The assertion was "if you can reliably establish someone's name, you can check it against that list" "of people who are in the country legally". Even if IND know the name of every UK citizen (which I doubt), there are still people legally in the country that they don't know about. And possession of an EU passport doesn't show that they're here legally either, even if you know who they are. -- Clive D.W. Feather | Home: Tel: +44 20 8495 6138 (work) | Web: http://www.davros.org Fax: +44 870 051 9937 | Work: Please reply to the Reply-To address, which is: |
#25
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In message , at 08:00:49 on Thu, 26
Aug 2004, Clive D. W. Feather remarked: The assertion was "if you can reliably establish someone's name, you can check it against that list" "of people who are in the country legally". This is in the context of Robin's American girlfriend. So I repeat my claim that if you are an American in the UK, the Home Office has a list of those who are in the country legally (a combination of landing cards for tourists and immigration papers for residents). -- Roland Perry |
#26
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Hatunen wrote the following in:
On Mon, 9 Aug 2004 20:38:42 +0000 (UTC), "Alan Harrison" wrote: Hmm, how would they know that a language is "not European"? On the Piccadilly Line on Saturday (Hounslow West to Hammersmith) I was sitting opposite a father and daughter who were speaking a language I didn't recognise. As both were fair-skinned and the little girl was blonde, I assume that they were European and speaking a European language (unless they were testing their knowledge of Swahili). What about Turkish (or Russian) where speakers may be European or Asian? Finn, Estonian and Hungaian don't sound a bit "European" People I've spoken to have said that Portugese sounds more like Russian than like a European language. On the other hand French and Spanish certainly sound European but are spoken by people in many countries outside Europe. -- message by the incredible Robin May. "The British don't like successful people" - said by British failures Who is Abi Titmuss? What is she? Why is she famous? http://robinmay.fotopic.net |
#27
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Robin May wrote:
Hatunen wrote the following in: On Mon, 9 Aug 2004 20:38:42 +0000 (UTC), "Alan Harrison" wrote: Hmm, how would they know that a language is "not European"? On the Piccadilly Line on Saturday (Hounslow West to Hammersmith) I was sitting opposite a father and daughter who were speaking a language I didn't recognise. As both were fair-skinned and the little girl was blonde, I assume that they were European and speaking a European language (unless they were testing their knowledge of Swahili). What about Turkish (or Russian) where speakers may be European or Asian? Finn, Estonian and Hungaian don't sound a bit "European" People I've spoken to have said that Portugese sounds more like Russian than like a European language. Isn't Russian a European language? -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
#28
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In article , Richard J. wrote:
Robin May wrote: People I've spoken to have said that Portugese sounds more like Russian than like a European language. Isn't Russian a European language? I'd have thought so. I also haven't found it to sound much at all like Portuguese, and I've been exposed to a lot of speech in both languages... Niklas |
#29
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Why was the original film called "Passport to Pimlico"?
I mean, a passport isn't to a specific place, like perhaps a visa is. You don't say 'a passport to Australia' or 'a passport to China' or the like. It's just a passport. It might contain a visa to Oz or China or Pimlico, but it's not a passport to anywhere in particular - it's just a passport. -- Ian Tindale |
#30
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"Ian Tindale" wrote in message
... Why was the original film called "Passport to Pimlico"? I presume that you know the plot of the film? The point was that you needed a passport to visit Pimlico, after UDI. -- Terry Harper, Web Co-ordinator, The Omnibus Society 75th Anniversary 2004, see http://www.omnibussoc.org/75th.htm E-mail: URL: http://www.terry.harper.btinternet.co.uk/ |
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