Albanian Migrants Baited Into Cheap Labour On Illegal Cannabis Farms In England
As local Albanian mafia gears up to sell drugs, it is making use of migrants crossing the English Channel as cheap labour to get cannabis out into the market
In a strange manner of recruitment, Albanians who have arrived at the UK through the English Channel have been appointed on various cannabis farms. They were first released from detention and then found themselves being sent to cannabis farms.
Almost all are
migrants, who have been recruited by crime gangs of Albanian origins to work in
cannabis farms set up in empty houses and industrial buildings across England
and Wales. Most have been forced to do so to clear the debts they had
taken to cross the English Channel amounting to close to £5000.
Work is grueling
upto 40 hours a day; living in dinghies their lives are no better. One, working in a “farm” in London, said he
spent seven days in “mountains” in France as three Channel attempts were
thwarted by police who punctured the boats each time. On the fourth attempt, he
was rescued by the UK coastguard when his packed dinghy ran out of petrol after
11 hours and started drifting mid Channel.
Most of them
have confided through family back home and their reports have been screened on
local Albanian channels. Albanians now account for 60 per cent of migrants
crossing the Channel, with as many as 7,000 thought to have arrived in small
boats so far this year. Most are being housed in hotels where more than 35,000
asylum seekers are living at a cost to taxpayers of £4 million a day.
The desire for
casual drugging has been increasing in England. It ranges from young kids to
adults asking for various kinds of drugs across the country which has increased
the activity of such drug mafia that is also indulging to human trafficking and
making money off these harried migrants that are looking for alternatives to a
better life.
The Albanians
dominate the cocaine market in the south of England and have displaced the
Vietnamese as the biggest producers of domestically sourced cannabis.
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