Nigel Farage claims migrant criminals now begging him to deport them | Politics | News

Nigel Farage announced how foreign prisoners were released from British prisons, where they cost thousands of pounds each year.
The reform leader, formerly called a video on Twitter, showed that he had read two letters from the prisoners who begged him to be sent home to make room in crowded prisons.
“I received these extraordinary letters for the last few weeks.” He said. “Isn’t it strange that people write to me? Foreign prisoners ‘get rid of us. We don’t want to stay here anymore, but the government won’t do it’.”
At the end of last month, a letter was sent to the leader of England from a prisoner who said he was from Lithuania and that he was “desperate” to be deported.
Another, HM prison Ashfield, an Indian citizen, serving for 15 years and six months, serving for great physical damage.
Mr. Farage said: “Obviously, my opinion, these people should be deported here in India and the other Lithuania.”
For us, for us, our prisons are full of foreign nationals because we released all kinds of bad people who return to communities early.
“This is beyond belief. These people should be deported immediately.”
Foreign criminals will be deported after serving one tenth of their sentences to make room for crowded prisons.
Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood launched a legislation for more than two months imprisonment for a foreign theft sentenced to two years of imprisonment.
They will not have to serve the rest of their sentences in their own countries, but they will be banned from returning to England.
If they violate the order by secretly entering England, they will have to serve the rest of their sentences.
The movement has been designed to combat extreme crowds by reducing a record number of foreign criminals in prisons in England and Wales, which stands in 10,838 since the end of March.
This represents one of the eight (12 percent) of 88,000 prisoners in English and Galli prisons. Each costs the taxpayer £ 54,000 per year, which is approximately 600 million £.