‘We’ve spent years contributing to Britain – but if Reform’s plans come into place we will leave’

A couple who made their homes of England, reform, said that Britain will have no choice but to leave the country if the new immigrant plans are realized.
35 -year -old Kushal Sureka and his 34 -year -old wife Preety Jalan moved from India to England to continue their careers as talented financial advisors in January 2020.
Both of them received permission in January (ILR) indefinitely in January (ILR), where their sons were born earlier this year, Farnborough, after working and founding life.
However, the couple, reform UK’s latest commitments, say that they feel “unwanted and uncertain” about the future in the country where they “call their homes”.
“We are not plaintiffs. We are donor – investors to the welfare, institutions and the future of this country, Mr. Sureka said.
“Nevertheless, instead of being accepted as high -valuable contributions to the laws that respect the British society, we now confront ourselves with fear and uncertainty, as rhetoric reform is spreading.
“The separatist language of the reform does not deal with the real challenges of England – only cultivating anger, creating a climate in which families like me feel insecure when sending our children to school or just walking in the town.
“What exactly have we done to deserve this? We work, contribute, raise the new generation of British citizens and pay much more than we will issue.”
On Monday, reform UK gave a hostage to see tens of thousands of people who legally settled in Britain under the risk of deportation.
Nigel Farage said that the current option of ILR, who lived in the UK for five years and is open to employees, has “betrayed democracy” and promised to eliminate it.
Mr. In the event that the plan enters into force, Sureka and Mrs. Jalan are concerned that they will face an endless cycle of insecurity, based on employers to sponsole the cost visas indefinitely.
Together, they say that they pay more than 100,000 taxes every year, they spend tens of thousands of pounds without getting help from public funds, and they direct their gains to the UK economy through investments.
If it is deported, they are not sure what will happen to their investments in the UK, such as their homes and pensions. His four -month -old sons are also an British citizen, so if they are going to move, they must apply for a visa elsewhere.
“If this plan is absolutely realized, we will move, Mr. Sureka said. Uz We feel that we do not belong, but as a family’s need for stability. Other countries could give us this stability, but it would be unclear here.
“Leave our emotional ties aside to your friends, neighbors and colleagues, we have made financial investments, so what will happen to them?”
Mr. Farage’s plans were condemned by Migration Aid Organizations and Thinking Organizations and the maintenance industry that warned of injury to injury.
Josephine Whitaker-Yilmaz, President of Charity Praxis, warned that the proposals will “tank our economy that has already struggled to tank our economy by breaking the lives of millions of people living and working in England for years.
Mr. Sureka said: “Reform, rather than meeting people who strengthen the economy and social fabric, chooses to armed migration as a means of division. This is not leadership. This is not patriotism.
“This is the policy of fear, and Britain undermines the values of justice, morality and community that should represent.
“Families like mine should not have to live under the shadow of doubt or hostility. We deserve security, dignity and respect. Britain deserves solutions to real problems, not the scapegoat of the people who help him.”




