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International
Roundup
The
Telegraph of
U.K.
reports that the rapid influx of immigrants into the
U.K.
will make the shortage of homes in
England
worse over the next couple of decades, according to figures by the U.K
Department of Communities and Local Government.
The Department estimates that 4.8 million new households formed
in
England
between 2004 and 2006, requiring 223,000 new homes a year to accommodate
them. This is an increase of
24,000 a year on previous estimates.
The increase is attributed to the unexpectedly high immigration
from the rest of
Europe
.
Yvette
Cooper, the Housing Minister, said: “These figures show why it’s
right to build more homes to meet the needs of the next generation.
We have a growing population with people living longer and more
of us are living alone.”
*****
The
Korean government is set to introduce a program designed to assist
undocumented immigrants wanting to return home.
The Korea Times reports
that
South Korea
will set up travel arrangements and fund the cost.
The move came after Justice Minister Kim Sung-ho met with Brunson
McKinley, the director general of the Helsinki-based International
Organization for Migration last week. The program is called Assisted
Voluntary Return (AVR), a program familiar to European countries such as
Germany
,
Belgium
, and the
U.K.
The
program comes at a critical time for immigration in
Korea
. According to government
estimates, there are over 200,000 undocumented immigrants living in the
country.
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