Friday, May 15, 2026
  • Login
The Southern African Times
  • Home
  • Southern Africa
  • Business
    • African Start ups
    • African Continental Free Trade Area
  • Technology
    • Lifestyle
      • Health
      • Culture
      • Food and Drink
      • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • SAT Jobs
    • Events
  • About Us
    • Advertise with Us
    • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Southern Africa
  • Business
    • African Start ups
    • African Continental Free Trade Area
  • Technology
    • Lifestyle
      • Health
      • Culture
      • Food and Drink
      • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • SAT Jobs
    • Events
  • About Us
    • Advertise with Us
    • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
The Southern African Times
No Result
View All Result
Home Opinion

OPINION | Taking Back Control? Try Giving Credit First

Why the Immigration Debate Needs Facts, Not Fear – A Response from the Frontlines of UK Healthcare

by SAT Reporter
May 19, 2025
in Opinion
0
OPINION | Taking Back Control? Try Giving Credit First

The Prime Minister’s recent address on immigration, introducing a sweeping White Paper to “take back control,” marks a defining moment in Britain’s political and socio-economic landscape. It arrives wrapped in impassioned rhetoric, pledging to shut down what he describes as an “open-borders experiment” that has pushed net migration to nearly one million in 2023. For many, it echoes a familiar refrain—control, enforcement, responsibility. Yet, in this recalibration of immigration policy, one central truth has been dangerously overlooked: immigrants have long stood as pillars of British society, not as threats to it.

I write this not only as a UK citizen of nearly three decades, but as a healthcare professional who has spent the last 25 years embedded in the very infrastructure that keeps this nation standing. Let us speak plainly: without migrants, the NHS would collapse. It is not hyperbole, but fact. From consultants to care assistants, from mental health nurses to hospital porters, migrant professionals fill essential gaps, uphold standards, and offer unwavering service even amid crisis. Their contributions are not abstract; they are visible in every ward, surgery, and care home.

The Prime Minister emphasises fairness and national interest. He speaks of rules, obligations, and cohesion. These are important values—but they must not become euphemisms for exclusion. The assertion that sectors have become “addicted” to cheap labour ignores the complexity of global labour markets and the lived reality of sectors like healthcare and social care, where recruitment remains a perennial challenge. Indeed, if there is an addiction, it is to the idea that curbing migration solves systemic underinvestment.

ADVERTISEMENT

Let me offer a perspective grounded in lived experience. My GP has always been Asian. My dentist, my pharmacist—the same. At university, most of my lecturers were of African or South Asian descent. In my NHS career, a majority of my colleagues were born beyond British shores. The one time I truly mixed with mainly local-born citizens? That would be my non-league football days.

This is the real Britain. A nation made stronger by diversity. Migrants are not transient passers-by; they are educators, innovators, carers, neighbours. They pay taxes, raise families, and build communities. To suggest, as the White Paper does, that settlement must now be earned over a decade—an extension from the previous five years—undermines the loyalty and stability many already provide from day one.

We must also be cautious not to frame integration solely as a test of language or assimilation. Integration is a two-way street. It is not simply about learning English, but about recognising the equal dignity of every contributor to the national story. The government’s promise to reduce immigration numbers dramatically may please focus groups, but it risks alienating key global talent in science, tech, and medicine—exactly the kind of people we should be courting, not deterring.

Yes, it is fair to ask industries to invest in local skills. Yes, we must ensure our systems are not open to abuse. But let’s also be fair in our judgments. Migration has not pulled this country apart—it has helped hold it together. Especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, when migrant healthcare workers risked their lives daily, often with little recognition and even fewer protections.

So as we debate the future of immigration, let us choose not slogans but substance. Let’s centre our policies on balance, not backlash. Let’s ground our discourse in data, not distortion. And above all, let’s remember that every migrant story is a human story—a story that deserves not suspicion but respect.

The future of Britain must be built on unity, not division. As a nation of laws and values, we must ensure those values are not weaponised to draw lines of exclusion but used to build bridges of belonging. That is the kind of leadership our country needs. And it is the kind of vision our communities—migrant and native alike—deserve.

 

Written by Marshall Gore is a UK-based healthcare professional with over 25 years of NHS experience. A long-time advocate for migrant contributions, he is active in Southern African diaspora communities and speaks regularly on healthcare, inclusion, and social impact.

Tags: BritainDiversityHealthcareinclusionintegrationKeir StarmerMarshall Goremigrant workersnet migrationNHSNHS contributionspublic policySocial ImpactSouthern African diasporaUK immigration policyWhite Paper
Previous Post

OPINION | Trump’s Chaos is Africa’s Ladder

Next Post

UPDATED: Zimbabwe at Trent Bridge: Not Just a Match, but a Message to Cricket’s Gatekeepers

SAT Reporter

Related Posts

France Is Trying to Get New Stripes in Africa – but will it work?
Opinion

France Is Trying to Get New Stripes in Africa – but will it work?

by Development Reimagined
May 14, 2026
When AI Gets It Wrong, Humans Must Get It Right
Opinion

When AI Gets It Wrong, Humans Must Get It Right

by Dr Brighton Chireka
May 14, 2026
Can the United States Still Sanction China Into Compliance?
Opinion

Can the United States Still Sanction China Into Compliance?

by SAT Reporter
May 12, 2026
Op-Ed by President Ramaphosa | Reparations must help to address Africa’s colonial legacy
Opinion

Op-Ed by President Ramaphosa | Everyone in South Africa Must Respect and Uphold Our Laws

by SAT Reporter
May 12, 2026
Who Owns the American Story? Druski’s Viral Satire and Hollywood’s Identity Crisis
Opinion

Who Owns the American Story? Druski’s Viral Satire and Hollywood’s Identity Crisis

by Michelle Mungeni
May 12, 2026
Next Post
UPDATED: Zimbabwe at Trent Bridge: Not Just a Match, but a Message to Cricket’s Gatekeepers

UPDATED: Zimbabwe at Trent Bridge: Not Just a Match, but a Message to Cricket’s Gatekeepers

Browse by Category

  • Africa AI
  • African Continental Free Trade Area
  • African Debt
  • African Start ups
  • Agriculture
  • AI Africa
  • Algeria
  • All News
  • Analysis
  • Angola
  • Arts / Culture
  • Asia
  • Botswana
  • BOTSWANA
  • BREAKING NEWS
  • BRICS
  • Burkina Faso
  • Burundi
  • Business
  • Business
  • Business Wire
  • Cameroon
  • Central Africa
  • Chad
  • China
  • Climate Change
  • Climate Changev
  • Community
  • Congo Republic
  • Conservation
  • Côte d’Ivoire
  • COVID 19
  • CRYPTOCURRENCY
  • Culture
  • Democratic Republic of Congo
  • Diplomacy
  • Eastern Africa
  • Economic Development
  • Economy
  • Education
  • Egypt
  • Elections 2024
  • Energy
  • Entertainment
  • Environment
  • Eritrea
  • Ethiopia
  • Europe
  • Fashion
  • Feature
  • Finance
  • Financial Inclusion
  • Food
  • Food and Drink
  • Foods
  • GABON
  • Ghana
  • Global
  • Global Africa
  • Guinea
  • Health
  • Humanitarian Aid
  • Immigration
  • in Southern Africa
  • International news
  • International Relations
  • Investment
  • Ivory Coast
  • Just In
  • Kenya
  • Lesotho
  • Libya
  • Life Style
  • Lifestyle
  • Literature
  • Malawi
  • Malawi
  • Mali
  • Markets
  • Mauritius
  • Middle East
  • Mining in Africa
  • Morocco
  • Mozambique
  • Namibia
  • Niger
  • niger
  • Nigeria
  • North Africa
  • North-Eastern Africa
  • Obituaries
  • Obituary
  • Opinion
  • PARTNER CONTENT
  • Politics
  • Property
  • Racism
  • Rwanda
  • Rwanda
  • SADC
  • SAT Interviews
  • SAT Investigation
  • SAT Jobs
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Senegal
  • Seychelles
  • Somaliland
  • South Africa
  • South Sudan
  • Sports
  • Startup Africa
  • STOCK EXCHANGE
  • Sudan
  • Sustainability
  • Sustainablity
  • Tanzania
  • Technology
  • Telecommunications
  • The Editorial Board
  • The Power Of She
  • Togo
  • Trade
  • Travel
  • Travel
  • Tunisia
  • Uganda
  • Uncategorized
  • Wealth
  • West Africa
  • World
  • World
  • ZAMBIA
  • Zambia
  • ZIMBABWE
  • Zimbabwe

Browse by Tags

#NewsUpdate #SouthAfrica #SouthernAfricanTimes #TheSouthernAfricanTimes AfCFTA africa African Continental Free Trade Area African development African Development Bank African economies African economy African Union Agriculture Angola Botswana Business China Climate change Cyril Ramaphosa Economic Development economic growth energy transition governance industrialisation Inflation Infrastructure Infrastructure Development International relations Investment Kenya Mozambique Namibia news Nigeria Regional Integration renewable energy Rwanda SADC South Africa Southern Africa sustainable development Tanzania United States Zambia Zimbabwe
ADVERTISEMENT

WHO WE ARE

The Southern African Times is a regional bloc digital newspaper that covers Southern African and world news. The paper also gives a nuanced analysis on news and covers a wide range of reporting which include sports, entertainment, foreign affairs, arts and culture.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

  • Home
  • Southern Africa
  • Business
    • African Start ups
    • African Continental Free Trade Area
  • Technology
    • Lifestyle
      • Health
      • Culture
      • Food and Drink
      • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • SAT Jobs
    • Events
  • About Us
    • Advertise with Us
    • Contact Us
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?