Andrew Green
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sir Andrew Green, KCMG was a British diplomat and is the chairman of Migration Watch, a pressure group concerned with what they see as high levels of immigration to the United Kingdom.
Green was educated at Haileybury College, a former boys' boarding school (now co-educational) near Hertford in Hertfordshire, and at Cambridge University. He served with the Royal Green Jackets 1962-1965 and joined HM Diplomatic Service in 1965. He was a professional diplomat for 35 years. After studying Arabic, he spent half his career in the Middle East where he served in six posts. The remainder of his service was divided between London, Paris and Washington DC. He was Ambassador in Syria (1991-94) and then Director for the Middle East in the Foreign Office before serving for four and a half years as Ambassador in Saudi Arabia. He retired in June 2000.
Green has since devoted his time to voluntary work. He is a former Chairman of Medical Aid for Palestinians, a British charity seeking to improve health care for Palestinians both in Palestine and in refugee camps. He is a member of the Advisory Board of the Sudan Peace Building Programme, working to rebuild relationships in that war torn country. And he is a board member of Christian Solidarity Worldwide, a human rights organisation which speaks for Christians and others around the world who are suffering persecution for their beliefs.
Green is regularly interviewed on British television and radio as an anti-immigration voice, perceived as more moderate than far-right organisations and parties, in his role as founding Chairman of Migration Watch.
Asked how he came to be involved in migration issues, Green said that he first became aware of the problem when he was the Foreign Secretary's principal adviser on the Middle East in the mid 90s. At that time he spent two years trying, on the Prime Minister's instructions, to remove from Britain Islamic extremists who were claiming asylum but was frustrated by the British courts. On retirement he was able to look into matters further. He found that the net inflow of migrants from outside the EU was approaching 200,000 a year or 2 million every decade. (The latest government figures show that , in 2004, this inflow was 268,000). He decided that this was a matter which should be brought to public attention and so founded Migration Watch UK towards the end of 2001.
Asked about Migration Watch UK, Sir Andrew said, "This is an independent organisation. We have no political axes to grind. We simply believe that the public are entitled to know the facts, presented in a comprehensible form. It is then for the political system to decide what action to take." Andrew Green is also the name of a famous Australian footballer.