What is certain is that C4C, founded ten years ago by Clare Moseley, a middle-class Liverpool mother and accountant, appears to have morphed into a highly organised political force that stands accused of encouraging migrants to travel here illegally, helped by an army of up to 600 willing, but naive, volunteers. An investigation by the Daily Mail has discovered that Moseley runs a successful company staging anti-racism music festivals along with a man called Weyman Bennett, who is also a central committee member of the Socialist Workers Party and a co-convenor of SUTR.
The usuala suspects, indeed! Die=hard socialistd and weak, middle class white women.
Their lives have been intertwined since they first met in Calais and, according to official Government land ownership records, set up an office together in a smart Manchester apartment. It seems a far cry from C4C's original roots when, one Saturday morning in 2015, Moseley realised a crisis was unfolding in Calais. A million people poured into Europe as borders opened for Syrian refugees, with many heading to the French coast hoping to reach Britain. As she explained to The Guardian: 'I remember it vividly. I sat up in bed, browsing the internet… and an article caught my eye: it was about the refugee crisis. Men, women and children were risking their lives to get to Western Europe, and many were dying in the process.'
Must have been the weomen and children dying in the process, since it was mostly the fit, fighting age men reaching our shores.
'My husband came upstairs to find me crying,' she told the paper in another interview. That day, she said she spotted a charity on the web called Stand Up To Racism which she hoped would help her.
What else is a bored housewife to do but set up a system to flood her country with foreign invaders? I guess making jam with the WI no longer holds the cachet it once did.
Moseley set up a 'distribution' warehouse for food and clothes at the French port, calling the operation Care4Calais, leaving her husband Benjamin and teenage children back in Britain. 'It's been hard for my family. I can't imagine going back to my normal life… restaurants, parties, without thinking how people need help,' she added. Yet in France Moseley ran into problems. She had a year-long affair with Tunisian migrant Mohamed Bajar, which ended in tears when they parted and he tried to burn down the charity's warehouse.
*guilty chuckle* It sounds like a pitch for a 2025 Netflix gritty reboot of 'Shirley Valentine'....
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