Judge wrote:Lee J wrote:That left Leto needing a work permit but Liverpool's application was refused by the Department of Work and Pensions.
i bet if he was of asian/muslim/polish/iraq or Iran origin he'd be given the permit and a place to live on full benefits too.
fking country is twisted.
i have to agree with lee here.
if the dept of work and pensions, deny him a permit to work, cause he aint played much, then thats ludicrous, as the spongers from overseas, dont do fu'ck all and get all sorts of permits etc, and benefits, house, car, phone and free health care etc etc etc etc etc
the list goes on
at least the lad has a recognised job, and he's penalised for it
Fu*king government
Rush Job wrote:Judge wrote:Lee J wrote:That left Leto needing a work permit but Liverpool's application was refused by the Department of Work and Pensions.
i bet if he was of asian/muslim/polish/iraq or Iran origin he'd be given the permit and a place to live on full benefits too.
fking country is twisted.
i have to agree with lee here.
if the dept of work and pensions, deny him a permit to work, cause he aint played much, then thats ludicrous, as the spongers from overseas, dont do fu'ck all and get all sorts of permits etc, and benefits, house, car, phone and free health care etc etc etc etc etc
the list goes on
at least the lad has a recognised job, and he's penalised for it
Fu*king government
I wouldnt beleve everything you read in the Mail Judgey, never heard of the DSS handing out car's or phones, or houses for that matter.
LFC2007 wrote:Thank f*ck for that then, it means he'll have to get first team experience on loan, and it means he can't play for us. Good news for all concerned
On his way to Olympiakos
Sabre wrote:LFC2007 wrote:Thank f*ck for that then, it means he'll have to get first team experience on loan, and it means he can't play for us. Good news for all concerned
On his way to Olympiakos
I don't share the apparent "not bother"ness about the decission. If we had the work permission, a loan would still be an option for us, possibly a good one. So this decission is a big nuisance no matter how we look at it.
The point is what's the criteria for the denial. This decission, once again, is bad for us, like the Mark Gonzalez case, who had to be loaned to Spain, and we waited for him and then he didn't answer well to the pressure of a big club. At the least, we lost some precious time with him because of a similar decission, and that costed us.
I think that to be a fringe player of Liverpool is as important as being a key player at a small premier team. Leto fulfills his job, which is not only in official games or reserve games but also in training, and he does his job in a top club. He's as good as to be an argentinian international, so if he doesn't receive this permission, then I don't know who will. Do they apply a known criteria? do they give reasons?
Judge wrote:Lee J wrote:That left Leto needing a work permit but Liverpool's application was refused by the Department of Work and Pensions.
i bet if he was of asian/muslim/polish/iraq or Iran origin he'd be given the permit and a place to live on full benefits too.
fking country is twisted.
i have to agree with lee here.
if the dept of work and pensions, deny him a permit to work, cause he aint played much, then thats ludicrous, as the spongers from overseas, dont do fu'ck all and get all sorts of permits etc, and benefits, house, car, phone and free health care etc etc etc etc etc
the list goes on
at least the lad has a recognised job, and he's penalised for it
Fu*king government
The Manhattan Project wrote:Leto should tell the government he's a Latvian who speaks no English and may be a pimp and human trafficker.
He'll get into the country with no problems.
Work permits will be issued to international players of the highest calibre who are able to make a significant contribution in footballing terms to the development of the United Kingdom game at the highest level (i.e. clubs competing in the Premier Leagues and Football Leagues in England and Scotland, the Welsh Premier League and the Irish Premier League in Northern Ireland).
Sabre wrote:Thanks for the link LFC2007, and I understand your views.Work permits will be issued to international players of the highest calibre who are able to make a significant contribution in footballing terms to the development of the United Kingdom game at the highest level (i.e. clubs competing in the Premier Leagues and Football Leagues in England and Scotland, the Welsh Premier League and the Irish Premier League in Northern Ireland).
I can agree the aim of the rule, as otherwise a Conference team could make scatter gun tactics with lads coming from Africa and offer a lot of small shitty contracts. And since there are a lot of lower teams, there would be a lot of players that could use the pretext of football to stay in the country.
But I disagree the arbitrary conditions that are later set and that are based in FIFA rankings. Gonzalez, was denied the permit because Chile hadn't a high position. Leto's problem is different, his nation is so powerful in terms of football that playing "A" games would be not only expensive for him, but for most of English professional players (bar the international regular ones).
If you look at the quoted text, I think Leto fulfills the criteria. More even so if they consider Irish and Welsh leagues as top ones. Let's remember that working as a footballer can be understood broadly, as there are conference leagues and a lot of lower divisions. Certainly playing at Liverpool, even as a reserve, with possibilities to have minutes, should be considered as top football.
Gonzalez wasn't good enough for Liverpool, correct, but he might be very good for Bolton or Betis in Spain, other smaller, yet top division clubs. Same thing applies to Leto, IMHO, it's very harsh to deny him a work permit if we attend to what it is quoted. Not good enough for Liverpool doesn't mean not good enough for another top division club.
Change of employment
A club wishing to sign a player from another United Kingdom club must submit an application to the sports and entertainments team, UK Border Agency. If the work permit criteria are satisfied, a permit will be issued for the period of a player's contract, up to a maximum of five years.
Loans
If a player is moving to another club on loan then the new club must make a fresh application before the player can play for them. If the player does not meet the criteria and the club have requested a panel, the panel will be arranged.
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