Migrants Stuns UK Radio by Admitting He Used FAKE Job to Enter Britain — Then Quit Weeks Later (Video)

A man who recently moved to the UK caused outrage after he openly admitted on live radio that he used a fake care job to get into the country, then left that job just a few months later. During an LBC political talk show hosted by Tom Swarbrick, the caller, originally from Zimbabwe, explained how his cousin helped him and several family members move to the UK by setting up a care company that doesn’t actually exist anymore.
He said he only worked in the care sector for about three months before quitting to look for other work. He then tried jobs in construction and Amazon but eventually got a better-paying job in a bank. When the host asked how he managed to come to the UK, given that care work doesn’t pay well, the caller admitted it was made possible through his cousin’s fake care company. The cousin created the business in Zimbabwe just for visa purposes, and although the company is now shut down, it allowed the whole family to enter the UK legally on paper.
The host was clearly shocked and interrupted him to clarify whether he was saying that he came to the UK through a fake job and quickly abandoned it. The caller calmly confirmed that’s exactly what happened, and admitted he simply used the system in a way that benefited him.
Tom Swarbrick accused him of “playing the system,” and the man didn’t deny it—in fact, he agreed completely. He also mentioned that four of his siblings also made the move, and all of them now have different jobs, including one working for a UK council and another in construction.
After the show, angry reactions quickly flooded social media. Many people were outraged, saying this kind of visa abuse is why the UK still faces a massive shortage of carers even after thousands of foreign care workers have been brought in. Some called for immediate deportation of anyone who enters this way and abuses the process. Others were stunned that someone would casually admit this kind of fraud on national radio without fear of consequences.