 I'm Aaron Peters, coming from London's Chinatown. We're here today to observe, watch what's going to happen. There is, at three o'clock, a strike, business led by Chinese businesses here in opposition to recent UKBA raids. I'm joined by Bo. Bo, you're incredibly angry. What's upset you so much? Well, the way, as I say, the UKBA people come into Raider in Chinatown during the last two or three months, you know. When they questioned me myself, you know, it took them half an hour to treat me, and they even shouted at me and said, don't answer my mobile phone, you know. That's why I told him, you know, that, you know, I have to answer my mobile phone, you know. I say, you know, because I look at it even if I don't answer it because my mother is in a nursing home, you know. And I'm so careful for my mother, you know. Anything happened to my mother, they will call me, you know. No respect, nothing. Even the police don't treat me like that, you know. We didn't see one police officer out the protest. That was a marked change to what one would normally expect. And I think it speaks volumes of the difference with regards to the tactics that UKBA and the MET employ with these kinds of communities. Strong, organized, they have a voice. The police know better than overstepping the mark, perhaps in Chinatown, UKBA, however, different story. And now, they're getting a response. I'm joined by Suresh Grover, one of the organizers of today's demonstration. Suresh, there's a lot of noise. We've spoken to several people, business owners, workers. The anger seems pretty consistent. People are really annoyed. I've been told that there have been increasingly frequent raids, fishing trips, as they're being called, over the course of the last several months. How new is this? Well, I think what's new is that 13 raids have taken place that are known to us over the last six weeks on a weekly basis. These raids are aggressive. They're not intelligence-led. They cause a alarm and distress to people who are being raided. The immigration officers who raid them are rude. They've been racist commons made to managers. And they are so aggressive, it has brought massive anger into the community. The composition of the demonstration here today is fascinating. I've seen a lot of East Asian faces. That's not a surprise. However, you're also seeing a lot of Black Britons, Unite banners. Behind me are several Eastern European and Central Asian porters who work in some of the wholesale food businesses around here. On the other side, West Africans, I've spoken to a few people and they're saying that, increasingly, it feels like there's a very generalized grievance, specifically amongst the non-EU working community, that they're being specifically targeted and that that's a political consequence of change in migration policy since 2010. We found this gentleman here with this sign, Welcome to Fake Britain, Government-only care for inward Chinese investment, but not our local labor shortage. An interesting angle is one I agree with. At first sight, this seems like a continuation of what's racist, pernicious, kind of tactics by UKBA, but there's a bigger story here, right? Absolutely. I think in the nutshell, they are only trying to do a political game. They want to be seen as doing something, but they have already lost control on the borders to the EU, but they have to be seen as doing something. And that's why they only want the people coming to invest, but when it comes to labor shortage, they don't want to know. So looking back on Tuesday's protests, a few thoughts. We have to remember this is a boss-led strike, real rare occurrence. Over 100 businesses in Chinatown are displaying these very prominent posters against UKBA fishing rates that are being described. And for now, there's a shared interest between workers and bosses with regards to migration caps and what is the plurable despicable treatment by British state against foreign-owned non-EU, primarily businesses, particularly in catering and the restaurant industry. What could change that? It's quite possible in the next two years, three years leading up to the next general election that the grievances of these bosses could be placated and we see a change of migration caps in these industries. That doesn't change however, the racist, disgusting treatment of many of these workers. They were saying frequently they were being treated like animals, they were comparing UKBA to the SA. That doesn't seem to be the problem of the bosses however. A final point, if this isn't resolved, we see a strange mutual interest between neuroskeptics and powerful bourgeois diaspora communities, specifically the bosses. So if this isn't addressed by the Labour Party or the Conservative Party, where do they go? UKIP?