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In 2011, 18,913 people born in the DRC were recorded as resident in England, 280 in Wales, [4] 298 in Scotland [5] and 19 in Northern Ireland. [6] In the 2001 UK census 8,569 DRC-born people were residing in the UK. [7] The majority of Congolese in the United Kingdom have come as political refugees. Congolese migration to the UK is a recent ...
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Congolese_in_the_United_Kingdom&oldid=302287883"
This page was last edited on 11 January 2017, at 14:00 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
A 2010 estimate for the whole of the UK shows that 4.76 million people (7.7 per cent) were born outside the EU and 2.24 million (3.6 per cent) were born in another EU member state. [12] The Office for National Statistics produces annual estimates of the size of the UK population by country of birth, based on the Annual Population Survey. The ...
While people from the Senegal River Valley (Senegal, Mali, Mauritania, Guinea) first arrived in the 1960s, Central Africans (chiefly from Cameroon and Congo), arrived in the 1970s. [2] Most of them come for work or familial reunification, but there is also a large number of Congolese people who come with a statute of political asylum during the ...
Pages in category "British people of Democratic Republic of the Congo descent" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The Democratic Republic of the Congo maintains an embassy in London and the United Kingdom maintains an embassy in Kinshasa. The United Kingdom established its first Diplomatic mission with the Congo Free State in 1902 when a British Consulate was built in the then capital Boma. A vice-consulate later opened in Léopoldville in 1906.
According to the Office for National Statistics (ONS) based on population survey figures from 2019, people from ethnic minority backgrounds make up 14.4% of the United Kingdom (16.1% for England, 5.9% for Wales, 5.4% for Scotland and 2.2% for Northern Ireland). [1]