



Online instructors are guiding thousands of foreign nationals in exploiting Britain's charitable volunteer programme to relocate entire families to the UK.
The development has emerged as maritime crossings reach unprecedented levels, with 25,000 individuals arriving via small boats this year alone.
Digital platforms have become avenues for migration advice, with content producers and legal posting publishing tutorials on navigating immigration systems.
These guides demonstrate methods for securing long-term residence through religious organisations and explain strategies for asylum applications that purportedly guarantee approval.
The charitable volunteer route has attracted increasing numbers of applicants, with government records showing 1,400 organisations authorised to sponsor such permits.
Nigerian content producer Kelvin Ossai, who identifies himself as a "lifestyle and relocation content creator", has garnered more than 23,000 views explaining how charitable volunteer permits serve as "leverage to bring your family into the UK".
His tutorials reveal that while primary visa holders cannot receive formal wages, they may obtain stipends for sustenance and transport.
"Most churches in the UK are charity organisations," Ossai states in his videos.
TIKTOK
|Kevin Ossai
"Most of them have the license to sponsor you on a charity visa - don't say I told you this."
Fellow content creator Tochi Esther, commanding 180,000 subscribers, features testimonials from individuals who successfully relocated their families through this pathway.
The programme requires each candidate to show they have £1,270 in savings and pay £319 per application, with additional healthcare charges applying to partners and children.
Religious institutions comprise many of sponsoring bodies among the government's approved list.
One interviewee featured in Esther's content disclosed: "Luckily for me as a volunteer working in the nursery, I was being paid as a volunteer. You still get paid as a volunteer, so I still get paid somehow."
She further explained: "My husband can do any type of work he works anywhere and as many hours as possible."
The creators emphasise that dependants face no employment restrictions whilst primary applicants undertake 20 hours of voluntary service weekly.
Legal practitioners specialising in immigration matters have published guidance on crafting asylum petitions with enhanced success rates.
TIKTOK
|Kevin Ossai has many videos on social media about how to get a visa to the UK
Sherissa Cupid-Bennett, presenting herself as a UK-based immigration solicitor, advises followers that claims based on religious conversion from Islam represent particularly strong cases.
Her tutorial entitled: "3 types of asylum claims with the best chance of success" suggests that genuine religious conversion narratives "almost always win" when adjudicators accept their authenticity.
These revelations surface as tensions escalate around accommodation facilities housing foreign nationals.
Weekend demonstrations at Canary Wharf's Britannia International Hotel began with families wearing pink attire before masked individuals disrupted proceedings, resulting in confrontations with law enforcement.