Scroll down to read the Tories’ furious reaction to our expose Pretending to be an asylum seeker from Afghanistan, he purchased the login to the delivery app’s service from a seller called Danyel. We showed how easy it was to scam the system after a Sun investigation last week showed migrants across the country could work illegally from asylum hotels as fast-food delivery drivers within hours of arriving in Britain.
Today, bosses of Deliveroo, Uber Eats and Just Eat will be hauled in by the Home Office.
As part of his cover story, our reporter told the account “dealer” — who operated on open Facebook forums under his real name — that he had no right to work in the UK as he had only just been processed by the Home Office.
But the dealer, based in Guildford, Surrey, told us: “It is no problem if you do your job, mate.”
Thousands of boat migrants working as delivery riders within hours of arriving while housed and fed by taxpayer, Sun probe reveals
