So far, three have used the term, and you make four, yet until now non-one was prepared to offer a definition of the term.
MBK has resorted to google to offer a definition, which shows that the term does not apply to asylum seekers.
Would you like to present an argument for how the term can be applied to asylum seekers?
As usual you are disregarding the clear explanation I gave and replying with yet another useless question.
Let me make it clearer:
You rightly pointed out the following:
"Here are a few widely recognized individuals who began their lives in the UK as asylum seekers or refugees:
Freddie Mercury: The legendary lead singer of Queen fled Zanzibar with his family in 1964 to escape the Zanzibar Revolution. []
Sir Mo Farah: The multiple Olympic gold-medal-winning runner arrived in the UK from Somalia as a child to escape conflict. [1]
Rita Ora: The pop star and actress fled the former Yugoslavia with her family as a baby to escape the persecution of Albanians. [1, 2]
Victor Moses: The professional footballer came to the UK from Nigeria at age 11 as an asylum seeker after his parents were killed during religious clashes. [1, 2]
M.I.A.: The globally famous British-Sri Lankan rapper and visual artist fled to the UK as a child to escape the Sri Lankan Civil War. [1, 2, 3]
Sigmund Freud: The father of psychoanalysis sought asylum in London at the age of 82 to escape Nazi persecution in 1938. [1, 2, 3]
Luol Deng: The NBA basketball star and British sporting icon fled South Sudan and lived in Egypt before being granted political asylum in London."
Don't you see a common denominator there???
They all run away from war and persecution.
Now, in modern times (today), don't you see the difference between an immigrant coming from Iran or Palestine and another coming from Bangladesh or Albania???