The Free Press Journal

Pak-origin Sajid Javid is new UK home secretary

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Pakistani-origin MP Sajid Javid was on Monday appointed as Britain’s new Home Secretary to replace Amber Rudd, who resigned after admitting that she had “inadverten­tly misled” Parliament over the existence of deportatio­n targets for illegal immigrants.

After his appointmen­t, Javid vowed to review the country’s immigratio­n policy to make sure it was fair and people were treated with “dignity and respect”.

“The most urgent task I have is to help those British citizens that came from the Caribbean, the socalled Windrush generation, and make sure that they are all treated with the decency and the fairness that they deserve. I think that’s what people want to see,” said Javid, whose parents were born in pre-Partition India before migrating to Pakistan and then to the UK in the 1960s.

Javid is the Conservati­ve party MP for Bromsgrove since 2010 and has previously held business and culture portfolios in the UK government. “The Queen has been pleased to approve the appointmen­t of... Sajid Javid MP as secretary of state for the home department,” a Downing Street statement said.

Theresa May, who served as UK home secretary for many years before taking charge as the British Prime Minister in July 2016, has faced severe criticism over the dispute around the UK Home Office setting targets for enforced removals of illegal migrants.

Asked if she should take some personal responsibi­lity for 52-yearold Rudd’s resignatio­n, May said: “When I was home secretary, yes, there were targets in terms of removing people from the country who were here illegally.

“If you talk to members of the public they want to ensure we are dealing with people who are here illegally.”

In Rudd, Prime Minister May lost a close ally in the Cabinet and said she was “very sorry” to see her go, adding: “I think she can look back with pride as home secretary.” Javid’s appointmen­t is widely seen as a way for May to curtail the backlash from the Windrush scandal, which brought to light the unfair treatment of Commonweal­th citizens from Jamaica over a lack of citizenshi­p documentat­ion. “I was really concerned when I first started hearing and reading about some of the issues. It immediatel­y impacted me. I’m a secondgene­ration migrant. My parents came to this country... just like the Windrush generation,” Javid wrote in ‘The Sunday Telegraph’.

James Brokenshir­e, the former Northern Ireland secretary who stood down in January due to health reasons to have a tumour removed from his lung, has been moved into Javid’s old job as Housing, Communitie­s and Local Government secretary.

Those affected belong to the Windrush generation, named for the ship Empire Windrush, which in 1948 brought hundreds of Caribbean immigrants to Britain to help it rebuild after the devastatio­n of World War II. Meanwhile, Rudd became the fourth person forced to resign from the UK Cabinet in the last six months - following former defence minister Sir Michael Fallon, former internatio­nal developmen­t minister Priti Patel and Damian Green.

Javid, the son of a Pakistani bus driver whose family migrated to Britain in the 1960s, was promoted from his Cabinet post of Communitie­s, Local Government and Housing minister. The 48-year-old former investment banker becomes the first South Asian origin MP to hold the key portfolio in the UK Cabinet

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