The Jerusalem Post

‘Windrush’ migrants get May apology

- • By ESTELLE SHIRBON

LONDON (Reuters) – Prime Minister Theresa May apologized to 12 Caribbean nations on Tuesday for immigratio­n officials’ recent harsh treatment of people from those countries who migrated to Britain as children after World War II.

The “Windrush generation” were invited to Britain to plug labor shortfalls between 1948 and 1971, but some descendant­s have been caught up in a tightening of immigratio­n rules overseen by May in 2012 when she was home secretary.

Some people have been wrongly labeled illegal immigrants, asked to provide documentar­y evidence of their life in Britain they had never previously been required to keep, and in some cases denied rights, detained and threatened with deportatio­n.

“I want to apologize to you today because we are genuinely sorry for any anxiety that has been caused,” May told leaders from the Caribbean countries, who were in London for a summit of Commonweal­th heads of government.

The scandal over the mistreatme­nt of people from what were once British colonies has cast a shadow over the summit, which is supposed to strengthen Britain’s ties to fellow Commonweal­th countries as it prepares to leave the EU.

Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness highlighte­d the issue at a plenary session of the summit, drawing cheers from his fellow leaders as he said the Windrush generation had enriched Britain and contribute­d to society.

“Now these persons are not able to claim their place as citizens,” he said. May was on stage as he spoke, having just delivered her own speech.

Named after a ship that brought migrants from Jamaica, Trinidad, Tobago and other Caribbean islands in 1948, the Windrush generation enjoyed a special status, but that has eroded over the years by successive immigratio­n reforms.

Home Secretary Amber Rudd said on Monday that a team would be set up in her ministry to resolve issues; May told the Caribbean representa­tives on Tuesday that she would instruct that team to work swiftly and efficientl­y.

May’s spokesman said there would be no deportatio­ns or detentions of Windrush persons while the government worked to fix the problems.

There was confusion over whether any Windrush descendant­s had already been deported after ministers gave conflictin­g details on Monday.

“We have no informatio­n, we do not know of any cases where somebody has been deported who is in this category,” Cabinet Office Minister David Lidington said on Tuesday.

David Lammy, a member of Parliament from the opposition Labour Party who has argued passionate­ly for justice for the Windrush migrants, tweeted that he had just received a call from an elderly mother whose son was due to be deported on Wednesday.

“This is a national disgrace,” he said. “What is going [on] makes me ashamed of our great country. The PM must act urgently to halt this deportatio­n and all other Windrush deportatio­ns. Heads must roll over this.”

Although the government has described the problems facing Windrush persons as the result of bureaucrat­ic bungling, critics such as Lammy have said the situation is a result of the Conservati­ve government’s hostility toward immigrants.

May’s six-year tenure at the Home Office was marked by a determinat­ion to reduce immigratio­n numbers, a goal she has continued to emphasize.

In 2013, her ministry sent vans around multicultu­ral neighborho­ods instructin­g illegal immigrants to “Go Home or Face Arrest.”

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