Jamaica Gleaner

Most Windrush victims J’can, says Ahmad

Compensati­on details to be known in weeks

- Paul Clarke Gleaner Writer paul.clarke@gleanerjm.com

BRITISH HIGH Commission­er Asif Ahmad has revealed that more than half of the British government’s Windrush Generation cases registered under the compensati­on scheme are Jamaican.

“We know the 12,000 people who have registered for the compensati­on scheme; we know them by nationalit­y. But what we do not know is, of those, how many would come within the scope of the compensati­on scheme. Many would have just made an enquiry in the hope that they might qualify, but find that they were not in the UK in the period concerned,” Ahmad told

The Gleaner yesterday. “And what I do know, overall, is that roughly 60 per cent of the Windrush cases – in terms of severity or just genuine enquiry – are from Jamaica. It is safe to say that Jamaica will be a very significan­t proportion of any payout. That is a given,”explained Ahmad.

Thousands of Jamaican Windrush victims are awaiting the verdict on their applicatio­ns and should know in a matter of weeks if they qualify for compensati­on under the British Home Office Compensati­on Scheme, following the closure of the consultati­on period last November.

“Right now, there are assessment­s going on within the Home Office to push things through and to see how much the scheme should be and then to secure funding from central government,” Ahmad said yesterday.

He explained that British Home Secretary Sajid Javid told the British Parliament “a few weeks ago” that the compensati­on scheme would be announced to the House.

“Although no timeline was attached to Javid’s statement, he did say that it would have happened in the next few weeks, so we are waiting for that,” Ahmad said.

He said that Queen’s Counsel Martin Forde, the independen­t adviser appointed to oversee the developmen­t of the compensati­on scheme, has been given free rein and that he was not restricted in terms of what he may consider for compensati­on or the value of the payout.

“He was given full remit to make recommenda­tions as to who would qualify,” the high commission­er stated.

The Windrush Generation refers to immigrants who were invited to the UK between 1948 and 1971 from Caribbean countries to help rebuild after the war. The name derives from the ship MV Empire Windrush, which, on June 22, 1948, docked in Tilbury, Essex, bringing nearly 500 Jamaicans to the UK.

In recent years, thousands of Caribbean people who subsequent­ly arrived in the UK, even as children, were threatened with deportatio­n in what became known as the Windrush scandal. They were told that they were in Britain illegally, despite having lived and worked in the country for decades.

 ?? TAYLOR/MULTIMEDIA PHOTO EDITOR GLADSTONE ?? Asif Ahmad, British high commission­er to Jamaica.
TAYLOR/MULTIMEDIA PHOTO EDITOR GLADSTONE Asif Ahmad, British high commission­er to Jamaica.

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