Jamaica Gleaner

Johnson brings fresh Windrush jitters

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

FRESH JITTERS have emerged among members of the Windrush Generation in the United Kingdom since Boris Johnson succeeded Theresa May as prime minister last month.

There are fears that the new prime minister could stymie efforts made to compensate immigrants who went to Britain following the Second World War who did not have the right documentat­ion to prove their status in the UK and suffered adverse effects on their life as a result. The compensati­on arrangemen­t resulted from backlash after stories emerged of several members of the Windrush Generation being denied state services, including access to healthcare, with some even being deported after failing to prove their legal residency status.

More than half of the British government’s Windrush Generation cases registered under the compensati­on scheme are Jamaican.

Concerns have been raised that Johnson, who is known for his swashbuckl­ing style of politics, may not want to go along with existing compensati­on plans.

Chairman of the The Windrush Movement UK, Desmond Jaddoo, confirmed that a

letter was sent to Johnson seeking assurances that the Windrush Scheme would not be watered down as a consequenc­e of the leadership change.

UNDER THE RADAR

He told The Gleaner that many of the affected persons remain under the radar of the British authoritie­s.

He explained that the communiqué demands that Johnson carry through on previous statements he made on undocument­ed migrants, who are disproport­ionately members of the African and Caribbean communitie­s.

“Clearly, Jamaicans in the UK are feeling the brunt of the government’s immigratio­n policy. This needs to be addressed and the hostile environmen­t suspended, especially bearing in mind the mentioned amnesty for undocument­ed migrants, which Mr Johnson mentioned during his campaign for the Conservati­ve Party leadership, which led him to becoming prime minister,” Jaddoo said.

He said that urgent assurances are needed from Johnson in order to calm fears of members of the affected community.

“Can you assure us that the commitment­s made in order to address those caught up in the Windrush scandal – some of whom have suffered badly – will not be limited and that every effort will continue to be made in order to remedy this quickly with all of the necessary extensions that may be deemed necessary?” the letter stated.

“In terms of undocument­ed migrants, during your leadership campaign, you said that an amnesty for undocument­ed migrants who have been in the UK for 15 years is possible to obtain status in order that they may constructi­vely contribute to the economy,” it further read.

In April, then Home Secretary Sajid Javid announced that the UK would pay around £200m – and maybe more – in compensati­on to people whose lives were damaged by the Home Office’s mistaken classifica­tion of thousands of long-term British residents as illegal immigrants.

The announceme­nt came almost a year after the government admitted that its treatment of the Windrush Generation had been “appalling”and promised reform of its immigratio­n system and compensati­on to those affected by hostile environmen­t policies.

Home Office officials claim at least 15,000 individual­s may have a right to compensati­on for being wrongly deported, forced out of their jobs, or for the loss of access to benefits.

 ??  ?? Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
 ??  ?? Desmond Jaddoo
Desmond Jaddoo

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