Weekend Herald

British Home Secretary refuses to step down over treatment of immigrants

- Amber Rudd Theresa May Reuters

British Home Secretary Amber Rudd says she has no plans to resign after giving contradict­ory statements about meeting targets for deportatio­ns, deepening a scandal over Britain’s treatment of Caribbean immigrants.

For nearly two weeks, British ministers have been struggling to explain why some descendant­s of the so-called “Windrush generation”, invited to Britain to plug labour shortfalls between 1948 and 1971, had been labelled as illegal immigrants.

The Windrush scandal overshadow­ed the Commonweal­th summit last week in London and has raised questions about Theresa May’s six-year stint as Home Secretary before she became Prime Minister following the 2016 Brexit referendum.

May apologised to the black community on Thursday in a letter to The Voice, Britain’s national AfroCaribb­ean newspaper.

“We have let you down and I am deeply sorry,” she said. “But apologies alone are not good enough. We must urgently right this historic wrong.”

Rudd said at a lunch with reporters in Parliament that it had been “a difficult few weeks”, but she was committed to the Home Office.

She told lawmakers on Thursday that Britain did not have targets for the removal of immigrants, but yesterday was forced to clarify her words after leaked documents showed some targets did exist.

“I have never agreed that there should be specific removal targets and I would never support a policy that puts targets ahead of people,” Rudd told Parliament in answer to an urgent request for a statement from the opposition Labour Party.

“The immigratio­n arm of the Home Office has been using local targets for internal performanc­e management,” Rudd said. “These were not published targets against which performanc­e was assessed. But if they were used inappropri­ately then this will have to change.”

Opposition lawmakers called for her to resign.

“Isn’t it time that the Home Secretary considered her honour and resign?” asked the Labour Party’s home affairs spokeswoma­n, Diane Abbott.

Tory MPs, however, including Cabinet colleagues, have repeatedly expressed their backing for Rudd. Michael Gove and Sajid Javid sat beside her on the frontbench on Thursday, while backbenche­r Nicholas Soames said she had “the total support of this side of the house”, to cheers from other Tory MPs.

Rudd told reporters she did not want immigratio­n officers to be set targets for the number of people who need to be removed from Britain and distanced herself from government statements it wanted to create a “hostile environmen­t” for illegal immigrants.

“I have not approved or seen or cleared any targets for removals,” she said. “Looking ahead I will not be doing that.”

Rudd, who is tipped by some as a future prime minister, also denied a story in the Sun newspaper on Wednesday that she is raising money for a future leadership bid when May resigns. “I am just thinking about staying in the game,” she said.

May’s spokesman said the Prime Minister had full confidence in Rudd.

The spokesman added that the idea of removal targets went back a number of decades under successive government­s.

“The Home Secretary is working hard in order to address the concerns that have been raised in relation to Windrush and to ensure they are addressed and put right,” the spokesman added.

May has apologised for the Windrush scandal and promised citizenshi­p to all those affected.

But the fiasco has raised awkward questions about how the pursuit of lower immigratio­n after Britain’s 2019 exit from the European Union sits alongside the desire to be an outwardloo­king global economy.

Some of the Windrush migrants have been made homeless, lost their jobs, been threatened with deportatio­n and denied benefits, according to the Guardian newspaper.

The crisis has focused attention on May, who as Home Secretary set out to create a “really hostile environmen­t” for illegal immigrants, imposing tough new requiremen­ts in 2012 for people to prove their legal status.

She said in her letter to The Voice that the Government would do “whatever it takes” to end the anxieties faced by those affected.

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