Daily Mail

FIASCO THAT SHAMES BRITAIN

WINDRUSH OUTRAGE Rudd faces call to quit as she’s forced to admit Caribbean migrants to Britain could have been kicked out by mistake

- By Ian Drury, Jason Groves and Inderdeep Bains Turn to Page 6

AMBER Rudd yesterday admitted members of the ‘Windrush generation’ may have been kicked out of Britain by mistake. The Home Secretary conceded she did not know whether Caribbean migrants who came here in good faith after the Second World War had been wrongly removed.

In farcical scenes, ministers at first appeared to admit some had been ‘horrendous­ly’ kicked out, then insisted they hadn’t, and then said that they didn’t know. Miss Rudd faced a call to resign and was summoned to the Commons to apologise for the fiasco. Labour’s David Lammy told fellow MPs it was a ‘day of national shame’.

Campaigner­s insisted that at least one person had already been wrongly sent back to Jamaica. It emerged at the weekend that Government officials had refused to meet Caribbean envoys to discuss the cases of those who came from the late 1940s to the 1970s to help rebuild post-war Britain.

Despite living here for decades, many have now mistakenly been told they are illegals under a Home Office crackdown on immigratio­n paperwork. Some have lost their

AMBER Rudd faced a barrage of criticism from her own party yesterday over her handling of the Windrush debacle.

Downing Street, Cabinet ministers and MPs all made clear their anger at her failure to deal with a problem the Home Office has been aware of for weeks.

The Home Secretary was publicly backed by Tory MPs in Parliament after she was hauled to the Commons to answer questions over the treatment of Caribbean residents who came here after the Second World War.

But behind the scenes fellow Tories were scathing about her lack of grip on the Home Office.

One Whitehall source said the Prime Minister was ‘furious’ about the fiasco, which threatens to overshadow this week’s Commonweal­th summit in London: ‘People have been raising this with the Home Office for weeks, only to be told it was all in hand.

‘The Commonweal­th summit was supposed to be a showcase – now it’s going to be all about a completely avoidable row.’

A second insider said: ‘ To say there is irritation is an understate­ment. It’s another self-inflicted wound from the Home Office. We kept being told it was all under control – well it doesn’t look very under control from here.’

In a highly unusual move, Miss Rudd’s fellow Cabinet minister, Communitie­s Secretary Sajid Javid, went public with criticism of the Home Office’s mismanager­ight ment. Writing on Twitter, he said: ‘I’m deeply concerned to hear about difficulti­es some of the Windrush generation are facing with their immigratio­n status.

‘This should not happen to people who have been longstandi­ng pillars of our community.’

Seeking to offer reassuranc­e, he added: ‘The Government is looking into this urgently.’

In another significan­t interventi­on, the former Conservati­ve leader Michael Howard – also a former home secretary – made public his dismay.

The peer expressed his ‘concern and bewilderme­nt’ over the issue and the ‘confusion and anxiety’ it had caused those involved. Condemning a ‘lamentable state of affairs’ he demanded to know how the citizenshi­p debacle had been allowed to happen.

In the House of Lords, he asked the Government spokesman: ‘Can he shed any light on the circumfire stances in which the confusion and anxiety has been allowed to arise in the first place?’

Yesterday morning, leading Euroscepti­c Jacob Rees-Mogg said the treatment of Caribbean residents was a ‘deep disgrace’ and ‘shameful’. He told LBC: ‘It’s absolutely dreadful – these people are as British as you and I are and it’s really extraordin­ary that the Home Office is coming out with this ghastly bureaucrat­ic guff saying that they’ve got to show that they’re British.

‘Nobody’s asking us to prove that we’re British when we go and use public services.

‘I think it’s a deep disgrace and it should be top priority of the Government to sort it out. It’s such a bad way of treating people and it puts bureaucrat­ic rules ahead of people’s lives and I think it’s shameful.’

The fiasco heaped pressure on Miss Rudd, who has come under in recent weeks over her handling of the spike in violent crime. One ministeria­l source said Windrush was ‘yet another Rudd blunder’. Another said the Home Secretary was ‘all over the place’ on the issue and a third called yesterday a ‘shambles’.

Last week Miss Rudd was criticised after she admitted not having seen a leaked document from her department which drew a link between cuts to police budgets and the spike in offending.

Following the chaos, bookmaker Coral slashed the odds on Miss Rudd being the next Cabinet minister to leave their post.

Before the Windrush crisis she was 33-1 to be sacked or resign, but those odds were cut to 6-1 after her statement to Parliament yesterday.

A Home Office source said: ‘Amber knows that this is about individual­s – people who have built their lives here and contribute­d so much to our society.

‘There’s no question about their right to remain so she wants this sorted as quickly as possible, that’s why she’s put a team on this to help these people get the documentat­ion they need and get it fast.’

The Prime Minister will today host a meeting of 12 leaders from West Indian countries affected by the scandal.

She is expected to pay public tribute to the Windrush generation, saying they are ‘ part of our national life’.

‘Concern and bewilderme­nt’

 ?? ?? Under pressure: Amber Rudd
Under pressure: Amber Rudd

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