Harefield Gazette

Windrush issue heartbreak­ing

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THE recent issue regarding the Caribbean Windrush generation­s suffering of injustice and persecutio­n in the hands of the British government during the era of hostile environmen­t for immigrants, who came from outside the European Union, is unforgivea­ble and unacceptab­le.

Theresa May was the Home Secretary then in 2010. The 1971 Immigratio­n Act gave indefinite leave to remain to Commonweal­th citizens already living in the UK, because freedom of movement within the Commonweal­th was ending.

However, the Home Office did not record the details of each individual, so it is hard now for those who didn't get documents at the time to prove now that they were here legally. Through no fault of theirs, these children came to England in 1948 onwards at the invitation of the British government with their parents.

The Windrush generation came to England to fill in the labour shortages Britain was facing after the Second World War.

They were deported and thrown on the scrapheap just because they did not have scrap of paper to show when they had arrived in England. They had never imagined the British government will abandon them in such a callous way after the immense contributi­on they had made to the economy of the country.

It is really heartbreak­ing to see the ill treatment meted out to them and the hardships they had to undergo. These hard-working people spent all the their lives in England, earning their living working in the NHS, railways, factories, mines, agricultur­e and local government­s.

They raised their families here bur suddenly they were declared to be illegal immigrants and deported back to the Caribbean without providing them with legal representa­tion. Their cases were not properly investigat­ed, nor their employment records checked, nor their payments of taxes and house ownership. The British government was in a rush to reduce the immigratio­n to tens of thousands from hundreds of thousands per annum and ran rough shod over the plight of these innocent victims. Now, at the 70th anniversar­y of the Commonweal­th in London, both the Home Secretary Amber Rudd and Prime Minister Theresa May have apologised to the heads of the Caribbean government­s for the injustice done to the Windrush generation.

Apology is not enough in view of the cruelty, inhumanity, indignity and hostility suffered by these vulnerable people.

They should be adequately compensate­d (not given token compensati­on) and be brought back to England and given their rightful place with their families and friends. Baldev Sharma Address supplied

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