Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

1,800 migrants become British citizens

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Almost 1,800 people in Kent became British citizens last year after swearing allegiance to the Queen at special ceremonies. But with such ceremonies indefinite­ly suspended due to lockdown, migrant rights campaigner­s say applicants across the country are stuck “in limbo”.

Home Office figures show 1,791 people attended citizenshi­p ceremonies in Kent in 2019. This was a rise of 1% on the year before, bringing the total for the last decade to around 18,200.

A total of 1.2 million immigrants have gained citizenshi­p in the UK over the last decade. Participan­ts are asked to make an oath of allegiance to the Queen and pledge to respect the rights, freedoms and laws of the UK. They are then presented with a certificat­e of British citizenshi­p and a welcome pack, after they can obtain a British Passport.

Jill Rutter, director of strategy at the think-tank British Future, said citizenshi­p was important for integratio­n and a shared sense of identity. She said: “Citizenshi­p ceremonies do really matter to new Britons. They mark the end of a long and expensive process and the start of an enhanced feeling of belonging to the country people have chosen to call home. We should restart citizenshi­p ceremonies as soon as it is safe to do so.”

An independen­t inquiry into citizenshi­p policy, co-ordinated by the group, is also paused due to Covid-19. In the longer term, British Future wants the UK to review its approach to citizenshi­p, by reducing the “highest fees in the Western world” and cutting red tape.

Last year, 15,101 people attended ceremonies in the South East – among 110,000 across the UK. A further 3,000 did so at a British consulate abroad.

Maike Bohn, co-founder of think-tank the3millio­n, which represents the rights of EU citizens, said the pandemic had caused “huge delays” for anyone wishing to become British – with appointmen­ts to provide details at biometric centres also suspended. Romanian national Alexandra Bulat, a project manager at the think-tank, says she has paid £1,300 in applicatio­n fees for her British citizenshi­p but is still waiting for her ceremony to take place.

She said: “It all feels like you’re still in limbo because the process is still not done and dusted. The main reason a lot of EU citizens apply for citizenshi­p is to feel more secure, because they don’t feel secure with the Settlement Scheme. Being a British citizen means you can vote and be a fuller part of society by participat­ing in political processes. It’s important for people to feel that they have a say, whether that’s in the taxes we pay or the direction the country is going.”

A Home Office spokeswoma­n said: “We know how much citizenshi­p ceremonies mean to people and we are actively looking at alternativ­e, safe ways to reinstate such important occasions.”

 ??  ?? Swearing allegiance to The Queen and gaining citizenshi­p allows the certificat­e holder to obtain a British passport, something 1,791 people did in Kent last year
Swearing allegiance to The Queen and gaining citizenshi­p allows the certificat­e holder to obtain a British passport, something 1,791 people did in Kent last year

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