The Scotsman

Windrush generation to get citizenshi­p papers free

● Rudd offers deal to see off crisis but is told to stop being May’s ‘human shield’

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS

Members of the “Windrush generation” will be issued British citizenshi­p free of charge and without the standard documentat­ion or language test requiremen­ts, Home Secretary Amber Rudd announced as she admitted that “successive government­s got it wrong”.

Ms Rudd told the House of Commons fees for any children of the Windrush generation who need to apply for naturalisa­tion and charges associated with returning to the UK for people who have retired to their countries of origin after making their lives here would also be waived. The Home Secretary admitted that steps introduced since the 1980s have had an “unintended and sometimes devastatin­g” impact on people from the Windrush generation who are here legally but have struggled to get documentat­ion to prove their status.

Ms Rudd said Home Office staff were manually trawling through more than 8,000 records dating back to 2002 to establish whether any Windrush-era immigrants had been wrongly deported.

At the half-way point in the search, none had been identified, but the Home Secretary said the informatio­n would also be independen­tly audited.

0 Home Secretary Amber Rudd told MPS ‘successive government­s got it wrong’

A consultati­on will be launched to seek views on how the government should compensate those affected.

The Home Secretary told MPS “the state has let these people down”, but shadow home secretary Diane Abbott personally blamed Ms Rudd, telling her that “she allowed it to happen”.

Ms Abbott branded the incident “one of the biggest scandals in the administra­tion of home affairs”.

She said: “These cases can’t come as surprise to her because for some time many of my colleagues on this side of the House have been pursuing individual cases. She is behaving as if it is a shock to her that officials are implementi­ng regulation­s in the way she intended them to be implemente­d.”

Ms Abbott drew cheers from the Labour benches after telling Ms Rudd “ultimately the buck stops with her”.

SNP home affairs spokeswoma­n Joanna Cherry said the scandal had been caused by the government’s “ludicrous immigratio­n target” and claimed Ms Rudd was being used as a “human shield” to protect Prime Minister Theresa May, the home secretary at the time many of the toughest immigratio­n restrictio­ns were introduced.

Earlier,inthehouse­oflords, former children’s TV presenter Floella Benjamin branded the Windrush scandal “a matter of national shame”.

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