Yorkshire Post

Windrush scandal a blow to Commonweal­th future

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UNTIL RECENTLY, I hadn’t thought much about the Commonweal­th since I received a shiny 50p piece for the Queen’s Silver Jubilee in 1977. All the children at my school got one, marked with the word “Commonweal­th” and presented in a velvet sleeve. We must have been part of some kind of internatio­nal commemorat­ion, but it’s so long ago I can’t recall the details.

When we moved house last year I came across my special 50p, forlorn and forgotten at the bottom of a drawer. Until recent months, the concept of the Commonweal­th was as dusty as that coin. Now this allegiance of 53 member states is right back on the political agenda. And it reminds us of some very uncomforta­ble truths about the so-called United Kingdom, our place in the world and how our government treats people.

This week, you’ll be hearing a lot of talk about it on the news because the biennial Commonweal­th Heads of Government Meeting is taking place in London.

However, the issue was brought into sharp focus by two things before this landmark event; the Commonweal­th Games in Australia and the scandal of the Windrush families. And in the background, steadily gaining pace and momentum since the EU referendum campaign, is the debate about how far a post-Brexit Britain might go towards reestablis­hing and strengthen­ing political and trading links with its former colonies and overseas territorie­s. area of potential operation hitherto confined to a cupboard named “the past”.

Since then, politician­s and policy experts have been busily putting forward their views, exploring the possibilit­ies and potential in much the same way as their forebears set out to conquer Africa. They don’t have much in the way of a map and they’re not sure what they will find when they get there, but they are willing to give it a go.

This was certainly on the agenda at the Commonweal­th Games. There hasn’t been as much interest in the event for years. While our boys and girls were winning a record number of medals – with Yorkshire athletic prowess particular­ly well-represente­d – Jonathan Marland, a former Conservati­ve party treasurer, was chairing a trade delegation.

In a Press conference he told reporters that the UK would, post-Brexit, be in an ideal position to “turbocharg­e” the Commonweal­th: “We all speak English, there is fundamenta­l rule of law that underpins our activities and a number of the major countries – Australia, Singapore, Canada and the UK – are freetradin­g. So there is the basis of what I think could be a Commonweal­th trade framework.”

It all sounds very positive. Exciting even. Forward-thinking. And with the global politics swirling around us and allegiance with the United States putting us literally on the front line of conflict, even possibly the start of a respectful and mutually-supportive new world order with the United Kingdom at its heart.

Let’s not get carried away. It would be deeply hypocritic­al for any government minister – Home Secretary Amber Rudd take special note – to wax lyrical about the brave new world of Commonweal­th links without addressing the matter of the “children of Windrush”.

It is outrageous that British citizens who descend from the thousands of immigrants who came to the “motherland” from former colonies in the 1940s and 1950s to help rebuild a country shattered by war should be treated with dangerous disrespect by the authoritie­s.

Denied access to healthcare, benefits and passports because of anomalies in recording their presence in the United Kingdom as decent, law-abiding, taxpaying citizens? It’s a scandal, especially when we all know that there are countless individual­s from other countries living here who have never worked a day in their lives, nor paid taxes or contribute­d in any meaningful way to society.

As Leeds North East MP Fabian Hamilton, who represents one of the largest Caribbean communitie­s in the UK points out, some vulnerable individual­s are being held in detention centres and threatened with deportatio­n.

Let the politician­s meet and greet their overseas guests this week. However, if they start talking about setting up a new kind of Commonweal­th, they must attend to matters at home first.

 ??  ?? Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, left, with Mayor of London Sadiq Khan and New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern as Commonweal­th leaders meet in London.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, left, with Mayor of London Sadiq Khan and New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern as Commonweal­th leaders meet in London.
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