Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

U.K. court: Mandatory migrant status checks breach human rights

- By Palko Karasz

LONDON — Ordering landlords to check prospectiv­e tenants’ immigratio­n status leads to racial discrimina­tion and breaches human rights, Britain’s High Court has ruled, in a judgment that deals a blow to migration control measures championed by Prime Minister Theresa May.

The mandatory checks are one plank in what has become known as the government’s “hostile environmen­t” policy, which aims to force people in the country illegally to leave by blocking their access to jobs, bank accounts and free medical care, among other things.

The policy has been criticized as imposing heavy burdens on legal immigrants and British citizens who are not white but are obliged to prove their status repeatedly. It has brought particular­ly harsh consequenc­es for the “Windrush generation” of migrants encouraged to move from the Caribbean after World War II to help with Britain’s reconstruc­tion, many of whom never had — or previously needed — the sort of documents demanded.

Landlords said the mandatory checks made them “unwilling border police” and discourage­d them from renting to anyone whose migration status might not be straightfo­rward.

The judgment does not strike down the 2014 legislatio­n that imposed document checks on tenants in England.

But it asks Parliament to reconsider how the law is applied and blocks plans to extend the checks to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

A report commission­ed by the Residentia­l Landlords Associatio­n — which backed the legal challenge brought by an immigrant rights group and decided by the High Court on Friday — found that close to half of landlords were less likely to rent to someone without a British passport.

“The measures have a disproport­ionately discrimina­tory effect,” Justice Martin Spencer said in his judgment. Even if the checks had been shown to be effective in controllin­g migration, he added, he “would have found that this was significan­tly outweighed by the discrimina­tory effect.”

Evidence submitted to the court showed the government had failed to measure whether the checks resulted in discrimina­tion, or even whether they helped detect and remove people who were in the country illegally.

According to the Migration Observator­y at the University of Oxford, forced removals and voluntary departures from Britain have declined since 2013.

“The net has been cast too wide and the effect of the scheme has been to cause landlords to commit nationalit­y and/or race discrimina­tion against those who are perfectly entitled to rent, with the result that they are less able to find homes than (white) British citizens,” the judge said, citing claims from the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants, which brought the case to court.

Ms. May, who was Britain’s home secretary for six years before becoming prime minister in 2016, has been closely identified with moves to tighten the country’s migration policies.

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