Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
International

Indians 3rd-Largest Group Affected By UK's Immigration Scandal

IANS, 22 Aug, 2018 01:53 PM
    Indians have emerged as the third-largest group affected by the UK's 'Windrush' immigration scandal involving Commonwealth nationals being wrongly denied their citizenship rights in Britain.
     
     
    The 'Windrush' scandal is an immigration scandal concerning people who were wrongly detained, denied legal rights, threatened with deportation and in many cases wrongly deported from the UK by the authorities.
     
     
    "The 'Windrush' generation refers to citizens of former British colonies who arrived before 1973, when the rights of such Commonwealth citizens to live and work in Britain were substantially curtailed," according to Rob McNeil, Deputy Director of the Migration Observatory.
     
     
    "While a large proportion of them were of Jamaican or Caribbean descent, they also included Indians and other South Asians," McNeil said.
     
     
    As many as 102 Indians were provided documentation to formalise their rights to live and work in the UK by an emergency ‘Taskforce’ set up to deal with cases of Commonwealth nationals who arrived in the UK before immigration rules became more stringent in 1973, according to the latest figures released by UK Home Secretary Sajid Javid to Parliament's Home Affairs Select Committee (HASC) on Tuesday.
     
     
    While the majority of the 2,272 migrants' cases dealt with by the ‘Taskforce’ came from Caribbean countries Jamaica (1,093) and Barbados (213), India came in third (102) followed by Grenada (88) and Trinidad and Tobago (86), with 690 cases classed as “Others”.
     
     
    Of the 102, a total of 69 Indians were granted their documentation under the 'Windrush Scheme', which ensures that members of this generation, their children born in the UK and those who arrived in the UK as minors are able to apply for citizenship free of charge.
     
     
    "The experiences faced by some members of the 'Windrush' generation are completely unacceptable and I am committed to righting the wrongs of the past," said Javid, who was born to Pakistani-origin parents in the UK.
     
     
    He also committed to making a formal apology to 18 members of the 'Windrush' generation from the Caribbean, who it is believed could have been wrongfully removed or detained.
     
     
    He said: "I would like to personally apologise to those identified in our review and am committed to providing them with the support and compensation they deserve”.
     
     
    “We must do everything we can to ensure that nothing like this happens again—which is why I have asked an independent adviser to look at what lessons we can learn from Windrush”.
     
     
    The Home Office said that its evidence suggests the 18 people came to the UK from the Caribbean before 1973 and stayed here permanently but were unable to demonstrate their continuous residence here and were either detained or removed.
     
     
    The group referred to as the 'Windrush generation' relates to a ship named 'Windrush', which brought Jamaican workers to UK shores in 1948.
     
     
    The scandal emerged as many who arrived as children around that period were struggling to access state services or even threatened with deportation because they did not possess any documents to prove they arrived in Britain before 1973.
     
     
    In his letter dated August 21 to HASC Chair, Labour MP Yvette Cooper, Javid highlights that the 'Windrush' cases expose problems which have happened over many years, under multiple governments and calls for a "cross party-approach" to ensure the wrongs which some members of the 'Windrush' generation have faced are put right.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra, Under Attack From Colleagues, Delivered Key Verdicts

    Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra, Under Attack From Colleagues, Delivered Key Verdicts
    Before being elevated as the 45th CJI, attempts were made to stall his elevation, but Justice Misra took oath as the head of the judiciary on August 28 last year.

    Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra, Under Attack From Colleagues, Delivered Key Verdicts

    Trump Cancels Britain Trip, Blames Obama For ‘Peanuts’ London Embassy Deal

    Trump Cancels Britain Trip, Blames Obama For ‘Peanuts’ London Embassy Deal
    US President Donald Trump cancelled a trip to London scheduled for next month to open a new embassy, saying he did not want to endorse what he understood was an Obama-era decision to move out of the old one.

    Trump Cancels Britain Trip, Blames Obama For ‘Peanuts’ London Embassy Deal

    '3 Good Reasons For Slavery And 3 Bad Reasons': US School Apologises For 'Offensive' Homework

    '3 Good Reasons For Slavery And 3 Bad Reasons': US School Apologises For 'Offensive' Homework
    A private school in Wisconsin in the US has apologised for asking Class 4 students to list “three good reasons for slavery and three bad reasons”.

    '3 Good Reasons For Slavery And 3 Bad Reasons': US School Apologises For 'Offensive' Homework

    Donald Trump Calls Haiti, African Nations ‘Shithole’ Countries

    Donald Trump Calls Haiti, African Nations ‘Shithole’ Countries
    President Donald Trump has expressed frustration over efforts of some US lawmakers to protect immigrants from Haiti and African countries, asking why America should accept citizens from “shithole” countries, triggering an international furore over the remarks.

    Donald Trump Calls Haiti, African Nations ‘Shithole’ Countries

    Neerja Bhanot Killing: FBI Releases Age-progressed Photos Of 1986 Pan Am 73 Hijackers

    Neerja Bhanot Killing: FBI Releases Age-progressed Photos Of 1986 Pan Am 73 Hijackers
    The US Federal Bureau of Investigations has released age-progressed photographs of four alleged hijackers charged with the 1986 hijack of Pan Am Flight 73 that killed 20 people, including Indian flight attendant Neerja Bhanot.

    Neerja Bhanot Killing: FBI Releases Age-progressed Photos Of 1986 Pan Am 73 Hijackers

    Execution Of Indian-Origin Prisoner Raghunandan Yandamuri In US Likely To Be Deferred

    Execution Of Indian-Origin Prisoner Raghunandan Yandamuri In US Likely To Be Deferred
    There is a slim chance of the first death-row Indian-American prisoner being executed on the scheduled date of February 23 because of a 2015 moratorium on death penalty by Pennsylvania Governor, officials said on Friday.

    Execution Of Indian-Origin Prisoner Raghunandan Yandamuri In US Likely To Be Deferred