Yesterday’s climb-down
by the Home Secretary over the Windrush generation was sudden and
dramatic. It is a welcome change of
direction, as is the agreement
by the Prime Minister to meet representatives of the Caribbean countries to
discuss the issue, given that, as recently as last week, she was absolutely refusing
to do so. A lot of credit is due to the Guardian,
in particular, for exposing details of some of the worst cases.
If it weren’t
so tragic, and hadn’t had so much impact on the lives of ordinary citizens who
had every right to be in the UK, some of the revelations would be comic. The Home Office advice
produced during the current Prime Minister’s tenancy of that office advising
those being returned to Jamaica to ‘put on a Jamaican accent’; the fact that
the government admit
that they’ve probably deported people who had every right to be here, but can’t
be certain about how many; and the way in which the government of the time
failed to keep any documentation relating to those invited here - this is the
material of farce. It shows a deeply
dysfunctional approach to the issue, but there’s also something more there.
During the
tenure of Theresa May at the Home Office a policy
was deliberately introduced of creating a “really
hostile environment” for illegal immigrants, as she herself put it in 2012. Of course, they will argue, this was aimed at
‘illegal’ immigrants rather than at those with a right to be here, but it also
effectively placed the onus on anyone living in the UK to prove that they have
a right to be here rather than on the authorities to prove that they do
not. It’s not quite a case of ‘guilty until
proved innocent’, but it’s not far short of that (in another instance of those
great British values being more about fine words than deeds).
The
implementation was then placed in the hands of officials who seem to have been
told simply to implement the rules rather than question them or use any
initiative, whilst ministers took a hands-off approach and let them get on with
it. It is that combination which led to
a situation where officials were unsympathetic, rule-driven and inflexible;
deporting – or attempting to deport – anyone who couldn’t produce the required
reams of documentation, despite decades of contribution to the economy and
society in which they lived. The
officials, of course, were ‘just following orders’. Whilst that’s not a defence which they should
be able to rely on – there should surely have been at least some of them
understanding that what they were doing was wrong morally, as well as legally
wrong in the case of those who had a right to be here but simply couldn’t prove
it – the real target has to be those who gave the orders in the first
place. And guess who that brings us back
to?
Yesterday’s
apologies and U-turns are a welcome start, but unless they lead to a change,
not only in the rules being applied, but also in the culture of those tasked
with applying those rules, then the apology will be no more than a form of
words, satisfying the news agenda of the day whilst leaving the basic processes
in place.
1 comment:
Seeing pictures of numerous heads of state from the Caribbean leaving No.10 in the papers today does make me think that Mrs May would not have changed her mind for a while if they had not been able to speak to her face to face.
The prime minister has the unfortunate habit of having to be pushed and pushed to make a reasonable compromise on virtually everything. She uses so much political capital to defend wrong decisions that by the time she does inevitably compromise she ends up looking mean hearted.
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