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News > Latin America

British Interior Minister Resigns Over Windrush Scandal

  • Britain's Home Secretary Amber Rudd leaves 10 Downing Street in London, April 10, 2018.

    Britain's Home Secretary Amber Rudd leaves 10 Downing Street in London, April 10, 2018. | Photo: Reuters

Published 29 April 2018
Opinion

The crisis has focused attention on May, who as interior minister set out to create a "really hostile environment" for illegal immigrants, imposing tough new requirements in 2012 for people to prove their legal status.

Britain's interior minister resigned Sunday after Prime Minister Theresa May's government faced criticism for its treatment of some long-term Caribbean residents who were wrongly labeled illegal immigrants, a government official said.

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UK MPs Call for Laws to Ensure Promises Made to 'Windrush Generation' Are Kept

A spokesman for May was not immediately available for comment but a British government official who spoke on condition of anonymity confirmed a BBC report that Home Secretary Amber Rudd had resigned.

For two weeks, British ministers have been struggling to explain why some descendants of the so-called "Windrush generation", invited to Britain to plug labor shortfalls between 1948 and 1971, had been labeled as illegal immigrants.

The Windrush scandal overshadowed the Commonwealth summit in London and has raised questions about May's six-year stint as interior minister before she became prime minister in the wake of the 2016 Brexit referendum.

Rudd, 54, had faced repeated calls from the opposition Labour Party to resign after she gave contradictory statements over whether the government had targets for deportations.

The Guardian newspaper reported a letter from Rudd to May last year in which she stated an "ambitious but deliverable" aim for an increase in the enforced deportation of immigrants.

After repeated challenges to her testimony on the deportation of immigrants, Rudd telephoned May on Sunday and offered her resignation which was accepted, the source said. A replacement is not likely to be announced tonight, another source said.

The government has apologized for the fiasco, promised citizenship and compensation to those affected, including to people who have lost their jobs, been threatened with deportation and denied benefits because of the errors.

A week before local elections, May apologized to the black community on Thursday in a letter to The Voice, Britain's national Afro-Caribbean newspaper. "We have let you down and I am deeply sorry," she said. "But apologies alone are not good enough. We must urgently right this historic wrong."

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