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‘Stringing us along’: Windrush U-turns let down those whose lives were ruined

‘Stringing us along’: Windrush U-turns let down those whose lives were ruined

Suella Braverman’s abandonment of key commitments is the latest in a series of blows to those seeking justiceLast year Anthony Williams decided to leave the UK after 53 years, 13 of which were spent as a soldier serving with the Royal Artillery. He said his decision to move was directly linked to the pain of being caught up in the Windrush scandal and his sense of disappointment that government promises to make amends were being quietly abandoned.“I just didn’t feel welcome any more. I spent the best part of my life serving the British army, and when I needed help everyone turned their back on me,” he said by telephone from Jamaica. Williams arrived in Birmingham aged seven in 1971, with his mother, a hospital cleaner, and his father, who worked at the Longbridge British Leyland car manufacturing plant. He was wrongly classified as an illegal immigrant and sacked from his job in 2013, and spent five years nearly destitute, unable to work or claim benefits.

The Guardian, Benzer haberler