U.K. Home Secretary Amber Rudd resigns over immigration scandal

She had faced criticism over the existence of U.K. Home Office deportation targets and her knowledge of them.

April 30, 2018 08:02 am | Updated 06:13 pm IST - London

British Home Secretary Amber Rudd. File

British Home Secretary Amber Rudd. File

Britain’s Home Secretary Amber Rudd resigned on Monday as pressure mounted on her to quit the Cabinet post amid a scandal over the authorities’ mistreatment of long-term U.K. residents wrongly labelled as illegal immigrants.

Ms. Rudd, who was due to make a House of Commons statement later in the day, had been under increasing pressure to quit over the scandal involving Caribbean immigrants who were brought to the U.K. from the so-called “Windrush generation” from the 1940s.

She had faced criticism over the existence of U.K. Home Office deportation targets and her knowledge of them.

“The Prime Minister [Theresa May] has tonight accepted the resignation of the Home Secretary,” a Downing Street spokesperson said.

Calls up Theresa May

Ms. Rudd, who faced calls to step down from the Opposition Labour Party, telephoned Ms. May to inform her of the decision to resign.

Ms. Rudd had been under pressure to explain apparent discrepancies between her evidence to the Parliament’s Home Affairs Select Committee last week denying any knowledge of deportation targets for illegal migrants in the U.K. Home Office headed by her and a memo leaked to the media that linked her to such targets.

The furore has grown since The Guardian reported that some people who came to the U.K. from the Caribbean in the decades after World War II had recently been refused medical care in Britain or threatened with deportation because they could not produce paperwork proving their right to reside in the country.

Those affected belong to the ''Windrush generation'', named for the ship Empire Windrush , which in 1948 brought hundreds of Caribbean immigrants to Britain to help it rebuild after the devastation of World War II.

In recent weeks Ms. Rudd and Ms. May have apologised repeatedly to the ''Windrush generation'', saying all pre-1973 Commonwealth immigrants who don’t already have British citizenship will get it, and those affected will get compensation.

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