74 years ago, on the 22nd June, 1948, the HMT Empire Windrush docked in Essex with hundreds of Caribbean immigrants on board.
Join us as we explore why we mark the day, and why it matters...
1/13
They had been invited to the UK by the government to help rebuild Britain after the second world war. Many found jobs in the NHS and other sectors lacking workers.
2/13
At the time the Caribbean was part of the Commonwealth so the Windrush Generation - the people who arrived into the UK from the Caribbean between 1948 and 1973 - were free to live and work permanently in the UK
3/13
The Windrush Scandal came to light in 2017 after it was discovered that many Commonwealth citizens, often from the Windrush Generation, had been illegally detained, denied rights, and deported.
4/13
The Home Office had destroyed thousands of landing cards and documentation which logged legal entry into the country for men, women and children from the Caribbean. It then placed the burden of proof of legitimacy on individuals and began to take action against them.
5/13
This was a direct result of the Hostile Environment created intentionally by successive policies since 2012, to make life deliberately unbearable for those labelled 'illegal immigrants'.
6/13
The domino effect of the Hostile Environment impacted thousands of non-White people who were subjected to tabloid-led racism and prejudiced policies around work, housing, education and healthcare. This is ongoing in the UK.
7/13
To support the Windrush Generation, the Caribbean government took these injustices up with then PM Theresa May and further ineptitudes, prejudices and the gross mismanagement of the immigration system in the UK were highlighted.
8/13
Windrush Day began in 2019 to mark the struggle of, and honour the Windrush Generation whose lives were irreparably changed by the treachery and prejudice of the British government.
9/13
It intends to celebrate the contribution of the Windrush Generation to Britain, and to highlight the injustice they continue to face. It is as vital now as it was then, and the lessons it teaches remain crucial and current.
10/13
The Windrush review shows the scandal was not an accident. The policies contributing to the #HostileEnvironment have not been removed. The Windrush compensation scheme is complex with insultingly small recompense. It is outrageous.
11/13
Wealth begotten from the abuse of Black lives continues to benefit Britain and no proper apologies or seemingly genuine attempts to offer restorative justice have been made. The Home Office seems determined to evade accountability.
12/13
The scandal is ongoing. The impact is ongoing. So should the outrage be.
Solidarity with the Windrush Generation and their descendents. We stand with you in contempt of the racist British government.
13/13
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
This #WorldRefugeeDay we would love you to pause for a moment and think what it means to be a refugee, why it matters to support refugees, and crucially, what we can ALL do to help 🧡✊ 1/5
Because for refugees, the situation they have fled and the situation they find themselves in, can be massive, traumatic sticking points. Sometimes barely an escape at all - 'out of the frying pan into the fire', as it were. This #WorldRefugeeDay please listen... 2/5
This #WorldRefugeeDay please consider how YOU can act to help. Can you raise awareness on social media? At home, at work, with friends? Can you donate to organisations already fighting for refugees, like @JCWI_UK? 3/5 jcwi.org.uk/help-us-fight-…
THREAD: The motive; could the cruelty have been imported here from a faraway land?
East meets West
As the Bill came back to the Commons yesterday, let’s consider the some of the key driving forces behind its ideology. 1/
Yes, Tory MPs have been supporting the Bill, however the lion’s share of the desire and drive arises from both @BorisJohnson being the PM, and the Home Secretary @pritipatel pushing it in order to appease their voter base. 2/
Patel is especially invested as she was charged to deliver the signicant electoral pledge of restricting immigration. However, the question of why Priti Patel as a PoC is hell-bent on pushing the #NationalityAndBordersBill has been asked a lot recently 3/
As we have all had had time to mull over the extraordinary revelations from last week, we thought it might be now a good time to dissect through some of the issues
This thread will focus on Rwanda in relation to the #PritiPatel deal. 1/
Most of you will have heard of #Rwanda from "Hotel Rwanda" a film that tells a bit about the Genocide that happened in the country in 1994 - in 100 days between April-July - >800,000 Tutsi people were killed in a national Genocide.
Rwanda has been rebuilding itself ever since. 2/
Why is it important that we dissect this deal from the #Rwanda angle?
Well put simply - its because the British gov #BorisJohnson#PritiPatel are deliberately not telling you, if they did, most Britons would be appalled & disgusted at how bad the scheme is for RW & refugees. 3/
[2/19]
Lets first consider the sentiment underpinning this, it is probably best expressed by Conservative MP Bill Wiggin while speaking at the Commons Liaison Committee on Wednesday 30th March, addressing the Prime minister as he outlines in his view the “right” sort of #refugees
[3/19]
In reply to Bill Wiggin’s question, the Prime Minister sighted the #NationalityAndBordersBill as being the solution.
Let’s take a brief look at this dreaded #NABB: When the Bill was devised, it was rushed through into official consideration containing placeholder clauses
Please keep in mind the #BordersBill is back in parliament on Monday, and they’re due to vote on this…
THREAD:
Has the Ukraine crisis transformed Britain’s approach to refugees?
[2/8]
Considering this government won the last election based on their Brexit promise to “take back control” of our borders -
“One of this government’s central ideas is to be tough on immigration and asylum and next week it’ll bring back to
[3/8] #NationalityAndBordersBill , but for now, it’s having to show that Britain is open to the people who need our help”
On one hand the government has been determined to hang on to a visa system which explains why they have been extremely sluggish in setting up their processes