Computer
says no to Europeans in Britain
Senior
citizens, low-skilled workers, children and homeless people at risk of missing
application deadline, activists say.
By CRISTINA
GALLARDO 2/7/20, 4:56 PM CET Updated 2/12/20, 4:42 AM CET
LONDON —
European citizens in the U.K. have the right to stay after Brexit but many fear
the system designed to let them prove it may yet let them down.
More than
400,000 eligible citizens from European Economic Area countries and Switzerland
have not yet applied for the U.K.’s EU Settlement Scheme, according to the
U.K.’s Office for National Statistics. The deadline for the scheme, which
allows citizens to prove they have the right to continue to live, work and access
public services in the U.K. now that Britain has left the EU, is June 30, 2021.
Organizations
that help citizens with the process say vulnerable groups, such as older
people, low-skilled workers, children and the homeless, may not have access to
the digital registration system or may be unaware they need to register.
Even among
those who have secured settled status, concern remains that flaws in the system
— in particular the lack of physical proof of their status — may mean bureaucratic
headaches continue long after Brexit.
The Home
Office rejects the concerns and announced this month that more than 3 million
EU nationals have successfully applied for settled status.
Home Office
Minister Brandon Lewis insists the EU Settlement Scheme provides Europeans in
the country with a “secure, digital status which can’t be lost, stolen or
tampered with.”
“There is
... plenty of support available across the U.K. for those who need help in
applying, including a helpline and face-to-face support, and paper application
forms and even home visits for vulnerable people,” a spokesperson said.
Home Office
Minister Brandon Lewis declined a request for an interview.
Computer
says no
Dimitri
Scarlato, a Brexit consultant who helps people apply at the Italian Advice
Centre in Islington, has seen how the system can work against the elderly. One
of his clients, a 101-year-old Italian, was registered as a 1-year-old baby
last month because the Home Office app “cannot scan passports of people whose
age goes beyond two digits,” he said.
After
further issues with the app and phone calls to the Home Office’s EU Settlement
Resolution Centre, officials “took all the details of this gentleman and said
they would update the profile by themselves,” Scarlato said. The pair is still
waiting for an update.
Demonstrators
attend a rally focusing on the rights of EU citizens living in Britain in
London on October 12, 2019 | Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP via Getty Images
Even those
who have managed to register successfully have little faith in the system.
Lewis insists the EU Settlement Scheme provides Europeans in the country with a
“secure, digital status which can’t be lost, stolen or tampered with.”
But Maike
Bohn, co-founder of The3Million campaign group, which lobbies on behalf of EU
citizens in the U.K., argues EU nationals’ profiles could be hacked or
accidentally modified by Home Office staff.
Elly
Wright, a Dutch national who has lived in the U.K. for 52 years and obtained
settled status in August, claims her maiden name was replaced with her married
name in her online profile without her consent and her most recent picture
replaced by an older image the Home Office had from a previous application.
“They do
all these things with your details and you don’t know anything about it unless
you keep on checking [your profile] ... Who can tell me that they won’t upload
a picture of, who knows, Theresa May?” she said.
Others
worry that the lack of a physical document, even once their application has
been approved, may make it difficult to prove their status in post-Brexit
Britain. Instead of receiving a hard copy of a document, they must log in to
the Home Office website and go through multiple steps each time they are
required to demonstrate their status to border force officials, landlords and
employers, among others.
Eighty-nine
percent of the more than 3,000 respondents to a survey conducted by The3Million
group said they are not happy with this, and fear being discriminated against.
One in 10 said they have already been asked to prove their settled status, even
though that proof is not officially required before 2021.
Once the
deadline has passed, there will be no way of knowing how many people are in the
country illegally and at risk of deportation.
Earlier
this month, the government rejected a proposed amendment to the Brexit deal
that would have compelled it to provide European nationals with physical proof
of their right to stay.
Missed
applications
As well as
concerns with the system itself, campaigners also worry about missed
applications.
The Refugee
and Migrant Children’s Consortium (Coram), a group of NGOs, estimates that at
least 450,000 EEA and Swiss national children in the U.K. have not yet applied.
This includes children whose parents have not applied themselves, or have not
realized the need to register their children, and children in foster care or in
psychiatric hospitals.
Organizations
such as Coram, funded by the Home Office to help people apply, warn their
funding is currently due to end on March 31. Marianne Lagrue, policy manager at
Coram, told the House of Lords that the charity stopped accepting referrals in
January because of this uncertainty.
Matt
Downie, director of policy and external affairs at Crisis UK, a charity helping
homeless people apply to the scheme, warned that if funding is not renewed,
rough sleepers could fall through the cracks and face worse exploitation and
living conditions.
Demonstrators
chant and hold placards during a protest in support of the Windrush generation
in Windrush Square, Brixton on April 20, 2018 in London | Chris J
Ratcliffe/Getty Images
Campaigners
have urged the government to allow European nationals to apply to the scheme
beyond the deadline, adding that the Home Office must learn from the Windrush
scandal, in which British citizens who arrived in the country before 1973 were
denied rights after being unable to provide documentation.
Once the
deadline has passed, there will be no way of knowing how many people are in the
country illegally and at risk of deportation.
Lewis has
sent mixed messages on whether EEA and Swiss nationals who fail to register
through the EU Settlement Scheme would be removed from the country. In October,
Lewis said these people risked deportation, but in January he told the BBC that
deporting them “is not what we’re about.”
CORRECTION:
This article has been updated to correct the number of eligible European
citizens that have not yet applied to the U.K.’s EU Settlement Scheme.
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