UK ex-official: May’s approach to migrants was ‘reminiscent of Nazi Germany’
Lord Kerslake says as home secretary, current PM’s desire to crack down on immigrants led to ‘hostile environment,’ creating crisis over legal Caribbean residents

A former senior British civil servant said Wednesday the “hostile environment” for refugees created by Prime Minister Theresa May during her tenure as home secretary was “almost reminiscent of Nazi Germany.”
Lord Robert Kerslake, who was in charge of the UK’s civil service between 2012 and 2014, told BBC Newsnight that from 2010, May aimed to foster a “hostile environment” for immigrants, creating the current crisis over Caribbean migrants who came to the UK between 1948 and the early 1970s.
May spearheaded a clampdown on illegal immigration during her tenure as home secretary, the British equivalent of interior minister, with requirements for people to have documentation to work, rent a property, or access benefits including healthcare. Many people who have legally lived for decades in Britain lost their jobs and benefits because they had failed to fill out the required paperwork in time.
“This was a very contested piece of legislation across government departments,” he said. “But, what I can tell you, it was highly contested and there were some who saw it, I shan’t name them, as almost reminiscent of Nazi Germany in the way it’s working.”
https://youtu.be/I-ETM2uodYs?t=1m50s
Environment Secretary Michael Gove, who served as education secretary at the time, rejected the accusations.
“I’ve never heard anyone make that comparison before Lord Kerslake,” he said. “It’s not for me to criticize a distinguished former public servant like Lord Kerslake but I respectfully disagree.”
Sarah Teather, a former Liberal Democrat MP who served as minister for children and families between 2010 and 2012, said, “Theresa May was determined to transform things. She was proud of wanting to generate a really hostile environment.”

May on Tuesday personally apologized to Caribbean leaders after her government threatened to deport some of the hundreds of thousands of people who emigrated to Britain from the region in the 1950s and 1960s.
At a meeting in Downing Street, May told representatives of the 12 Caribbean members of the Commonwealth that she took the treatment of the so-called Windrush generation “very seriously.”
“I want to apologize to you today. Because we are genuinely sorry for any anxiety that has been caused,” she told the hastily-convened gathering.
She added: “I want to dispel any impression that my government is in some sense clamping down on Commonwealth citizens, particularly those from the Caribbean.”

The government has faced outrage for its treatment of people who came to Britain between 1948 — when the ship Empire Windrush brought over the first group of West Indian immigrants — and the early 1970s.
They and their parents were invited to help rebuild Britain after World War II and with many of them legally British — they were born while their home countries were still colonies — they were given indefinite leave to remain.
But those who failed to get their papers in order are now being treated as illegal, which limits their access to work and healthcare and puts them at risk of deportation if they cannot provide evidence of their life in Britain.
The row, which one MP called a “national shame,” has been hugely embarrassing as it coincides with this week’s meeting of the 53 Commonwealth heads of government in London.
More than 50,000 people could be affected by the government’s immigration crackdown.
‘Make good any injustice’
Timothy Harris, prime minister of Saint Kitts and Nevis, expressed hope that Britain would “do the right thing and make good any injustice,” including through compensation.
Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness, who earlier had a meeting with May, said he wanted a “speedy” response.
The now elderly people involved “have significantly contributed to the building and enrichment of the country,” he said.
“Now these persons are not able to claim their place as citizens.”
Britain has written to each of the Caribbean governments setting out how it intends to rectify the situation, notably by helping anyone affected to find the necessary paperwork to regularize their immigration status.
It has promised to waive the usual fee for residency cards, and “reimburse reasonable legal costs” incurred so far.
But there was further embarrassment for May on Tuesday when the Home Office — the department she led for six years — admitted it had destroyed some of the Windrush generation’s registration slips, which detail when they arrived in Britain.
Questions over EU citizens
“Due to the rollout of very intrusive and harsh immigration checks across everyday life, people are now finding themselves in situations where they are quite heavily penalized for not having that documentation,” said Satbir Singh, chief executive of the Joint Council for Welfare of Immigrants.
Singh said those affected could suffer from anxiety and depression as they can be left destitute after losing work through being labelled undocumented migrants.
“The mental toll is simply unimaginable. People who are told that they’re not British when they’ve spent their whole life thinking that this the country that they belong to,” he told AFP.
The scandal has also sparked concern about London’s ability to deal with millions of European citizens currently living in Britain who want to stay after Britain leaves the European Union next year.
Ministers have agreed they will be given indefinite leave to remain, but they must apply for a new status.
Guy Verhofstadt, the European Parliament’s Brexit coordinator, was quoted by The Independent newspaper as saying: “This will be deeply worrying for millions of EU citizens in the UK who will now fear similar treatment after Brexit.”