The children of Windrush: 'I’m here legally, but they’re asking me to prove I’m British'
Eight people tell of the harrowing experience of having to prove their status despite having been in the UK legally for half a century
How the Guardian broke this story
Sun 15 Apr 2018 13.59 BST Last modified on Mon 16 Apr 2018 13.29 BST
Left to right top row: Elwaldo Romeo, Paulette Wilson, Renford McIntyre. Bottom row: Michael Braithwaite, Sarah O’Connor and Anthony Bryan. Composite: Martin Godwin/Fabio de Paulo/David Sillitoe/Alicia Canter for the Guardian
A growing number of people who were born in the Caribbean and came to the UK as children during the 1950s and 60s have been experiencing severe problems with their immigration status because they have never formally naturalised or applied for a British passport.
VÁ LÁ QUE OS PALESTINOS E OS DO BANGLADESH ESPERAM E TÊM "DIREITO" A REGRESSAR.POR ACASO OS BRANCOS EXPULSOS DE ÁFRICA E SEM BENS AINDA NÃO MOTIVARAM NENHUM INTELECTUAL AFRICANO A CORRIGIR ESSA TREMENDA VIOLAÇÃO DOS "DIREITOS HUMANOS"...
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