Advertisement

Investigation after deportation letters sent to 100 EU citizens in UK 'in error'

An investigation has been launched after 100 deportation letters were sent in error to EU citizens living in the UK.

A Home Office spokesperson said "a limited number of letters" were sent by mistake and the department is "urgently looking into why this happened".

They added: "We are contacting everyone who received this letter to clarify that they can disregard it.

"We are absolutely clear that the rights of EU nationals living in the UK remain unchanged."

Prime Minister Theresa May said it was an "unfortunate error", adding: "I want to assure EU nationals here in the UK that their rights and status in the UK have not changed."

One of those who received a letter was Finnish academic Eva Johanna Holmberg, who was told she had a month to leave and warned she was "liable to be detained".

Dr Holmberg, a visiting fellow at Queen Mary University of London, wrote in a Facebook post that the "absurd nonsense has aged me at least five years".

She added that ordeal has made her "even less likely to trust anything Amber Rudd, Theresa May, or David Davis says to calm us EU nationals down".

Pro-EU campaign group Open Britain described the letter as "shameful stuff from the same department that gave us the disgraceful 'go home vans' a few years ago".

Executive director James McGrory said: "It's little wonder that many EU citizens feel worried about their future status in the UK when they hear of people with every right to be here getting letters threatening their deportation.

"The Home Office show scant sign of being able to get a completely new immigration regime up and running by 2019.

"Ministers should drop their damaging rhetoric about an immigration target and instead come forward with proposals that recognise the work of EU nationals already in this country, and others who we will undoubtedly need in the future."

Labour MP Yvette Cooper, chair of the Home Affairs Select Committee, said the group of MPs would be investigating the "disgraceful" matter when Parliament returns, suggesting Home Secretary Amber Rudd could eventually be asked to appear before them.

Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrats have called on the Home Secretary to apologise and said the episode "shames Britain".

The party's shadow home secretary Sir Ed Davey said: "This catastrophic error is a sign of the chaos and incompetence at the heart of this Conservative government."

Professor Simon Gaskell, president and principal of Queen Mary University of London, said: "Whilst it is clearly reassuring that the appalling position in which Dr Eva Holmberg was placed has now been resolved, we should be deeply concerned that such mistakes can be made - and, perhaps worse, that we live in times when they do not particularly surprise us.

"Dr Holmberg and her family should not have been subject to such stress, and it should not have been necessary for support mechanisms at Queen Mary University of London to be activated."