logo
Windrush hero trapped in limbo for 26 years finally allowed home to Britain

Windrush hero trapped in limbo for 26 years finally allowed home to Britain

Daily Mirror2 days ago
Windrush hero George Lee left Britain to teach in Poland for two years in 1997. When he tried to enter Britain, his visa was rejected. Now 26 years later, he's finally back home.
When Windrush hero George Lee touched down at Birmingham Airport last week, it marked the end of 26 years in exile – and the close of yet another heartbreaking chapter in the Windrush Scandal.

For 26 years, George has been trying to get back to the UK after going to teach in Poland for two years in 1997. When he left the country John Major was still Prime Minister, the country was reeling from 'mad cow disease' and Princess Diana was still alive.

He has been unable to visit his mother or his brother's graves and has lost touch with his sisers. And he has never been able to access the state pension he is entitled to.

"When you're in this position, every single morning when you wake up you have a wrench in your gut," he says, speaking for the first time about his ordeal. "No matter how long it went on I had that feeling. It's about belonging nowhere. There's nothing you can do about it – your constitutional and human rights have been stripped away and that leaves you vulnerable. I started adopting Theresa May's epithet that I was a citizen of nowhere."
Born a Commonwealth citizen in Kingston Jamaica, George was brought to the 'mother country' at the age of eight by his aunt, to start a new life in London. George spent 36 years in the UK before he went to Poland. He went to school here, got into grammar school, set up his own business, got married and eventually became a teacher, all in Britain.
But after heading to Poland in 1997, he found himself locked out. He was told he'd need a special visa to re-enter the UK but when he tried to get it from the British embassy in Krakow he was refused. Instead, George, now 72, spent the next 26 years stuck in Poland.

George is one of many Windrush heroes campaigners now believe may be trapped in third countries by Tory 'hostile environment' policies that endure long after Theresa May's government. Uncovered in 2017, the Windrush Scandal saw thousands like George – members of the 'Windrush Generation' who came here to build Britain – wrongly detained, deported and denied legal rights.
Trapped in Poland, George made repeated attempts to access support. It was only when a Windrush campaign group heard about his plight that he was able to get help raising his case with the British Home Office. With their support, last week he finally made it home to the UK.

"From the moment they refused to allow me to come home to the UK, everything changed," he says. "It's dehumanising, because you create a situation where people can't easily get a home, get a job… when you're in a third country that is hostile, that's very difficult. My landlord was terrible. I didn't have utilities for three months. There is no legislation that shows I'm not a British citizen. When I was 18, I was so proud of Great Britain, I would never have believed that the British government would do this to me. The British government took away our rights."
He moved to Poland to take up a two-year contract teaching at a private English language school. "I got offered a job that I couldn't refuse," he explains. "I did really well, and got seconded to a university. When I decided to come back, I'd gone slightly over the two years I'd planned to be away, so I was told to go and get a visa for my re-entry back to the UK. But I went to the British Embassy, and they would not let me in the building."
Desperate, he travelled to another Polish city, Warsaw, to try there. "I went to Warsaw and it was the same. I tested it by trying embassies in other places…Prague, Switzerland. I realised that any British embassy you go to, as a Windrush person, you always meet a block. I feel that when the British government were planning the Immigration Act 1971, they made the decision that they were going to get black people out of the United Kingdom.

"That is the root of the scandal." George gave up. "I was resigned for many, many years. I was stuck." When he read about the emerging Windrush scandal, George hoped it might help. "It was a real knock when the Windrush scandal broke and I went back to the British Embassy, but they wouldn't let me in," he says. "They sent a Polish person out to see me on the pavement."
Then, last year, George made contact with Bishop Desmond Jaddoo – chair of the Windrush National Organisation – who spoke to the Home Office on his behalf and started compiling evidence of George's life in the UK. "We are only just discovering people in these third countries – there will be more Georges," Bishop Desmond says.

"The Immigration Act allowed people from the Commonwealth to go in to Europe and work which many people did. The problem was that then their status was called into question."
Bishop Desmond's team were able to gather his school records, national insurance number, old passport and marriage certificate to build his case. "We were able to map his life from the day he arrived in the UK to when he went to Poland," he says. "No-one had bothered to look at George's case."
Once they were made aware, Bishop Jaddoo says the Home Office was helpful, arranging George's flight home, temporary accommodation and to transport his few possessions. And the Labour government say the tide is turning with the appointment of senior pastor Reverend Clive Foster MBE as the first Windrush Commissioner – to fulfil a manifesto commitment to achieve justice for victims.
A Home Office spokesperson said: "It is longstanding policy not to comment on individual cases. However, when this government arrived a year ago, it pledged to do things differently. For 77 years, the Windrush community has made an immense contribution to our country, weaving a vital thread in the fabric of British society. We have made a longstanding commitment to ensure victims of the Home Office Windrush scandal are heard, justice is sped up, and that the compensation scheme is run effectively."
Since landing on British soil in Birmingham last week, George has begun the process of trying to access his state pension, find a GP and look for his two sisters. He also plans to visit his mum and younger brother's graves in north London. "I just want to get settled and I want to join the fight for our rights," George says. "I don't now have to work any more – which means I can spend my time trying to help others."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Leicestershire police and crime commissioner defects from Conservatives to Reform UK
Leicestershire police and crime commissioner defects from Conservatives to Reform UK

ITV News

time38 minutes ago

  • ITV News

Leicestershire police and crime commissioner defects from Conservatives to Reform UK

The police and crime commissioner for Leicestershire, Rupert Matthews, has defected from the Conservative Party to Reform UK. Reform UK's leader Nigel Farage made the announcement at a press conference today (August 4th). Mr Matthews has held the position since 2021 and was re-elected in 2024. He served as an MEP for the East Midlands for the Tories between 2017 and 2019. His defection makes Mr Matthews the first-ever Reform PCC. Speaking at a press conference alongside Reform UK leader Nigel Farage, Mr Matthews said the 'dark heart of wokeness' needed to be cut out of the criminal justice system. He said: 'The self-serving, self-entitled liberal elite who have let our country down time after time are now on notice that their day is almost done, be they Conservative or Labour governments, everyone knows our politicians have failed us all. They have let this country down. They have let the British people down. Enough. Now is the time for Reform.'

Bradford MP leads cross-party group on warning over grooming inquiry
Bradford MP leads cross-party group on warning over grooming inquiry

ITV News

time2 hours ago

  • ITV News

Bradford MP leads cross-party group on warning over grooming inquiry

An MP from Bradford has pulled together a cross-party group to issue a warning to the Prime Minister over the national grooming inquiry. Robbie Moore, MP for Keighley and Ilkley, has written to the Prime Minister calling for a 'survivor-led' approach to the inquiry's design and delivery. The letter is signed by 98 other MPs across six different parties. Moore said: 'We are united in one message. Put victims and survivors at the heart of the national rape gangs inquiry. No justice without them.' In June, the PM announced there would be a national inquiry into grooming gangs. It comes after the government commissioned a review into grooming gangs by Baroness Louise Casey, which has recommended a national inquiry, co-ordinating a series of targeted local investigations. In Moore's letter, MPs urge the government to ensure the inquiry has a trusted mechanism for survivors to speak about their abuse and that there is formal survivor representation. It says: 'For decades, survivors have spoken out about what happened to them. Many were ignored, disbelieved, or failed by all levels of the British state. They are now speaking again with the hope that people will finally listen to their calls. We need to make sure they are heard. '[Survivors] bring a wealth of knowledge that will be vital to the inquiry. They must have formal, meaningful roles in shaping the inquiry's work and must not simply be consulted after decisions have been made.' Signatories of the letter include Conservative party leader Kemi Badenoch and Reform leader Nigel Farage. Speaking about the letter, Robbie Moore MP said: 'It's a basic principle that every MP should agree on that there is no justice without survivors. If the Prime Minister wants this inquiry to succeed, then he needs to show victims and survivors that it is being done with them, not to them. 'For decades, Survivors have been ignored by all levels of the British state and this cannot be allowed to happen again. We now await a formal response from the Prime Minister and the Home Secretary and I urge them to adopt these proposals in full.'

Picking on foreign students won't solve the migration crisis
Picking on foreign students won't solve the migration crisis

Spectator

time3 hours ago

  • Spectator

Picking on foreign students won't solve the migration crisis

We can't stop the illegal migrants, so let's crack down on legal ones instead. That pretty well sums up the government's policy on migration. Last year foreign students earned Britain £12.1 billion in revenue. They are one of our strongest export industries (while the students might physically be entering Britain, they are an export because it is the direction the money is flowing in which matters). Some universities have become truly international institutions – Imperial College and UCL now draw more than half their students from abroad. Mickey mouse courses aside, UK higher education has become one of Britain's success stories. How natural, then, that the government wants to throttle it in its panic to get the migration figures under some sort of control. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper is reported to be planning to announce a ban on universities accepting foreign students if too few students go on to start or complete their courses. If fewer than 95 per cent of accepted students get as far as enrolling, or if fewer than 90 per cent go on to complete their course, it seems as if that university would be banned from accepting any foreign students at all. In other words, you might be a university which is just embarking on advertising itself to foreign students. You make a tentative start by offering ten students a place. Then one of them fails to turn up to start their course – and you get banned from taking any more foreign students whatsoever. There is, it has to be said, a problem with abuse of student visas. Some migrants have been applying for visas in order to gain access to the country in order to claim asylum. Last year, 16,000 asylum claims were made by foreign students. But the issue, as ever, is the feebleness of the asylum system itself. It takes far too long to make decisions, and even when people are rejected, they are not removed from the country. Moreover, we have asylum tribunals which perversely interpret the European Convention on Human Rights to grant criminals and terrorists the right to stay in Britain if they have succeeded in impregnating a British woman and can claim the right to a family life. It is all these issues which need sorting out, not the higher education sector which needs thwarting. If we are going to try to deal with abuse of the asylum system by stopping legal migrants entering Britain in the first place, we would have to close our borders completely: ban foreigners coming to Britain not just to study but to work, to come on holiday, visit relatives, take part in sporting competitions – all of which have been used by asylum claimants to enter the country. There might be a few Britons who would be happy with that situation, but it would be the actions of a country in which most of us would not be happy to live. And still it wouldn't stop people arriving illegally on small boats – and being put up in four-star hotels for years while their cases are wrung through layers of taxpayer-funded legal arguments. This government's biggest error was one of its very first: to close down the Rwanda scheme. That failure has contributed to an explosion in illegal migration and the associated costs and other problems. The fact that the Rwanda scheme was beginning to act as a deterrent, even before a single asylum applicant was sent to that country, could be seen in the large number of migrants who were fleeing to Ireland to make their claims instead. Now, to try to cover up for that failure, the government is going to pick on legal migrants instead, because they are the easy targets – never mind that it could mean turning down billions of pounds in foreign earnings from foreign students. That is where Starmer's fundamentalist approach to human rights leads.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store