European Interest

Roma rights in UK after Brexit

Wikimedia Commons
August von Pettenkofen: Gipsy Children (1885), Hermitage Museum.

Roma fear they will be left out of the British government’s registration scheme for all European Union citizens who arrive in the UK before 31 December 2020 to apply for a pathway to a new “settled status”.

Anxiety is growing among Roma people from elsewhere in the EU about their lives in the UK, according to Sarah Zawacki, PhD Candidate, Durham University. The Roma she has spoken to as part of her research fear limited literacy and the inability to independently complete the application will prevent them from securing the right to reside in the UK.

“It’s telling that Roma who arrived in the UK prior to the EU accession of Eastern European countries such as Poland and Hungary in 2004 and Bulgaria and Romania in 2007, primarily claimed asylum upon entry,” writes Zawacki in an article published by The Conversation online. “Discrimination and abuse against this much maligned ethnic group runs rampant in Eastern Europe, taking the form of segregation in schools, exclusion from employment and physical violence.”

She also notes that those Roma who have come to the UK with EU free movement rights have reported that the diversity of UK society allows them to blend in and escape the stigmatisation of their identity that is so common in their countries of origin. Yet this sense of security has been put under strain with the Brexit vote.

“My wider PhD research among grassroots Roma organisations focuses on their experiences of using health services, yet in the years since the Brexit vote the migrant identity of UK Roma communities and its impact on their personal well-being has become inseparable from my overall focus on their interactions with the NHS. A set of extra focus groups I organised in July 2018 to discuss Roma community members’ concerns about the settlement process for EU citizens revealed a picture of fear and uncertainty.”

The application for settled status consists of an online form, which requires applicants to supply proof of identity and residence.

“The Roma I spoke to were overwhelmingly doubtful of their ability to independently complete the application. For a community with low levels of educational attainment and high rates of functional and digital illiteracy, even the simplest of online forms can be completely inaccessible.”

The Home Office hasn’t clarified the extent of accreditation that will be necessary for organisations to assist with settlement applications, and organisations without accreditation as providers of immigration advice could be excluded from offering assistance.

“Roma in Eastern Europe have long been disadvantaged at the hands of bureaucratic processes, and many still fear that engagement with government officials will result in challenges to their basic rights. They are unlikely to engage with formal Home Office advice mechanisms, and without access to support from a trusted source, there is a danger that many Roma will choose to forego the settlement application altogether. This could plunge them into a state of unauthorised immigration.”

Zawacki also stressed there is pervasive fear among the Roma that extreme marginalisation in their countries of origin will impact negatively on the Home Office’s assessment of their applications for settlement.

“The prospect of overseas criminal records checks crystallises this concern. Roma in Eastern Europe are often subject to routine and unjust criminalisation, yet it is unlikely that Home Office assessments of criminality will take into account the social context of Roma applicants’ criminal records.”

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