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Anger as Home Office confirms primary school children of EU citizens to be checked for criminal records

Government says all applicants for EU settlement scheme aged 10 and over will be checked for criminal records – despite previously stating these checks would only apply only to over-18s

May Bulman
Social Affairs Correspondent
Wednesday 11 September 2019 15:41 BST
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The Home Office has said all applicants for the EU settlement scheme aged 10 and over will be checked to see whether they have a criminal record, and will be refused if they meet the 'deportation threshold'
The Home Office has said all applicants for the EU settlement scheme aged 10 and over will be checked to see whether they have a criminal record, and will be refused if they meet the 'deportation threshold' (Getty)

The Home Office has prompted outrage after confirming primary school-age children of EU citizens will be checked for criminal records, despite previously suggesting that this would only apply to over-18s.

Campaigners said ministers were "misleading the public" after the Home Office said all applicants for the EU settlement scheme aged 10 and over were being checked to see whether they had a criminal record, and would be refused if they met the "deportation threshold".

This is despite the fact that the government website states criminal checks would apply only to applicants who were 18 or over, prompting concerns that the government was "misleading the public".

EU nationals living in Britain need to apply for settled status by the end of June 2021 – or by the end of 2020 if Britain crashes out of the bloc – to remain in the country legally.

Without settled status, children will risk becoming undocumented, which would leave them unable to access state support and could make them liable to detention and deportation in the coming years.

The Independent revealed on Monday that dozens of vulnerable EU children serving jail sentences in Britain could be stripped of their immigration rights after Brexit because the Home Office is refusing to let them apply for settled status.

When approached for a comment on that article, a Home Office spokesperson said: “An application to the EU settlement scheme will be refused if it meets the deportation threshold. All applications from those aged 10 and over are checked to see whether the applicant has a criminal record.”

Guidance for EU settlement applicants the government's own website appears to contradict this statement, saying: "If you’re 18 or over, the Home Office will check you have not committed serious or repeated crimes, and that you do not pose a security threat."

Labour’s shadow home secretary Diane Abbott said: “This is wrong on every level. Children should not be subject to criminal checks and they shouldn’t have their residency status put at risk in this way. And ministers should not mislead the public by saying one thing and doing another.

“It’s clear that this government simply cannot be trusted and the only way to end their ‘hostile environment’ policy being applied to growing numbers of people is to get rid of this government altogether.”

Maike Bohn, co-founder of the3million, said carrying out criminal checks on children was “simply unacceptable”, adding: “What kind of country have we become to subject 10-year-old children to criminality checks?

"Despite the government's own assurance on the application website that criminality checks will only be conducted on EU citizens older than 18 it seems to be that the Home Office is doing checks under the radar anyway."

Louise King, director of the Children’s Rights Alliance for England, part of Just for Kids Law, said there was a "worrying lack of clarity" in current government policy about the rights of children in the criminal justice system under the EU settlement scheme.

She added: “We know from our work that children in the criminal justice system are extremely vulnerable. These children are falling through the gaps between the Home Office, Ministry of Justice and Department for Education, all of whom have a legal responsibility to consider their best interests.

"Unless urgent action is taken another Windrush-like scandal is inevitable.”

A Home Office spokesperson said: “An application to the EU settlement scheme will be refused if it meets the deportation threshold. All applications from those aged 10 and over are checked to see whether the applicant has a criminal record.”

They added that all applications by those aged 10 and over were checked against criminality databases for offences, while they required adults aged 18 and over to declare their criminality at the time of applying.

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