Brexit bureaucracy creates British nightmare for Dutch boat captain
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[June 09, 2021]
By Andrew MacAskill and Guy Faulconbridge
LONDON (Reuters) - When Dutch boat captain
and engineer Ernst-Jan de Groot applied to continue working in Britain
after Brexit, he became ensnared in a bureaucratic nightmare because of
an online glitch and says he is now likely to lose his job.
Under new immigration rules coming into force, de Groot faces the
prospect of losing the right to come to Britain to work unless he can
successfully apply for a visa through a government website by the end of
June.
Following its departure from the European Union's orbit at the end of
December, Britain is changing its immigration system, ending the
priority for EU citizens over people from elsewhere.
While the government has so far processed more than 5 million
applications from EU citizens to continue living in Britain, lawyers and
campaigners estimate there are tens of thousands who, like de Groot,
risk missing the deadline.
Those who succeed are not given a physical document to prove they have
the right to live or work in Britain, so they remain hostage to websites
when they need to show evidence of their status at borders, or when they
apply for mortgages or loans.
The experience of de Groot and eight other applicants spoken to by
Reuters shows how Brexit has put some EU citizens at the mercy of
government websites and officials, and how Britain may be inadvertently
discouraging people with skills it needs.
"I am trapped in a bureaucratic maze that would even astonish Kafka, and
there is no exit," de Groot said. "I have tried everything I can think
of to communicate the simple fact that their website is not functioning
as it should."
LABYRINTHINE NIGHTMARE
De Groot, 54, has worked happily in Britain on and off for the past six
years.
He sails long, narrow barges from the Netherlands to England to be used
as floating homes. He also spends a few months a year building boats at
a shipyard near London and captains a tall ship around the west coast of
Scotland in the summer.
A fluent English speaker, de Groot says he followed the post-Brexit
rules by applying for a frontier worker permit to allow him to work in
Britain while not being resident.
The online application was straightforward until he was asked to provide
a photo. The next page of his application, which was reviewed by
Reuters, said: "you do not need to provide new photos", and there was no
option to upload one.
A few weeks later, his application was rejected - for not having a
photo.
So began a labyrinthine nightmare of telephone calls, emails and
bureaucratic disarray. De Groot estimates he has spent over 100 hours
contacting government officials who he said were either unable to help
or gave conflicting information.
Some officials told him there was a technical issue that would be
resolved quickly. Others said there was no problem.
Each time he phoned, de Groot said he asked the person to make a record
of his complaint. On his last call, he said an official told him they
did not have access to individual cases, so that was impossible.
He tried to start a new application to bypass the glitch but each time
he entered his passport number it linked to his first application and he
remained trapped in the photo-upload loop.
The Home Office, the government department that administers immigration
policy, did not respond to requests for comment about de Groot's case or
the lack of physical documents proving the status of successful
applicants.
TAKE BACK CONTROL
Over the past two decades, Britain experienced unprecedented
immigration. When it was part of the EU, the bloc's citizens had a right
to live and work in the country.
A demand to reduce immigration was a driving force behind the campaign
for Brexit in the 2016 referendum, with supporters calling for Britain
to "take back control" of its borders.
Most EU citizens who want to stay will need to have applied for settled
status before July. Others, such as de Groot, need to apply for visas to
work in Britain.
Landlords, employers, the health service and other public departments
will be able to ask for proof from EU nationals of their immigration
status from next month.
The Home Office has a reputation for aggressively targeting people who
do not have the correct documentation.
The government apologised three years ago for the Home Office's
treatment of thousands of Caribbean migrants, who were denied basic
rights, including some who were wrongly deported, despite having arrived
legally in Britain decades earlier.
So far this year, 3,294 EU nationals were denied entry to Britain with
some taken to detention centres because they could not show a correct
visa or their residency status.
Lawyers, charities and diplomats say some EU nationals may be unaware
they need to apply, or are struggling to navigate the bureaucracy.
Chris Benn, a British immigration lawyer with Seraphus, a law firm
contracted by the EU delegation to the United Kingdom to provide advice
about the rules, has spent the last three years speaking at events
telling EU citizens how to navigate the new system.
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Dutch boat captain Ernst-Jan de Groot, poses for a picture a few
miles east of the Scottish island of Bac Mor, also known as the
Dutchman's Cap, in this handout photograph taken in July 2015.
Charles Lyster/Ernst-Jan de Groot/Handout via REUTERS
Although Benn said it was impossible to know how many
people still need to apply, he is worried tens of thousands of
people, and possibly a hundred thousand, may miss the deadline.
Benn says he is still meeting well-educated, fluent English speakers
who don't realise they need to apply. He is particularly worried the
elderly, and people in rural areas such as those working on farms,
may be unaware of the new rules.
"If even a very small percentage miss out, you will have very
widespread issues," he said.
MISTAKEN IDENTITY
While the system has worked well for millions, the nine EU nationals
struggling with applications spoken to by Reuters say it seems
overwhelmed. They complain of long waits to speak to staff in call
centres and, when they get through, they are not given case-specific
advice.
One of them, a Spanish student in Edinburgh, told Reuters he was
concerned he would be unable to finish his studies because his
settled status application in November has been put on hold.
Three days after applying he was informed in documents reviewed by
Reuters that police considered he was being investigated for
"culpable and reckless conduct" - an offence in Scotland for
behaviour that exposes an individual, or the public, to the
significant risk to their life or health.
The student, who asked not to be named publicly for fear of
jeopardising career prospects, said he had never been in trouble
with the police and he had no idea what the alleged investigation
might relate to.
He requested details from the Scottish police. In replies seen by
Reuters, they said their databases showed he was not listed for any
crime, nor under investigation.
He has approached his university, campaign groups for EU nationals
and the Spanish embassy asking for help. So far, no one has been
able to get him out of the bureaucratic maze.
"The panic has been constant and gradual," he said. "I end up
thinking about it all the time because I might get literally kicked
out of the country."
A spokeswoman for Police Scotland directed questions to the Home
Office.
The Home Office did not respond to requests for comment about the
student's case or complaints about call centres.
De Groot is equally frustrated. The company that usually employs him
to captain a ship in the summer has started to look for someone
else.
Diplomats say another problem is looming: what will Britain do with
EU citizens who don't have the right documents by July?
The government has said those who miss the deadline will lose the
right to services such as free non-urgent healthcare and could be
deported. Guidelines suggest leniency will only be granted in
certain cases, such as for people with a physical or mental
incapacity.
Even those with settled status are concerned that without a physical
document as proof, they could still end up in immigration limbo if
websites fail.
When Rafael Almeida, a research fellow in neuroscience at the
University of Edinburgh, applied for a mortgage this year, he was
asked to provide a share code generated by a government website to
prove his settled status.
Almeida said the website would not work and he was greeted with a
message: "There's a problem with this service at the moment. Try
again later."
After a month of failed attempts to generate the code, Almeida's
mortgage broker persuaded the lender to accept only his passport as
proof of identity. The website is still not working.
The Home Office did not respond to requests for comment.
Almeida is worried that from next month he will unable to access
healthcare, apply for a job if he ever wants to, or return to
Portugal to see family or friends.
"I am incredibly anxious, I am incredibly frustrated with the people
who should have been taking care of this," he said. "I am just
really worried for the future."
(Reporting by Andrew MacAskill and Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by
David Clarke)
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