Clause 9 in the nationality and borders bill will strike fear and uncertainty into the hearts of black and Asian Britons
At first glance, Shamima Begum and I don’t have much in common. She fled Britain when she was a schoolgirl to join Islamic State. I came to the UK from Sri Lanka in 2005 and qualified here as a public and human rights lawyer. I became a British citizen in 2015.
Begum was born in the UK as a British citizen on the basis of her parents’ immigration status. She was stripped of her citizenship using a controversial power introduced after the 2005 London bombings, which allows the government to remove British citizenship from dual nationals if doing so is “conducive to the public good”. The use of this power increased from 2010 and further increased in 2014.
Naga Kandiah is a solicitor at MTC Solicitors
Continue reading…This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.