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World News Windrush arrivals made UK a better place - William

The Windrush generation have made the UK “a better people today”, the Prince of Wales has said on a day of celebrations to mark 75 years since the first crossing from the Caribbean.

Prince William said the voyagers and their descendants had helped rebuild the country and added to its culture.

Among the celebrations, the King was at a Windsor Castle service. A procession will be held later in south London.

Campaigners welcomed the commemorations but called them “bittersweet”.

In 2018, it emerged that many British citizens who arrived as migrants from the Caribbean between the late 1940s and 1970s - despite having the right to live in the UK.

‘THEY DIDN’T EXPECT THIS’

Almost 500 people stepped off the HMT Empire Windrush at Tilbury Docks in Essex on 22 June, 1948, the first of thousands encouraged to migrate and help fill labour shortages in the armed forces, industry and NHS.

As part of the anniversary, in 2022 the King commissioned 10 portraits of some members of the Windrush generation. These will go on public display for the first time at the Palace of Holyrood house in Edinburgh.

Writing in a book accompanying the artworks, the King said: “Though drawn from different parts of the world, they collectively enrich the fabric of our national life and the remarkable tapestry of the Commonwealth.”

He said it was “crucially important that we should truly see and hear these pioneers... and those who followed over the decades to recognise and celebrate the immeasurable difference that they, their children and their grandchildren have made to this country”.

Prince William’s tribute came after he met air force veteran

Alford Dalrymple Gardner, who is one of the few living passengers to have travelled on the Windrush.

Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Mr Gardner said quite a lot had happened in the past few months: “I’ve met the King and I’ve met the Queen, and I’ve met the Prince of Wales.

“There’s a portrait of me to be hung at Buckingham Palace so in a couple of thousand years when I’m dead and gone, my great great great ones will see my name... nothing can beat that.”

His son Howard Gardner told Today: “They didn’t ask for this, they didn’t expect it. The people who are Dad’s age are very humble people... they didn’t expect all of this.”

Paying tribute with a video posted on social media, Prince William said: “Today we celebrate the Windrush generation, their descendants and everything they have given to us all.”

William said those voyagers had helped to rebuild the country and had added to its culture - “their contributions to Britain cannot be overstated”.

He added: “We are a better people today because the children and the grandchildren of those who came in 1948 have stayed and become part of who we are in 2023. And for that we are forever grateful.”

In 2018, it came to light that some members of the Windrush generation and their descendants were facing deportation and being denied access to public services because their right to live here had not been properly recorded by the government decades before.

The then home secretary, Amber Rudd, apologised after a scathing report published in 2020 found it had been “foreseeable and avoidable” and that victims were let down by “systemic operational failings”.

As of last month, £75m in compensation had been offered to those impacted, with £62.7m of that paid out, analysis by the PA

News agency showed.

But the Home Office has continued to face criticism over the handling of compensation applications.

Amelia Gentleman, a journalist for the Guardian who exposed the scandal, told Radio 4’s Today programme: “The anniversary remains soured by the ongoing failings of the Home Office.”

She added the 44-page form involved in claiming compensation was too complicated.

Patrick Vernon, convenor of the Windrush 75 network, said the events were a chance to “celebrate the diversity of modern Britain” and to “acknowledge the legacy of those first Windrush pioneers, the challenges they overcame and the contribution they made to Britain”.

But he said it was a “bittersweet moment, tainted by the injustice of the Windrush scandal”.

Home Secretary Suella Braverman has resisted calls for the programme to be moved out of Home Office control and the department has insisted it is “absolutely committed to righting the wrongs of the Windrush scandal”.

Meanwhile, the BBC has uncovered evidence that hundreds of long-term sick and mentally ill people were sent back to the Caribbean after arriving in Britain. (BBC)

The abdominal surgery Pope Francis underwent more than two weeks ago continues to take its toll, with the pontiff complaining of breathing issues.

Francis, 86, opted against delivering a speech Thursday to charity workers, who instead received a written address.

“I’m still under the effect of anaesthesia,” the pope shared Thursday, according to Vatican News. “My breathing isn’t good.”

Francis underwent a threehour surgery on June 7 to address issues including a hernia. He left A. Gemelli University Hospital in a wheelchair last Friday after nine days, telling media members at the time that he was “still alive.”

Two days after being discharged, Francis made his regular Sunday address in Vatican City last weekend in front of about 15,000 people.

“This human and spiritual closeness for me was a great help and comfort,” Francis told the crowd at St. Peter’s Square on Sunday. “Thanks to all, thanks to you, thanks from the heart.”

The operation was Francis’ second abdominal surgery since July 2021. He similarly cited lingering effects of anesthesia after that procedure.

The pope was also hospitalized in late March with bronchitis and spent three days at Gemelli Hospital. Francis’ June 7 hospitalization came hours after he attended a general audience at St. Peter’s Square.

“The surgery, decided upon over the past few days by the medical team assisting the Holy Father, became necessary due to an incisional laparocele (hernia) that is causing recurrent, painful and worsening sub-occlusive syndromes,” the Holy See said at the time.

Dr. Sergio Alfieri, who performed the abdominal surgery, told reporters last Friday that the pope was doing “well.”

“He’s better than before,” Alfieri said. (NYDailynews)

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