Ambassador To Uk Urges Poles To Consider Coming Back

Ambassador To Uk Urges Poles To Consider Coming Back

By Ben Kerrigan-

Poland’s ambassador to the UK has written to 800,000 Polish nationals, advising them to “seriously consider” leaving the country after Brexit.
Arkady Rzegocki said living standards in Poland were improving, providing “a very good opportunity to come back”.

Rzegocki said  on Poles living in the UK  applying for settled status there or return.
Mr Rzegocki described the current number of applicants to the EU settlement scheme as “alarmingly low”.
He wrote: “To date, around 27% of Poles living in the British Isles have applied for settled status.
“This is an alarmingly low level, meaning that thousands of Polish citizens may be exposed to complications related to the lack of regulating their status.”
The ambassador said although a significant number of Poles remain in the UK, many are considering a return to Poland.
“Last year 116,000 left [Britain]. There are still about a million here but you can see there is a discussion being had,” he added.

“Soon, Great Britain, which has been home to thousands of Poles for generations, will most likely cease to be a member of the European Union – which we regret, but we also see this process as an opportunity to strengthen the bond between our two countries,” he said.
The most recent data from the Office for National Statistics suggests around 832,000 people born in Poland were resident in the UK in 2018, the joint highest overseas-born population alongside India.

EU citizens living permanently in the UK must register for settled status or pre-settled status to be able to remain legally in the country after the current Brexit deadline of October 31.Speaking on BBC Radio 4′s Today programme on Wednesday, the ambassador said: “Of course, we are concerned about this process a little bit, because there’s 42% of people [EU citizens] who have received pre-settled status.
“It means that there are quite a lot of people who have had a problem with receiving settled status.”

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