3nanny6 I have some sympathy with your post. Deportations have been going on for years. I looked up the official figures and there have been thousands of them. I honestly don't know enough about the current cases, but it does seem strange that some of them are allegedly historic offences, the people have served their sentences and, as far as we know, haven't committed further offences.
I'm afraid I wouldn't trust a word of the government's claims, so it would be good to know the truth.
I think there needs to be some action on:
a) ensuring that everybody who came to the UK as a child knows the position with regard to applying for citizenship and the system should be as easily accessible as possible for those who are eligible. My understanding is that these people have been treated differently on the basis of citizenship.
b) there should be an urgent review of the way different groups are sentenced. If it's true that some ethnic groups are given harsher sentences for the same crimes, that needs to stop.
In addition to the above, the country needs to face up to the fact that racism still exists in the UK. Boys from black West Indian backgrounds (not African) have the worst educational outcomes and are more likely to drift into criminal activities.