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Nelson Shardey

(134 Posts)
Callistemon21 Thu 16-May-24 18:32:17

This is rather long but I hope you will read it.

Nelson Shardey, age 74, is a Ghanaian man who came to the UK nearly 50 years ago to study accountancy. When there was a coup in Ghana his family were unable to continue supporting him so he worked so he could continue his studies.
He worked for well-known firms such as Mother's Pride, Mr Kipling Cakes and Bendincks.
No-one ever queried his right to stay and work here. He paid his taxes.
Later on he ran a newsagent's, married and had a family. His sons went to university here and both have good jobs.

Mr Shardey bought a house after obtaining a mortgage.
He has performed jury service, and in 2007 was given a police award for bravery after tackling a robber who was attacking a delivery man with a baseball bat.

He never applied for a British passport as he never went abroad until 2019 when he wanted to go to Ghana after his mother died.

That's when his troubles started because the Home Office said he had no right to be in the UK.
Officials told him to apply for the 10-year route to settlement.
By that time, even if granted, he will be 84.

Over the 10 years it costs about £7,000, with a further £10,500 over the same period to access the NHS.

"I cannot afford to pay any part of the money they are asking," said Mr Shardey, who is recovering from prostate cancer."

Mr Shardey made a mistake in believing he did not need to apply for settlement here and no-one, not the HMRC, the CJA, the banks ever advised him otherwise.

This man has been an asset to our country, a man to admire.

Surely the Home Office should use some common sense and grant him British citizenship as a matter of urgency?
We need rules but there must be some way round this ridiculousness.

Callistemon21 Tue 21-May-24 14:03:16

Sorry, sp. Greta

Greta Tue 21-May-24 14:07:45

I am not trying to mislead anybody but was under the impression that my HO letter was equal to "leave to remain indefinitely". I am not a lawyer.
According to the conditions of the "Settled Status" scheme I should report changes to my status. I'm actually in the process of doing that now because I have a new passport.

Greta Tue 21-May-24 14:20:11

I think you're right, Callistemon21, there is often poor or lack of communication that complicate matters.

GrannyGravy13 Wed 22-May-24 10:45:03

Nelson Shardey is being interviewed on This Morning at the moment.

maddyone Wed 22-May-24 18:41:28

Can you tell us what was said GG please? I’m in Seville and so can’t watch.

GrannyGravy13 Wed 22-May-24 18:45:06

maddyone

Can you tell us what was said GG please? I’m in Seville and so can’t watch.

Sorry I only caught the first couple of minutes as I was going to the gym.
He did say he was here at college being supported from home then circumstances at home changed and he had to get a job to support himself, then I left.

maddyone Wed 22-May-24 22:17:28

Thank you anyway GG.

Sasta Fri 24-May-24 12:35:36

Just for note, there’s a difference between compassion and facts. I’ve seen countless posts on Gransnet where the facts of law have been invaluable to posters needing advice and support, always supplied by Germansherpherdsmum, with follow-ups when needed. I see no value in dissing these factual points made when they are so pertinent to the issue. Mr Shardey is clearly a decent bloke and I hope he can stay. But the law is the law even if it seems unfair at times, and I know for certain it can be horribly unfair.