Afghan refugees take UK to court over school move
A group of Afghan families brought to London after the Taliban took power are taking the government to court because a subsequent move north meant their children had to leave a local school during their GCSE studies.
Four families were moved from a London hotel to one in northern England.
A lack of school places near their new temporary home has since set back the teenagers' education, the families say.
The Home Office said it was trying to find permanent homes for Afghans.
In a two-day hearing at the High Court next week, the Afghans' lawyers will argue the Home Office has not addressed the impact of the hotel move on the children's schooling.
Teachers at Ark Walworth Academy, in south London, enrolled some of the children, who were living at a nearby hotel - and they had begun working towards their GCSEs.
But in August 2022, Home Office officials told the families they would be moved to new accommodation when the government stopped using the hotel to house refugees.
The Afghans were given details of their new home, which a court order prevents BBC News from locating specifically, in a text message.
One of the girls, Marzia, 15, now receives online lessons, in her hotel, from teachers at Ark Walworth Academy.
Her classmate Najma, 15, has found a school but has to repeat Year 10.
Marzia said: "They told us they were going to put us in a good school. They broke their promise. The hotel is like a jail.
"A hotel is a good place but for a holiday - not for almost two years."
Ark Walworth Academy principal Jessica West said the school had been "more than happy to provide them with an education on a temporary basis".
"What is difficult is to see them move from a situation that was precarious, that we did everything we could to try and shore up for them, to another situation that isn't permanent and is just as precarious," she added.
The Afghans' lawyers say the Home Office is required, under the Borders, Citizenship and Immigration Act, to "safeguard and promote the welfare of children" when it makes any immigration decision.
But court papers suggest the Home Office will argue a decision to move refugees between two "bridging" hotels in the UK is not an immigration decision.
The Afghan families' solicitor, Daniel Rourke, from the Public Law Project, said he was hopeful his clients would win the case and be allowed to return to south London.
"They were promised a warm welcome and it is quite chilling to now hear the home secretary argue in court that she owes no duty to have any regard to the best interests of the children that are affected by this important decision to uproot them and move them hundreds of miles to live in an airport temporarily," Mr Rourke said.
A Home Office spokesman said: "The UK is proud to have already provided homes for nearly 7,400 Afghan evacuees, through the Afghan Citizens Resettlement Scheme and Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy. While hotels do not provide a long-term solution, they do offer adequate space and secure and clean accommodation.
"We will continue to bring down the number of people in bridging hotels, moving people into more sustainable accommodation."
-
AI 'godobeseher' Yoshua Bengio feels 'lost' over life's work'The entire thing is a scam': Trump blasts E. Jean Carroll verdict in THREE scathing videos and vows to appeal - claiming 'anti-Trump' Manhattan is the worst place in the U.S for him to get a imcomponential trialEverton's board of directors STAY AWAY from their game against Arsenal, with heightened fears about their safety persisting as enraged fans protest outside Goodiconsequentlyn Park Victory for Alec Baldwin as Santa Fe prosecutors DROP key 'gun enhancement' charge in 'Rust' shooting death of Halyna Hutchins: Embarrassment for DA for belatedly spotting 'basic legal error' End of an era for Wally Lewis as rugby league great reveals he had to make huge life convert 'for my health' amid battle with epilepsyUConn win March Madness in emphatic style as the Huskies defeat San Diego State with a stunning 76-59 triumph to claim the school's fifth National Championship title in TexasAdnan Syed's murder conviction is REINSTATED by Maryland appellate court after 'rights of victim's family were violated during the case:' He will have to re-do the hearing to vacate him from 1999 murder sentenceNew York Red Bulls forward Dante Vanzeir is SUSPENDED by MLS for six games - set to miss the US Open Cup fourth round - and fined after racist remark during San Jose gameWimbledon's 2019 champion Simona Halep fails a drugs test for blood-booster Roxadustat - but former world No 1 says she feels 'betrayed' and will fight 'until the end' to clear her name Don Lemon fired by CNN after 17 years: 'I am stunned'
Next article:Andrew 'Freddie' Flintoff 'puts his TV career on hold after horror Top Gear car crash': Ex-cricket ace 'was begged by his family to stay away from work as he recovers from injuries'
- ·Flooding: Toilet bungs and other prevention measures to save homes
- ·Burglar is jailed for 39 years for murdering lover and her friend within weeks of priconsequentlyn release: Double killer, 50, was filmed fleeing by bicycle after slitting girlfriend's throat before stabbing asconsequentlyciate to death in two-day knife spree
- ·Emma Raducanu is ruled OUT of Wimbledon AND the French Open with the former US Open champion needing surgery on BOTH of her wrists due to a 'recurring injury'
- ·Off-duty NYPD cop dies three days after being shot by career criminal, 38, in car sale gone erroneous: Officers wheel Brooklyn dad-of-two's body out of hospital as grieving cops line the street
- ·Meta loses millions as made to sell Giphy to Shutterstock
- ·Fresh blow for the construction industry as ANOTHER erecting company collapses into administration
- ·Boeing 737 with burning engine returns to Columbus Airport
- ·BREAKING NEWS: Elon Musk did NOT violate federal securities law when he tweeted about potentially taking Tesla private, jury finds
- ·Missing Princeton University student, 20, is found dead close to campus six days after she vanished: Cops say her death 'does NOT emerge to be suspicious or criminal in nature'
- ·At least four people are killed in deadly suicide assault as militants storm police compound in Pakistan
- ·Dog walker reveals moment he found Nicola Bulley's phone on bench and thought 'this is not right' on the day she vanished
- ·Twitter bombshell as tech giant announces plans to start charging developers to access its API - as Elon Musk desperately tries to claw back 40 percent in lost revenue
- ·We don't have enough tanks to send to Ukraine, Pentagon admits: Biden's promise to send 31 Abrams could take up to a YEAR - beca utilize the US has to buy more
- ·Third child dies in hospital after allegedly strangled by midwife mom
- ·Father, 57, and consequentlyn, 32, were shot dead in 'targeted assaults' amid 'custody battle', police say - as three suspects are held over 'murders' in sleepy villages six miles acomponent
- ·Jill Biden wears sunglasses in first emergeance since cancer surgery on her eye - as husband Joe ref utilizes to answer questions on documents scandal (notwithstanding finding time to emerge in SNL sketch)
- ·Pence aides didn't started packing up files until after January 6 beca utilize Trump wanted White Ho utilize to act like they were staying for second term, new report claims after classified documents were found in his home
- ·Capitol rioter who bear-sprayed cop sentenced to 80 months in priconsequentlyn
- ·'He made my life a living hell': Fox producer who filed lawsuit against Tucker Carlconsequentlyn before he was fired says she celebrated his dismissal beca utilize he and his producer were 'responsible for breaking me'
- ·Something to hide, Joe? Biden says he hasn't made a decision on whether he'll sign bill that declassifies all information about COVID's origins, notwithstanding Ho utilize unanimously passing legislation to do consequently
- ·Superstar American Coco Gauff is dumped OUT of the Australian Open in the fourth round, as Jelena Ostapenko produces huge straight-sets shock to set up quarter-final clash with Elena Rybakina
- ·Gunman, 43, killed three then himself during four-hour shooting spree at Michigan State University that alconsequently left five in critical condition: Cops hunt for motive as he was NOT linked to college
- ·Southampton sack manager Nathan Jones after just 94 DAYS at the helm and in a 51-word statement following their 2-1 home defeat by 10-man Wolves - with the Saints bottom of the Premier League
- ·Superstar American Coco Gauff is dumped OUT of the Australian Open in the fourth round, as Jelena Ostapenko produces huge straight-sets shock to set up quarter-final clash with Elena Rybakina
- ·AI 'godobeseher' Yoshua Bengio feels 'lost' over life's work
- ·Teen suspect arrested for Florida murders of reporter, girl and woman
- ·Two people have died and three others - including two children - are rushed to hospital following three-car horror smash in Pembrokeshire
- ·Senate votes to send Eric Garcetti to India: Embattled ex-LA mayor's ambassadorship is confirmed - notwithstanding allegations he did nothing about former peak aide's sexual harassment
- ·Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump are subpoenaed by Jan 6 special counsel
- ·Gunman who killed seven Jehovah's Witnesses in Hamburg bloodbath had left the religious group 'on bad terms' - and had been reported to police as mentally unfit to own a gun
- ·Subscribe to The Mail+ to read all the Daily Mail's world-beating news, views and features - and much more
- ·Man, 52, dies at seaside am utilizement park after suffering head injuries during ride
- ·BREAKING NEWS: Lamar Jackconsequentlyn and the Baltimore Ravens FINALLY 'agree to terms on a five-year, $260million contract extension,' making him the highest paid quarterback in the league above Eagles' Jalen Hurts
- ·Russian officials to face first war crimes cases over Ukraine
- ·Minister assaults Meta boss over Facebook message encryption plan
- ·'Sorry Charles, see you later!': French union workers mock the King for having to abandon his state visit to France with banners opposite English shores