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50 grand to deport a family.

Jay-B | 15.08.2002 21:55

Reprinted from Brum Evening Mail, 14.8

A family of Afghan refugees were flown out of Britain in a private jet today, leaving a furious row over the £50, 000 cost of the deportation in their wake.

Farid Ahmadi, his wife Feriba and their 2 children, Hadia, 6, and Seear, 4, were flown out of Britain in a cloak and dagger Home Office operation shortly after 10am.

The family, who had settled in Lye, were whisked out of te country from a secret location, ending a year-long wrangle with the authorities.

Furious protestors had been told they would leave from Birmingham Airport for Germany, after losing an 11th Hour High Court bid to stay in the country.

2 blacked out Ford Transit vans, followed by an estate car and a police escort, were seen leaving the detention centre in Harmondsworth, neat Heathrow, at 7.30 am.

Protestors blocked the convoy'spath and campaigners waving placards were bundled out of the road by police.

Mrs. Ahmadi was glimpsed sobbing uncontrollably as the convoy of cars roared away from the following camera crews on the M40. They are thought to have doubled back to either Heathrow or the Northolt Airbase.

Birmingham Perry Barr MP, Khalid Mahmood, said: "This is silly and absurd. This amount of money could have paid for them to stay here for 4 or 5 years."

Leading campaigner Soraya Walton said in tears: "The Home Office has acted in a deplorable way. I fear what those children will be going through now after they had a settled life in this country. It is appalling.

"On every step of the way the Home Office has used the judicial system as its own personal agency. It isn't justice."

Elaine Hefferman of the Committee to Defend Asylum Seekers siad: "it is a final insult to the family and the thousands of British people angry at what has happened to deport them in secret. The Government has wasted taxpayers' money on chartering a flightand even more on the High Court battles and they moan that they can't afford to build hospitals, schools and provide new railway lines."

The Home Office met all inquiries about the deportation of the Ahmadi family with a wall of silence. Officials said they "could not comment on individual cases because details were private to the people involved."

Asked whether the HO had been embarrassed by the whole affair, the spokeswoman replied curtly: "No, we are not embarrassed. We simply can't comment."

Mr. Ahmadi, a 33 year old mechanic and his 24 year old wife, who wants to train as a nurse, fled Taliban contolled Afghanistan in 2000.

Jay-B

Comments

Hide the following 5 comments

49.500 and go by train

15.08.2002 22:35

pretty sick way of getting shot of 'em.
If they had given them the cash and put them on the train they would have been a lot better off ..

just a thought .. !!!

TGV


Blunkett is Hitler

15.08.2002 23:59

Once a council leader with nystagmus in his blind eyes with a lovely obedient dog, fluffing at his side on Question Time, fighting the evils of Thatcherism. And now putting into place more horrendous law and doctrine, more horrible treatment of the poor, needy and pleading, more abuse of children herded into deportation camps,overriding common law, overriding all standards of decency and humanity. Vent your spite on this man and this government.
All operating at the behest of the perpetrators of 911
This society deserves the name evil thru and thru
They're coming to get you without a doubt

dh


Not here as well...

16.08.2002 02:53

and there I was hoping things were better in Britain...

just flying back for a visit, from Melbourne, where Phillip Ruddock recently whisked Muntazer and Alamder Bakhtyari back to detention in Woomera by private charter jet, hours before their father arrived from Sydney to see them...

perhaps the only reason Britain seems better is that there are no deserts big enough to hide a Woomera in...

Seb

Seb
mail e-mail: infratoad@hotmail.com


Government hypocrisy rampant

16.08.2002 13:57

One of the most appalling aspects of this whole saga was the way the 'authorities' snatched the two children of this family. At a time when the headlines are full of the distressing story of two other children who have been abducted to an as yet unknown fate, can the system in general refute the charge of double-standards ?

Space-Trotskyist


And it gets worse....

16.08.2002 15:26

Since the family's involuntary arrival in Munich, the German Government is now proposing their return to Afghanistan; which is now, apparently, "safe".

Jay-B