© Muhammad
Hamed / Reuters
|
Thousands of children
seeking asylum in Britain are being denied access to schools across the
country, organizations who work with refugees say.
RT
report continues:
Children
who have arrived with their families, as well as unaccompanied minors, are
being subjected to discrimination by local authorities, groups have said, with
a number of children waiting for up to a year to be given a place at school.
A
Refugee Council spokeswoman said the situation was troubling.
“The
inability for all asylum-seeker children to access a school place promptly is
concerning. We have worked with children who have had to wait up to a year to
get a school place.”
There
is no single governing body providing access to education, and the
responsibility to ensure children get school places is split between different
local councils across the country.
Children
who live in initial accommodation, which is open for asylum seekers who have
just arrived in the country and have nowhere to live, do not have the right to
attend school and councils have said they have no responsibility to find places
in classrooms for them.
Children
in initial accommodation also suffer because they cannot go on waiting lists
for schools.
One
father told the Guardian his daughter had been denied access to school after
the family’s visa expired and they claimed asylum in the UK.
“Our
daughter had been in school before, but when we claimed asylum she was no
longer allowed to go to school. She wants to continue with her GCSE courses,
but has not been allowed to do so. Our daughter has become worried and
disturbed because she is not allowed to go to school. Her dream is to become a
doctor and education is a very important part of her life. The way we have been
treated is playing with our emotions.”
Peter
Hall, who coordinates the Croydon Refugee Day Centre, told the paper he
sometimes looks after as many as eight families at a time whose children are
unable to access education.
“Some may be there for
several months. In the last four weeks, a group of lads around the age of 12
have been coming to our center regularly and can’t get into a school because
they are in initial Home Office accommodation.... If these children aren’t
allowed to go to school they should at least be provided with some kind of a
home educator system,” he said.
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