UK MPs demand visa waiver for Gaza students

Displaced Palestinians in Jabalia, in the Gaza Strip. (AP Photo)
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Updated 06 August 2025
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UK MPs demand visa waiver for Gaza students

  • At least 80 are due to begin studies at British universities next month
  • Enclave’s only biometrics center handling UK applications closed in October 2023

LONDON: At least 70 British MPs have signed a letter demanding that the government delay biometric requirements for 80 Palestinian students in Gaza, Sky News reported on Wednesday.

The war in the enclave has prevented the students from fulfilling the mandatory biometric checks, and a government waiver would let them take their university spots in Britain.

The students have all been granted university positions for the beginning of their studies in September. Labour’s Abtisam Mohamed and Barry Gardiner are leading the appeal by MPs.

Applicants for UK visas, which the students need, require a portrait photo and fingerprint scans.

Home Office guidance says this “plays a significant role in delivering security and facilitation in the border and immigration system.”

Biometric data allows border officials to perform identity checks and verify that visa applicants are not on a watchlist, ensuring their eligibility to come to the UK.

However, Gaza’s only biometrics center handling UK applications closed in October 2023 after the start of the war.

The MPs’ letter said: “Even before the war, leaving Gaza to pursue higher education was a complex process. The ongoing siege and restrictions made travel extremely difficult, but in the current state of constant bombardment, shootings at aid sites, and an IPC-declared famine, this process has become all but impossible.”

It added: “Unless the government makes rapid progress with offering visas and coordinating evacuations over the next week, students who should be starting university next month in the UK will be among those who are being shot dead at aid sites, bombed in displacement camps or starving as famine spreads deeper in Gaza.”

Signatories are asking Home Secretary Yvette Cooper to “defer biometric data screening for student visa applicants based in Gaza and open a safe passage to enable these young people to fulfil their academic dreams.”

Other countries in Europe have already “taken proactive steps to ensure safe evacuation routes for students bound for their countries,” the letter said.

Gardiner, speaking to Sky News, highlighted the government’s ability to evacuate injured children from Gaza to receive treatment in the UK.

He questioned why the same mercy is not being shown to the 80 students, who have already been admitted to British institutions.

He also cited previous government exemptions to the biometric rules, such as for Ukrainian refugees and a small number of Afghan families with relatives already in Britain.

A government waiving of the requirement would also “give the state of Palestine the possibility of a future,” Gardiner said.

“These young people are the future of Palestine. They are the young talent … The state of Palestine will need everything from classical musicians right the way through to town planners,” he added.

“And these youngsters are coming over here with that full range of study potential, with the express intention of going back and building their nation.”

They have shown “extraordinary resilience, extraordinary courage, extraordinary ability, and we should facilitate that,” he said.


WHO alarmed by health workers, civilians ‘forcibly detained’ in Sudan

Updated 17 December 2025
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WHO alarmed by health workers, civilians ‘forcibly detained’ in Sudan

  • The WHO counts and verifies attacks on health care, though it does not attribute blame as it is not an investigation agency

GENEVA: The World Health Organization voiced alarm Tuesday at reports that more than 70 health workers and around 5,000 civilians were being detained in Nyala in southwestern Sudan.
Since April 2023, Sudan’s regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) have been locked in a brutal conflict that has killed tens of thousands of people, displaced 12 million more and devastated infrastructure.
“We are concerned by reports from Nyala, the capital of Sudan’s South Darfur state, that more than 70 health care workers are being forcibly detained along with about 5,000 civilians,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on X.
“According to the Sudan Doctors Network, the detainees are being held in cramped and unhealthy conditions, and there are reports of disease outbreaks,” the UN health agency chief said.
The RSF and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North faction allied earlier this year, forming a coalition based in Nyala.
“WHO is gathering more information on the detentions and conditions of those being held. The situation is complicated by the ongoing insecurity,” said Tedros.
“The reported detentions of health workers and thousands more people is deeply concerning. Health workers and civilians should be protected at all times and we call for their safe and unconditional release.”
The WHO counts and verifies attacks on health care, though it does not attribute blame as it is not an investigation agency.
In total, the WHO has recorded 65 attacks on health care in Sudan this year, resulting in 1,620 deaths and 276 injuries. Of those attacks, 54 impacted personnel, 46 impacted facilities and 33 impacted patients.
Earlier Tuesday, UN rights chief Volker Turk said he was “alarmed by the further intensification in hostilities” in the Kordofan region in southern Sudan.
“I urge all parties to the conflict and states with influence to ensure an immediate ceasefire and to prevent atrocities,” he said.
“Medical facilities and personnel have specific protection against attack under international humanitarian law,” Turk added.