UK government faces legal action over failure to help evacuate Gaza families

According to Gaza’s Health Ministry, the death toll has risen beyond 67,000. Israel has been accused by the UN of violating the October ceasefire and committing acts of genocide. (Reuters/File Photo)
Short Url
Updated 11 November 2025
Follow

UK government faces legal action over failure to help evacuate Gaza families

  • Two fathers in the UK have instructed the law firm Leigh Day to act on their behalf

LONDON: The British government is facing legal action over its alleged failure to assist in the evacuation of families trapped in Gaza, despite pledging months ago to do so, The Guardian reported on Tuesday.

Two fathers in the UK have instructed the law firm Leigh Day to act on their behalf, arguing that the government’s inaction is unlawful and breaches their families’ human rights.

“I wished that I didn’t have to do this, that it didn’t have to reach this level that I’d have to involve courts,” said one father in the UK, who asked to remain anonymous. “I wish anyone would intervene and take my children out of the life that they are living.”

The man, who was granted humanitarian protection in the UK before the war broke out in 2023, said he was informed by the British Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office in August that he would soon be reunited with his family after they received a positive family reunion decision the previous month.

In Gaza City, the man’s wife, three children and adopted nephew are now living in a tent in Al-Zawida. His wife walks for an hour to make phone calls to him, and he says his children have been shot at by Israeli forces while trying to collect aid. Their flour and rice have also been taken by gangs, he added.

“It was really shocking to see that this didn’t actually end up happening,” said the 39-year-old, who is from Gaza City and spoke through a translator.

He compared the government’s handling of the case to “being released from prison, only to be told you have to return.”

He added: “The war is not over, there’s still aggression from Israel, there’s no food or water, people are not OK.”

According to Gaza’s Health Ministry, the death toll has risen beyond 67,000. Israel has been accused by the UN of violating the October ceasefire and committing acts of genocide.

In August, the British government announced plans to evacuate ill and injured children from Gaza. However, medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres has urged the authorities to scale up those efforts after only a small number of children were brought to the UK.

Two months later, the government said Palestinian students with scholarships at UK universities would be allowed to bring family members from Gaza on a case-by-case basis.

“My children are students as well,” the father said. “Why shouldn’t (they) be brought here?”

Although the family has an approved reunion decision, they remain unable to travel because of biometric requirements. With no visa application center in Gaza, lawyers say the UK government has refused to secure assurances from Jordanian authorities to allow the family to cross the border for biometric checks there.

The FCDO, which was contacted for comment, is understood to have responded to a pre-action letter in October stating that the family could not be assisted at present, and that the differential treatment between them, students and medical evacuees was not unlawful.

Sarah Crowe, a solicitor at Leigh Day, said the government had “turned its back” on promises to help ensure their clients’ safe passage.

“Meanwhile, other groups have been safely evacuated under similar circumstances. Our clients argue that this differential treatment is not only unjustifiable and unfair, it is unlawful,” said Crowe.

Another father in the UK, who also requested anonymity, has launched separate legal action to reunite with his six children in Gaza.

Earlier this year, the government agreed to assist the family after a pre-action letter, but they now say that commitment has not been upheld.

Speaking through a translator, he said relatives in Gaza are living in a tent after their home was bombed, and that they are entirely dependent on charities for food.

His daughter has developed blood clots in her legs, while his son struggles to breathe after inhaling phosphorus gas, he said. In the UK, his two daughters often ask when their siblings will arrive.

He described himself as exhausted and emotionally broken.

“My children were supposed to be here in May,” said the father, who fled Gaza in 2018 after being imprisoned and tortured by Hamas. “I was supposed to have already been with them for five or six months now.”

A government spokesperson said: “It would be inappropriate to comment while legal proceedings are ongoing.”

Earlier this year, figures showed how Home Office bureaucracy has made it nearly impossible for people trapped in war zones such as Gaza and Sudan to reunite with relatives in the UK. For months, campaigners and parliamentarians have called for a bespoke humanitarian scheme similar to the one created for Ukrainians following Russia’s invasion.


In show of support, Canada, France open consulates in Greenland

Updated 06 February 2026
Follow

In show of support, Canada, France open consulates in Greenland

  • Decisions taken in a strong show of support for Greenland government amid threats by US President Trump to seize the island

COPENHAGEN, Denmark: Canada and France, which both adamantly oppose Donald Trump’s wish to control Greenland, will open consulates in the Danish autonomous territory’s capital on Friday, in a strong show of support for the local government.
Since returning to the White House last year, Trump has repeatedly insisted that Washington needs to control the strategic, mineral-rich Arctic island for security reasons.
The US president last month backed off his threats to seize Greenland after saying he had struck a “framework” deal with NATO chief Mark Rutte to ensure greater American influence.
A US-Denmark-Greenland working group has been established to discuss ways to meet Washington’s security concerns in the Arctic, but the details of the talks have not been made public.
While Denmark and Greenland have said they share Trump’s security concerns, they have insisted that sovereignty and territorial integrity are a “red line” in the discussions.
“In a sense, it’s a victory for Greenlanders to see two allies opening diplomatic representations in Nuuk,” said Jeppe Strandsbjerg, a political scientist at the University of Greenland.
“There is great appreciation for the support against what Trump has said.”
French President Emmanuel Macron announced Paris’s plans to open a consulate during a visit to Nuuk in June, where he expressed Europe’s “solidarity” with Greenland and criticized Trump’s ambitions.
The newly-appointed French consul, Jean-Noel Poirier, has previously served as ambassador to Vietnam.
Canada meanwhile announced in late 2024 that it would open a consulate in Greenland to boost cooperation.
The opening of the consulates is “a way of telling Donald Trump that his aggression against Greenland and Denmark is not a question for Greenland and Denmark alone, it’s also a question for European allies and also for Canada as an ally, as a friend of Greenland and the European allies also,” Ulrik Pram Gad, Arctic expert at the Danish Institute of International Studies, told AFP.
“It’s a small step, part of a strategy where we are making this problem European,” said Christine Nissen, security and defense analyst at the Europa think tank.
“The consequences are obviously not just Danish. It’s European and global.”

Recognition

According to Strandsbjerg, the two consulates — which will be attached to the French and Canadian embassies in Copenhagen — will give Greenland an opportunity to “practice” at being independent, as the island has long dreamt of cutting its ties to Denmark one day.
The decision to open diplomatic missions is also a recognition of Greenland’s growing autonomy, laid out in its 2009 Self-Government Act, Nissen said.
“In terms of their own quest for sovereignty, the Greenlandic people will think to have more direct contact with other European countries,” she said.
That would make it possible to reduce Denmark’s role “by diversifying Greenland’s dependence on the outside world, so that it is not solely dependent on Denmark and can have more ties for its economy, trade, investments, politics and so on,” echoed Pram Gad.
Greenland has had diplomatic ties with the European Union since 1992, with Washington since 2014 and with Iceland since 2017.
Iceland opened its consulate in Nuuk in 2013, while the United States, which had a consulate in the Greenlandic capital from 1940 to 1953, reopened its mission in 2020.
The European Commission opened its office in 2024.