An asylum-seeker who joined a Coventry school claiming to be a 15-year-old boy but 'looked like a 40-year-old' with his receding hairline, has stopped attending classes after October half-term.
Parents at
the school in Coventry reportedly raised concerns after the asylum-seeker
student, who appeared to be a balding, adult male - joined the school in
October.
The
asylum-seeker is said to have moved to the UK from Gambia, West Africa.
The Home
Office launched an 'urgent investigation' into the matter after the city
council wrote to parents to reassure them about the situation.
The pupil is
said to have not returned to classes after October half-term, according to The
Sun newspaper.
One parent
said: 'The general feeling among parents is that they are bemused and
untrusting. Parents have been told that sharing images of children is wrong and
is a form of bullying, they've not been told what action was taken.'
Photos of the
student were posted on Facebook after one schoolgirl shared the images in a
private Snapchat questioning his age.
The girl's
mother said she was then called into school to discuss the issue with teachers
and that they were concerned sharing photos of the new classmate amounted to
bullying.
She told The
Sun: 'I said, 'You can't really blame the children [for talking about it] - he
looks about 40'. They sort of nodded and said, 'Yes – we did have concerns but
we've been told that he is in fact Year 11 age'.
'I just felt
a bit annoyed that the school was trying to shut down my daughter. I said, 'I'm
all for encouraging free speech and I don't agree that it was bullying as
such.'
She added:
'The school has said it's inappropriate for us to question his age. There's
absolutely no way this boy looks 15. He looks about 40 to me.'
Another
parent told Metro: 'Pupils were coming home saying there's a man in our class,
some were even saying they reckoned he could be aged up to 40.
'He has a
thin hairline and apparently he has no birth certificate or passport. He might
be the right age, he might not. Either way parents would like some clarity.'
Coventry City
Council was forced to send a letter to parents after the pupil took his place
in classes.
Sarah Mills,
head of education entitlement at Coventry City Council, said in the open
letter: "When pupils arrive in England and present an application for a
school place, we - local authorities and schools - are obliged to process these
applications.
"If
there are concerns or doubts regarding a pupil’s age at the time of application,
schools and local authorities are able to ask for further evidence in the form
of birth certificates and passports.
"However,
please note, on some rare occasions if pupils arrive as asylum seekers and
alone, i.e. without parents, these may not always be available.
"I am
able to confirm [the school] follows all of these procedures and always seeks
the city council's support in such matters.
A school
spokesperson later told The Sun they had been able to verify the student's age
- but couldn't reveal how.
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