Sunderland Echo

Family bid to fight deportatio­n

PETITION LAUNCHED TO HAVE HOME OFFICE RECONSIDER DECISION

- By Poppy Kennedy poppy.kennedy@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @poppykenne­dyjp

A Sunderland-born woman fears her family being split up following a Home Office decision to deport her husband.

Alison Atkinson-Phillips and her husband Jeff have been told he must return to Australia – or he will be deported.

Now desperate to keep their family together, the couple, who have two children Tijaan, 19, and Mia, 13, have launched an online petition which has gained more than 1,500 signatures.

A Sunderland-born woman fears her family being split up following a Home Office decision to deport her husband.

Alison Atkinson-Phillips and her husband Jeff have been told he must return to Australia – or he will be deported.

Now desperate to keep their family together, the couple, who have two children Tijaan, 19, and Mia, 13, have launched an online petition which has already gained more than 1,500 signatures.

They initially returned to the UK at the beginning of the year when Alison took on a new role at Newcastle University.

Alison, 42, grew up in Southwick and Roker before her parents moved to Perth, Australia, when she was 13.

The mum-of-two was delighted when she was offered a research post at the newlyforme­d Oral History Unit & Collective at the university.

She said: “At the time it seemed like the stars had aligned.

“When you’re specialise­d with a PhD, the jobs that fit your field and skills are pretty small.

“This was an amazing position – it was in my field, it was in the North East and researchin­g the local area which was exciting for me.”

The family, who now live in Newcastle, accompanie­d Alison but because of UK visa rules requiring a sponsor to have worked in the UK for six months, Jeff came initially on a tourist visa.

Having sought guidance from Citizens Advice, Jeff, 42, applied for leave to remain in the UK, but has now been refused on the grounds that there is no strong reason why the family could not return to Australia.

The couple, who married in 2002, were given 14 days to appeal the decision.

Alison, who attended Redby Primary School and Monkwearmo­uth Comprehens­ive School in Sunderland, was at work when Jeff called with the news on Wednesday October 3.

“When I got the phone call I was shaking,” said Alison. “I had to do my work so I tried not to think about it.

“It was when I got home that it hit me properly.

“I’m trying really hard to be reasonable about it. I get that there is a process and a system, but I’m a British citizen and my two children are British citizens.

“We’ve been married for 16 years now so there’s no question if the relationsh­ip is fake.

“It makes me quite angry that we are put in this position really.”

She added: “I find it very upsetting that my country of birth doesn’t seem to care about keeping me or my children here, or value the contributi­on we are able to make to the UK.

“The Home Office may think there are no insurmount­able obstacles to us upping sticks and moving halfway around the world, but we see things differentl­y.

“I do not want to give up my job or have to move the kids now they are settled here.”

Jeff has a chronic pain condition which means he cannot work, but Alison’s wage meets the required income threshold, so there is no concern about a cost to the UK government.

Daughter Mia, 13, attends Heaton Manor School and Jeff is her primary caregiver and has been for most of her childhood.

The couple previously lived in Manchester for two years from 2002, and Tijaan started school in the UK before they moved back to Perth.

Alison is a member of the University and College Union (UCU), which has written to Home Secretary Sajid Jav- id asking him to intervene to ensure the family can remain together in the UK.

The union said that the case suggested that, despite the Home Secretary saying the Home Office’s “hostile environmen­t” era was over, its legacy appeared to live on.

UCU head of policy and campaigns Matt Waddup said: “This case risks sending another worrying message to the rest of the world that the UK is not open for business.

“We have written to the Home Secretary and hope he will intervene so families are not forced to leave the UK just to stay together. Sajid Javid may say the Home Office no longer operates a “hostile environmen­t” policy, but this case suggests that legacy lives on.”

A Home Office spokespers­on said: “We are currently reviewing our decision in this case.”

To sign the petition, people can visit www.change. org/p/let-jeff-stay-no-todeportat­ion-of-british-academic-s-husband-no-tofamily-separation

“At the time it seemed like the stars had aligned” ALISON

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 ??  ?? Alison Atkinson-Phillips and her husband Jeff.
Alison Atkinson-Phillips and her husband Jeff.

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