the girls are not here. the home office suddenly moved them to another hotel in the north of england without arranging school places for them. england without arranging school places for them. look at the care. isn t it glorious? places for them. look at the care. isn t it glorious? that s places for them. look at the care. isn t it glorious? that s a - places for them. look at the care. isn t it glorious? that s a lot i places for them. look at the care. isn t it glorious? that s a lot of i isn t it glorious? that s a lot of work. isn t it glorious? that s a lot of work- the isn t it glorious? that s a lot of work. the principal isn t it glorious? that s a lot of work. the principaljess- isn t it glorious? that s a lot of work. the principaljess west | isn t it glorious? that s a lot of i work. the principaljess west says she cried when she received handmade christmas cards from some of the afghan girls who were forced to leave the school bus yellow we know them, we love them
look at the care that s been taken. isn t it glorious? that s a lot of work. principaljess west says she cried when she received handmade christmas cards from some of the afghan girls who were forced to leave the school. we know them, we love them, we look after them, we care for them. what s really difficult is to see them moving from a situation that was precarious, that we did everything we could to try and shore up for them, to another situation that isn t permanent and is just as precarious. najma, studying for her gcses, must repeat a year because local schools have no year 11 vacancies. marzia is having to study online with material provided by walworth academy. i think they broke their promise and the hotel is like a jail. the government is spending £1 million a day on hotels for afghans because it can t source suitable permanent homes for often large family groups. abdullah, not his real name, was a sniper who worked alongside the british military in afghanistan.
look at the care that has been taken. isn t it glorious? that s a lot of work. principaljess west says she cried when she received handmade christmas cards from some of the afghan girls who were forced to leave the school. we know them, we love them, we look after them, we care for them. what s really difficult see that moving from a situation that was precarious, that we did everything we could to try and shore up for them, to another situation that isn t permanent and is just as precarious. one of the girls, studying for her gcses, has to repeat a year because local schools have no year 11 vacancies. the other is having to study online with material provided by walworth academy. i think they broke their promise and the hotel is like a jail. abdullah, not his real name, was a sniper who worked alongside the british military in afghanistan. for legal reasons he can t be identified but he is among those taking the home office to court