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I was fined £160 by ‘despicable' council for taking my son on holiday to Egypt – even though trip was ‘educational'

I was fined £160 by ‘despicable' council for taking my son on holiday to Egypt – even though trip was ‘educational'

The Suna day ago
A MUM has blasted a "despicable" council after they slapped her with fines for taking her 12-year-old son to Egypt on an "educational" trip.
Michelle Partington and her husband Andrew Partington, 51, took their son Oliver Partington out of school for 10 days so they could travel to Egypt on June 1.
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The 46-year-old wanted to cheer up her son after he switched schools in April due to bullying.
But she "couldn't afford" to book the £3,270 trip during the school holidays as it would have set her back an extra £2,000.
Despite arguing the trip that included snorkelling and quad biking was an "education trip" because of Egypt's rich history, the school rejected her request to take Oliver out of school.
Michelle was "devastated" when she and her husband both received an £80 fine from Wigan Council on 2 July forcing her to cancel the fun plans she'd organised for her son during the summer break.
Local councils can issue a fine of £80 per parent for a child's unauthorised absence from school, including holidays during term time.
If parents fail to pay the fine within a 21-day timeframe the amount doubles and if it remains unpaid they may face prosecution.
The mum-of-two slammed the decision on social media, saying "this is just despicable behaviour. Something needs to be done and soon".
Michelle said that while believes "education is important" she defends her decision and urges others to sign a petition to abolish these fines.
However, Wigan Council hit back by saying that "parents have a legal duty to ensure their child receives full-time education, either by regular attendance at school or otherwise".
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Michelle, a driving school company director who lives in Wigan, Greater Manchester, said: "It was really upsetting.
"I was shocked when I found out it wasn't just £80 and it was £160 even though we're one family unit. I was absolutely devastated that we had to cancel the plans we had made.
"The holiday was worth it despite the fine. It was a once in a lifetime trip and it was magical.
"We certainly couldn't afford to go to Egypt [during the school holidays], maybe Pontins or Haven or something.
"We work hard so getting to spend time together as a family was nice and we don't get to do that very often."
She added: "As much as education is really important, I think spending time with family and relaxing with family and enjoying family time on holiday is equally as important for a child's mental health.
Fury as dozens of pupils 'put into isolation for wearing Union Jack clothes on school's culture day'
"I did let the school know we'd be taking him out. I told the school this would be considered an education trip because we were going to Egypt which is where lots of civilisation began and there's lots of history there.
"We arranged it to make sure there were no exams taking place so we were sensible in that much.
"They said the authorisation was denied and we would be taking him out of school without their consent. They advised me that we may receive a fine.
"I was expecting to get a fine and I'd heard that it was £80. Myself and my husband received separate letters."
While on the "educational" holiday they went snorkelling, quad biking and had a meal in the desert.
'UNFAIR'
Michelle defended her decision and calls on the council to change their policy as well as the holiday companies to stop charging higher prices during school holidays.
She said: "We had to swap his high school because he was bullied. He was still very upset about what had happened. This holiday was to cheer him up about that as well.
"I feel like the school and the council didn't really take that into consideration. You'd have thought there'd be some sort of lenience there.
"I can understand the school wanting to take a stance on children being present at school and I understand education is so important.
"What is unfair is the holiday companies charging through the nose so much more money when people need to go during the school holidays. It just makes it impossible for normal people to book nice holidays during the school holidays because it's too expensive."
A Wigan Council spokesperson said: "Parents have a legal duty to ensure their child receives full-time education, either by regular attendance at school or otherwise.
"Headteachers may only grant a leave of absence during term time if they consider that there are exceptional circumstances, and the Department for Education 's statutory guidance, updated in August 2024, reinforces that a holiday is not considered exceptional."
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My epic cross-Africa train ride to the Victoria Falls
My epic cross-Africa train ride to the Victoria Falls

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time11 hours ago

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My epic cross-Africa train ride to the Victoria Falls

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There's time for a final glimpse of the smoke that thunders, then the diesels rev and we enter Haslam was a guest of Distant Journeys, which has 20 nights on the Grand African Rail Journey— with 13 all-inclusive onboard, three all-inclusive in a hotel or lodge and two B&B in hotels — from £12,995pp, including flights (

I've found the best beach holiday in Africa
I've found the best beach holiday in Africa

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timea day ago

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I've found the best beach holiday in Africa

'You've picked a beauty of a day to fly,' the helicopter pilot says with a grin, as I strap myself into his five-seater on the small airstrip of the seaside town of Vilanculos, on Mozambique's southeast African coast. 'I think you're going to wish Benguerra Island was a little more than seven minutes away. So enjoy!' He's right. Within seconds of us taking off, soaring over thatched fishermen's houses and a palm-fringed cream beach, a jaw-dropping expanse of blues stretches out below us. In the pale aquamarine shallows, creamy sandbars swirl amid lacy blobs of coral. In the distance, the triangular sails of dhows cast black shadows on the ocean's surface. As we swoop down on the baguette-shaped island of Benguerra, there's nothing beyond the rolling dunes but sparkling sea and cloudless sky. Thirty years ago, the only helicopters that hovered over Mozambique were army ones. From 1975, when the Front for the Liberation of Mozambique party declared independence from the country's Portuguese colonisers, through to the end of the ensuing civil war in 1992, the country was a no-go zone for holidaymakers. City walls were pockmarked with bullet holes. The countryside was littered with landmines that killed thousands and destroyed wildlife. Ten years after its wars ended, Mozambique was still one of the poorest countries on earth. Today, infrastructure is still basic, the roads potholed and 800 miles away in the gas-rich far north, Isis-affiliated fighters have made the Cabo Delgado and Nampula areas a no-go zone, displacing thousands and killing hundreds. In the south, though, it feels like a different place. Around the seaside towns of Inhasorro and Vilanculos and on the nearby Bazaruto Archipelago, confidence is growing as the government tries to lure tourists back. On the mainland smart new private houses and boutique hotels have been built on the palm-lined beaches. On the San Sebastian Peninsula a 30,000-hectare wildlife sanctuary is dotted with mansions owned by wealthy families, including the Oppenheimers. And on the five islands that make up the Bazaruto Archipelago smart hotels are springing up, including Kisawa, where the helicopter is dropping me, on Benguerra and the British-owned Azura Marlin Beach, which opened in May. The reason? The coastline, stretching over 1,700 miles, is not only the longest around the Indian Ocean but one of the most beautiful on earth. Its sands and seas are the colours of the Maldives but but far less discovered; its waters throng with marine life; its food farmed or fished locally. The fact that Mozambique's neighbour, South Africa, produces very fine wine doesn't hurt either. 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Perhaps most fun of all is the electric Mini Moke on which to whizz to the gym and spa where the sweet Balinese masseuse Ayu kneads knots and delivers soothing sound baths; to the shack-like Baracca bar attended by the cool mixologist Mr Dube; or the beachside restaurant (behind glass on this very windy southern stretch of the island). Dishes, from perfectly spiced Moroccan salads to fire-grilled seafood feasts, are served up by the accomplished South African executive chef Jean-Pierre 'JP' Nunez. I can't help but ponder whether this polished excess feels very Mozambiquan. But on a tour of the island, I'm put to rights by Pedro Mucuacuane, Kisawa's community manager. Twenty years ago, he tells me as we climb a 90m dune to admire the forest views, the islanders scraped a living from fishing. Today, 35 per cent of its 2,034 inhabitants work in the island's four luxury hotels, which have also funded a school, clinic and wells. At the school, the teacher tells me, the children's uniforms are funded by guests' donations. At the Bazaruto Centre for Scientific Studies, founded by Flohr, the Portuguese chief scientist Dr Mario Lebrato states that without Kisawa, Mozambique would lose its only permanent ocean observatory, which hosts international research and helps the national parks team to protect creatures such as dolphins, turtles and dugongs — all of which I spot on a snorkelling trip at the appropriately named Aquarium area off nearby Two Mile Reef. The next day, on the 56-mile road trip from Vilanculos to my second stop, at the Sussurro boutique hotel, my driver, Jamal, confirms the importance of tourism. His four adult children — a builder, a plumber and two doctors — were educated thanks to his job, he says. Without tourism, which contributed £164 million to the economy in 2024, their choices, like those of most of Mozambique's 34 million nationals (a staggering 45 per cent of whom are under 15), would have been more limited. His point is illustrated on the last 20 miles of our journey, north of Inhassoro, when we drive on a beach thronging with fishermen pulling in their nets, some heaving in their catch on ropes, others sorting sardine-sized fish into big blue tubs which are carried back to villages near Sussurro. Alongside the wide Bartholomew Dias lagoon, Sussurro is properly remote. It's owned by the Zimbabwean couple Adam Humphreys and Sarah Birkett. Humphreys' father had bought a stretch of coastal land more than 20 years ago. When Birkett first saw it, from the family's basic reed hut, she thought it was the most beautiful place she'd ever seen. 'I knew we could create a proper African beach resort together,' she told me. Neither had lived in Mozambique before, or worked as hoteliers. She had lived in London for 12 years, modelling for Alexander McQueen and Stella McCartney then studying art direction at the London College of Fashion, and he had helped to run an estate in Tuscany. The first five years were 'super-hard', Birkett admits. They had a clapped-out Toyota truck, and had to drive 20 miles to get fresh water and a phone signal. But with the help of the community, slowly they built their dream: an eco-friendly boutique hotel with a soul. Nine years on, they've just opened their seventh cottage at Sussurro: a two-bedroom, shaggy-fringed family pool house. And their own beach house is now also home to their two toddlers and a pair of dachshunds. It all feels super-chilled and extremely romantic, which is why it's become so popular among honeymooners. Walls are punctured by wooden louvres that funnel the sea breeze and filter the sun. The simple whitewashed Afro-minimalist interiors have muslin-swathed beds, and there are big baths in the courtyards for moonlit soaks. Everything is local: the makuti-woven ceilings and soapstone-carved basins, the chairs carved with animal designs and the rows of giant fire-baked terracotta urns. In the evening, sisal cushions are placed by a bonfire for cocktails and simple delicious food served under the palms: inventive salads, fire-grilled fish or crab and peanut curry, and fruity ice creams, all made from ingredients grown by themselves or by the community. Activities include picnics on remote beaches; days out on sandbars watching fisherman in dugouts; sundowners on the hotel's shabby-chic wooden dhow, and after-dinner drinks under a night sky thick with stars. It's a space in which to chill out, and tune into nature. After this remote wilderness, driving back into Vilancoulos feels like a real jolt back into civilisation. This bustling little town, its streets thronging with vendors selling piles of fresh fruit and vegetables and bowls of silvery fish, has been the holiday home of the South Africans Mike and Sarah van Hone for 23 years. When, eight years ago, the plot alongside their own villa on a 14-home beach estate came up for sale, they snapped it up and built a white architectural villa they named Saudade. This February they launched it as a six-bedroom boutique hotel (you can also rent the whole thing). That Sarah has designed homes and gardens all her life is immediately clear. Saudade's a beauty: an Axel Vervoordt-inspired, wabi-sabi blend of clean monochrome lines and rough African accessories, polished concrete floors and scalloped wooden mirrors, all accessorised with characterful ceramic vases, rattan lampshades and ocean-themed embroidery. Two downstairs rooms open onto a grassy garden and circular pool; two upstairs into the airy open-plan living-dining area overlooking Vilanculos beach. Although the garden isn't huge, the couple have created courtyards and verandah in which to dine privately and trained their local chef Papi to create delicious three-course meals, from ceviche and Mediterranean-style salads at lunch to crispy deep-fried Asian-style prawns, then rare rump steak with dauphinois and gooey chocolate bombes at dinner. You can be as busy or lazy as you like. The couple have teamed up with operators they've known for decades who will take you out fishing for the day or horse riding along the beach, diving on Two Mile Reef or snorkelling off sandbars. Or you can go, as I did, for a tour in Mike's 1967 refurbished turquoise Land Rover of the charmingly ramshackle town, then out on a dhow, snorkelling among seahorses with a local environmental organisation devoted to protecting the endangered creatures. Like other Mozambiquans I meet on all three properties, Saudade's staff are a delight: smiley, helpful and determined to use their extraordinarily beautiful coastline to improve the welfare of their people. I've now been to their country ten times. If their roads improve, one day I might be able to drive there from Zimbabwe, as my parents did when I was a child, Bob Dylan songs about Mozambique blasting from the tape Grainger was a guest of Kisawa, Sussarro, Saudade and Mahlatini. Ten nights' all-inclusive (with six nights at Saudade and four nights at Sussurro) from £6,910pp, including flights and transfers ( Tucked into luxuriant undergrowth on steep dunes just north of Vilanculos, this simple nine-bedroom lodge overlooks the Bazaruto Archipelago's turquoise channels and islands. Accommodation comprises two cottages, six safari-style canvas-walled rooms and a new Luxury Iconic Suite, each spacious, wooden floored, thatched and simply furnished, with a private pool. The Italian owners, Elena and Fabio Ratti, are known for their all-inclusive fresh Mediterranean-style food, Italian wines and inventive cocktails. Additional activities can be arranged with longstanding local operators from fishing and whale-watching to market trips, scuba diving and cooking Full-board doubles from £446 ( A private self-catering villa, just four miles north of Vilanculos, this rustic thatch and wood house sits on a point, overlooking a quiet mile-long bay. Sleeping eight in four en suite bedrooms, it was built as a family holiday house 20 years ago and has been looked after by the same housekeeper ever since. This is a place to hang out in a hammock, lie by the pool, fire up the barbecue, watch fishing dhows —and perhaps go for a walk or swim. Although its interiors are the rustic end of shabby chic, it has two attentive staff who will help to organise activities or hire a A night's self-catering for eight from £342 ( A Greek-inspired hotel might seem odd in Mozambique. Until you look at the colours around it: white beaches and blue seas and skies. Set on the cliffs on nearby Kingfisher Bay, Santorini has four villas, with one to five bedrooms that cater to both families and honeymooners. In the five-bedroom main house, with crisp white fittings, rooms around a common pool with sea views can be booked individually. All-inclusive meals, wines and cocktails can be served on the beach, the rooftop, in a courtyard under the stars — or even the vegetable garden. The therapist uses natural Thalgo and CSpa products in the little All-inclusive doubles from £1,039 ( This little Fairtrade community-based hotel, built from stone and thatch by a cashew farmer and furnished with simple woods and cottons, has links with various projects, from groups cleaning the beach and schooling children to former fishermen saving seahorses. The 17 clean, airy rooms include 12 with a sea view and five quiet garden suites amid greenery above the beach. Ingredients are sourced locally, for dishes from cashew-nut curries and giant grilled prawns to crab ravioli. A small gym, spa and yoga classes are available — or there's a long white beach to walk on and warm Indian Ocean water to swim B&B doubles from £243 (

I was fined £160 by ‘despicable' council for taking my son on holiday to Egypt – even though trip was ‘educational'
I was fined £160 by ‘despicable' council for taking my son on holiday to Egypt – even though trip was ‘educational'

The Sun

timea day ago

  • The Sun

I was fined £160 by ‘despicable' council for taking my son on holiday to Egypt – even though trip was ‘educational'

A MUM has blasted a "despicable" council after they slapped her with fines for taking her 12-year-old son to Egypt on an "educational" trip. Michelle Partington and her husband Andrew Partington, 51, took their son Oliver Partington out of school for 10 days so they could travel to Egypt on June 1. 8 8 8 8 The 46-year-old wanted to cheer up her son after he switched schools in April due to bullying. But she "couldn't afford" to book the £3,270 trip during the school holidays as it would have set her back an extra £2,000. Despite arguing the trip that included snorkelling and quad biking was an "education trip" because of Egypt's rich history, the school rejected her request to take Oliver out of school. Michelle was "devastated" when she and her husband both received an £80 fine from Wigan Council on 2 July forcing her to cancel the fun plans she'd organised for her son during the summer break. Local councils can issue a fine of £80 per parent for a child's unauthorised absence from school, including holidays during term time. If parents fail to pay the fine within a 21-day timeframe the amount doubles and if it remains unpaid they may face prosecution. The mum-of-two slammed the decision on social media, saying "this is just despicable behaviour. Something needs to be done and soon". Michelle said that while believes "education is important" she defends her decision and urges others to sign a petition to abolish these fines. However, Wigan Council hit back by saying that "parents have a legal duty to ensure their child receives full-time education, either by regular attendance at school or otherwise". 8 8 8 8 Michelle, a driving school company director who lives in Wigan, Greater Manchester, said: "It was really upsetting. "I was shocked when I found out it wasn't just £80 and it was £160 even though we're one family unit. I was absolutely devastated that we had to cancel the plans we had made. "The holiday was worth it despite the fine. It was a once in a lifetime trip and it was magical. "We certainly couldn't afford to go to Egypt [during the school holidays], maybe Pontins or Haven or something. "We work hard so getting to spend time together as a family was nice and we don't get to do that very often." She added: "As much as education is really important, I think spending time with family and relaxing with family and enjoying family time on holiday is equally as important for a child's mental health. Fury as dozens of pupils 'put into isolation for wearing Union Jack clothes on school's culture day' "I did let the school know we'd be taking him out. I told the school this would be considered an education trip because we were going to Egypt which is where lots of civilisation began and there's lots of history there. "We arranged it to make sure there were no exams taking place so we were sensible in that much. "They said the authorisation was denied and we would be taking him out of school without their consent. They advised me that we may receive a fine. "I was expecting to get a fine and I'd heard that it was £80. Myself and my husband received separate letters." While on the "educational" holiday they went snorkelling, quad biking and had a meal in the desert. 'UNFAIR' Michelle defended her decision and calls on the council to change their policy as well as the holiday companies to stop charging higher prices during school holidays. She said: "We had to swap his high school because he was bullied. He was still very upset about what had happened. This holiday was to cheer him up about that as well. "I feel like the school and the council didn't really take that into consideration. You'd have thought there'd be some sort of lenience there. "I can understand the school wanting to take a stance on children being present at school and I understand education is so important. "What is unfair is the holiday companies charging through the nose so much more money when people need to go during the school holidays. It just makes it impossible for normal people to book nice holidays during the school holidays because it's too expensive." A Wigan Council spokesperson said: "Parents have a legal duty to ensure their child receives full-time education, either by regular attendance at school or otherwise. "Headteachers may only grant a leave of absence during term time if they consider that there are exceptional circumstances, and the Department for Education 's statutory guidance, updated in August 2024, reinforces that a holiday is not considered exceptional."

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