Delay biometric visa checks for 80 Gaza students, dozens of MPs urge UK government
Labour MPs Abtisam Mohamed and Barry Gardiner are leading the charge, asking Home Secretary Yvette Cooper to defer the requirement, so the students can take up their university places in September.
However, shadow home secretary Chris Philp says the biometric checks should not be deferred, arguing they are "an essential part of our security arrangements".
Gaza latest: Netanyahu mulls 'full Gaza takeover'
In order to obtain a UK visa, applicants must provide a photo of their face, as well as their fingerprints. The Home Office guidance says these data points "play a significant role in delivering security and facilitation in the border and immigration system".
UK visa process for Gazans 'all but impossible'
In the letter, the MPs raise the case of a Haia Mohamed, who they describe as a "young poet in Gaza", who has won a scholarship to Goldsmiths College in London.
But neither she nor 79 other successful applicants to UK universities are able to travel to the UK because providing the required biometric data is "all but impossible".
They write: "Even before the war, leaving Gaza to pursue higher education was a complex process. The ongoing siege and restrictions made travel extremely difficult, but in the current state of constant bombardment, shootings at aid sites, and an IPC-declared famine, this process has become all but impossible."
In an email to MPs asking them to sign the letter, Mohamed and Gardiner are far more blunt, saying: "Unless the government makes rapid progress with offering visas and coordinating evacuations over the next week, students who should be starting university next month in the UK will be among those who are being shot dead at aid sites, bombed in displacement camps, or starving as famine spreads deeper in Gaza."
The UK did have an authorised centre in Gaza that was able to process biometric data, but it was closed in October 2023 after the 7 October Hamas attack, and as Israel's war in response to the atrocity got under way, according to The Guardian.
As result, they are asking the home secretary to "defer biometric data screening for student visa applicants based in Gaza and open a safe passage to enable these young people to fulfil their academic dreams", pointing out that other countries in Europe "have taken proactive steps to ensure safe evacuation routes for students bound for their countries".
Students are 'the future of Palestine'
Speaking to Sky News on Tuesday, one of the writers of the letter, Barry Gardiner MP, pointed out that the government has been able to find a way for injured children from Gaza to receive care in the UK, and exemptions have been made in the past, and so the same should be done in this case, and "quickly" because the academic year starts next month.
The Brent West MP also said that this is about "giving the state of Palestine the possibility of a future".
"These young people are the future of Palestine. They are the young talent, and it doesn't matter whether they're constructing a road network, or a sewage system, or they're town planners or, as in the case of Haia Mohamed, astonishingly profound poets - the state of Palestine will need everything from classical musicians right the way through to town planners," he said.
"And these youngsters are coming over here with that full range of study potential, with the express intention of going back and building their nation."
He added that the fact they have been able to win scholarships to, in many cases, the UK's top universities "shows extraordinary resilience, extraordinary courage, extraordinary ability, and we should facilitate that".
Checks 'essential part of security arrangements'
But Conservative MP and shadow home secretary Chris Philp told Sky News in a statement: "We should not be deferring biometric checks. These are an essential part of our security arrangements, and they should not be waived or delayed until arrival in the UK - by which time it is too late."
Earlier this month, a student from Gaza reportedly left France after being ordered to leave following the discovery of alleged antisemitic social media posts. Her lawyer said she "firmly denies the accusations made against her", according to France24.
Mr Gardiner told Sky News: "Anyone who breaks the law in that way must be dealt with as the law requires. But what you don't do is you don't say, 'somebody might break the law, so we're not going to allow anybody to come'."
Read more:More children from Gaza to be brought to UK for medical treatmentNetanyahu to instruct Israeli military on next steps in GazaAnalysis: Full Israeli occupation of Gaza could massively backfire
The UK requires that biometric data be submitted in advance of the visa being approved in order to:
• Establish a person's identity by joining the applicant's biographical data with their biometric data;• Verify an individual "accurately against an established identity";• Check they are not on a watchlist, for example, to ensure they are eligible to come to the UK.
Exemptions from the requirement to provide biometric data have been given in rare circumstances. It was waived for Ukrainians fleeing to the UK following Russia's invasion in January 2022.
However, it was not waived for Afghans fleeing the Taliban in August 2021. But a judge later ruled that a family in hiding in the country did not have to provide the data in order to join British family members in the UK, which was thought to also apply to around 100 other families.
The Home Office and Foreign Office have been contacted for comment.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Grok, is that Gaza? AI image checks mislocate news photographs
This image by AFP photojournalist Omar al-Qattaa shows a skeletal, underfed girl in Gaza, where Israel's blockade has fuelled fears of mass famine in the Palestinian territory. But when social media users asked Grok where it came from, X boss Elon Musk's artificial intelligence chatbot was certain that the photograph was taken in Yemen nearly seven years ago. The AI bot's untrue response was widely shared online and a left-wing pro-Palestinian French lawmaker, Aymeric Caron, was accused of peddling disinformation on the Israel-Hamas war for posting the photo. At a time when internet users are turning to AI to verify images more and more, the furore shows the risks of trusting tools like Grok, when the technology is far from error-free. Grok said the photo showed Amal Hussain, a seven-year-old Yemeni child, in October 2018. In fact the photo shows nine-year-old Mariam Dawwas in the arms of her mother Modallala in Gaza City on August 2, 2025. Before the war, sparked by Hamas's October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, Mariam weighed 25 kilograms, her mother told AFP. Today, she weighs only nine. The only nutrition she gets to help her condition is milk, Modallala told AFP--and even that's "not always available". Challenged on its incorrect response, Grok said: "I do not spread fake news; I base my answers on verified sources." The chatbot eventually issued a response that recognised the error -- but in reply to further queries the next day, Grok repeated its claim that the photo was from Yemen. The chatbot has previously issued content that praised Nazi leader Adolf Hitler and that suggested people with Jewish surnames were more likely to spread online hate. - Radical right bias - Grok's mistakes illustrate the limits of AI tools, whose functions are as impenetrable as "black boxes", said Louis de Diesbach, a researcher in technological ethics. "We don't know exactly why they give this or that reply, nor how they prioritise their sources," said Diesbach, author of a book on AI tools, "Hello ChatGPT". Each AI has biases linked to the information it was trained on and the instructions of its creators, he said. In the researcher's view Grok, made by Musk's xAI start-up, shows "highly pronounced biases which are highly aligned with the ideology" of the South African billionaire, a former confidante of US President Donald Trump and a standard-bearer for the radical right. Asking a chatbot to pinpoint a photo's origin takes it out of its proper role, said Diesbach. "Typically, when you look for the origin of an image, it might say: 'This photo could have been taken in Yemen, could have been taken in Gaza, could have been taken in pretty much any country where there is famine'." AI does not necessarily seek accuracy -- "that's not the goal," the expert said. Another AFP photograph of a starving Gazan child by al-Qattaa, taken in July 2025, had already been wrongly located and dated by Grok to Yemen, 2016. That error led to internet users accusing the French newspaper Liberation, which had published the photo, of manipulation. - 'Friendly pathological liar' - An AI's bias is linked to the data it is fed and what happens during fine-tuning -- the so-called alignment phase -- which then determines what the model would rate as a good or bad answer. "Just because you explain to it that the answer's wrong doesn't mean it will then give a different one," Diesbach said. "Its training data has not changed and neither has its alignment." Grok is not alone in wrongly identifying images. When AFP asked Mistral AI's Le Chat -- which is in part trained on AFP's articles under an agreement between the French start-up and the news agency -- the bot also misidentified the photo of Mariam Dawwas as being from Yemen. For Diesbach, chatbots must never be used as tools to verify facts. "They are not made to tell the truth," but to "generate content, whether true or false", he said. "You have to look at it like a friendly pathological liar -- it may not always lie, but it always could." dou-aor/sbk/rlp
Yahoo
41 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Nahal Oz petitions High Court against gov't decision to repopulate Gaza border communities
The June decision came following military estimates that 'there is no immediate security threat' to civilians living so close to the Gaza Strip. The government's decision to repopulate some of the Gaza border communities while the Israel-Hamas War rages on and 50 hostages remain in Hamas captivity is not appropriate and should be reversed to allow the communities agency in the matter, Kibbutz Nahal Oz said in a petition it submitted to the High Court of Justice on Monday. The government's decision, which passed in June, came following military estimates that 'there is no immediate security threat' to civilians living near the Gaza Strip. Nahal Oz was one of 12 towns cleared for repopulation at the time. In response, the Hostages and Missing Families Forum had said, 'If, security-wise, there is no reason as to why one should not go back to living in the Gaza border communities, then there is no reason for the Israel-Gaza war to continue.' On Monday, Nahal Oz said, 'As long as there is a war in Gaza and hostages are being held captive in Hamas's torture tunnels, it is impossible to live a normal life 800 meters from the border fence.' It added that it felt it was left with no choice but to petition the court after sensing that the government was not meeting its needs. Omri Miran, from Kibbutz Nahal Oz, is still being held in Hamas captivity. Lishay Miran Lavi, his wife, is one of the 120 signatories to the petition. Kibbutz Nahal Oz devastated by October 7 massacre Nahal Oz is geographically the closest to the Palestinian enclave, and on October 7, terrorists led by Hamas attacked the kibbutz for hours on end. Fifteen residents were killed and eight people were taken captive, out of the larger tally of 251 kidnapped on that day. 'The petition reflects the desire everyone in Nahal Oz has to return to a life of productivity and growth. The first step toward that end goal cannot be forceful. Residents should be given the agency to decide when and how to return to their ruined homes to rebuild,' said the kibbutz. The petition calls to extend the temporary residency conditions for the kibbutz members (they were evacuated after the attacks) until the war in Gaza ends, 'given the kibbutz's close proximity to operative locations in northern Gaza, as well as the collective trauma that the residents carry,' the kibbutz added. Other signatories included Gali Idan, the widow of Tsachi Idan, who was kidnapped on October 7 and killed in captivity, and also the mother of 18-year-old Maayan, who was killed on October 7. Yehuda and Nurit Fiorentino, the parents of Ilan, who was the chief security officer for the kibbutz and was killed on October 7, also signed the petition. Solve the daily Crossword


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
The Unintended Consequences of Trump's Tariff Strategy
Subscribe to Trumponomics on Apple Podcasts Subscribe to Trumponomics on Spotify With US President Donald Trump's self-imposed Aug. 1 deadline having come and gone, trading partners across the globe are digesting what his new threatened tariffs might mean for them. Countries like the UK appear moderately pleased with their 10% rate while nations such as Switzerland are aghast at levies as high as 39%—so much that Swiss President Karin Keller-Sutter traveled to Washington to negotiate directly before they're initiated fully, which Trump promises will happen on Aug. 7. But it's early days yet in Trump's trade war, and everything from the unexpected movement of the dollar to negative jobs data and $1 trillion in trade exemptions continues to cloud the picture. On this episode of Trumponomics, we try to understand how Trump's tariffs (which, to add more complexity, an appeals court could soon rule illegal) are currently affecting US businesses, China and the rest of the world. Host Stephanie Flanders is joined Bloomberg Economics Chief US Economist Anna Wong and Bloomberg News senior correspondent Shawn Donnan to discuss it all.