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Why official announcement of Timothy Akindileni's switch from Aberdeen to QPR took four months
Why official announcement of Timothy Akindileni's switch from Aberdeen to QPR took four months

Press and Journal

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • Press and Journal

Why official announcement of Timothy Akindileni's switch from Aberdeen to QPR took four months

Young defender Timothy Akindileni's transfer from Aberdeen to English club Queens Park Rangers has FINALLY been confirmed four months after The Press and Journal revealed it was happening. A deal for the 6ft 4in, 17-year-old centre-half was agreed by the clubs late in the January transfer window. However, an administrative issue on the part of the English Championship outfit – who had not secured the required Fifa clearance via the English FA to sign an under-18s player cross-border – meant the official announcement of the move had to wait until this summer. Coincidentally, the same administrative issue on the part of Premier League Nottingham Forest also derailed another Dons youngster, Lewis Carrol's, swap to England on January deadline day. Signed to the Reds' academy after a trial from juvenile club East End Lewis in 2023, left-footer Akindileni was part of the Aberdeen youth side who won last season's Club Academy Scotland (CAS) Under-18s Elite league last year and featured for the Reds in the UEFA Youth League during the recently-concluded season. 'We are, of course, disappointed to be losing Timi as we had high hopes for him', said Dons director of football Steven Gunn. 'We made numerous attempts to convince him to stay with Aberdeen, but similar to the issues faced by so many Scottish clubs in recent years, we are finding it increasingly difficult to hold on to our young players. 'We have negotiated a significant deal with QPR that also provides future protection should Timi continue to develop into the player we hoped he could be.' Scotland youth international Akindileni told the QPR website he was 'over the moon' with his transfer to Loftus Road. Akindileni – who moved to London and began training with his new club after the deal was initially agreed during winter window – said: 'There was interest from other clubs, but QPR just stood out for me because the development here for young players is extraordinary. 'You can see it through all the young players coming up to the first team, and that's what really persuaded me to come here. 'The whole point of going into an academy is to work your way up to the first team, because that fuels you to work harder every day. 'Coming down to England is a big step, but I think it's an opportunity you couldn't turn down. 'It's just a great challenge for me and I'm really looking forward to it.'

Aberdeen 'finding it increasingly difficult' to keep youngsters
Aberdeen 'finding it increasingly difficult' to keep youngsters

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Aberdeen 'finding it increasingly difficult' to keep youngsters

Aberdeen say they are "finding it increasingly difficult" to hold on to young talent after confirming teenage defender Timothy Akindileni has left to join Queens Park Rangers for an undisclosed fee. The Pittodrie side say they made "prolonged attempts to persuade" the 17-year-old to stay, but the youngster has opted to join QPR's development squad. Advertisement The centre-back impressed in the Dons youth set-up but never played a first-team game for the club. "We are, of course, disappointed to be losing Timi as we had high hopes for him," said Aberdeen director of football Steven Gunn. "We made numerous attempts to convince him to stay with Aberdeen, but similar to the issues faced by so many Scottish clubs in recent years, we are finding it increasingly difficult to hold on to our young players." Gunn adds that Aberdeen have "negotiated a significant deal" that will provide "future protection" if Akindileni develops "into the player we hoped he could be".

Inside the hidden homeless crisis
Inside the hidden homeless crisis

New Statesman​

time23-05-2025

  • Health
  • New Statesman​

Inside the hidden homeless crisis

Image: Impact on Urban Health More than 60,000 people in London are living in temporary accommodation (TA). With housing costs vastly inflated, the crisis of the so-called 'hidden homeless' is even more extreme in the capital than elsewhere. While the public's perception of homelessness often focuses on rough sleeping, this is a far rarer phenomenon when compared with the vast numbers of registered homeless people who are suffering the precarity of sofa-surfing with family and friends, or else living in council-provided TA. Nowadays, TA, while allocated and paid for by local authorities, is rarely owned by them, since councils have had their own housing stock decimated over the last forty years of right-to-buy and low rates of housebuilding. Instead, TA for homeless residents often entails budget hotels, hostels, and B&Bs, with whole families sometimes sharing single rooms. If this is not an option, accommodation for the homeless is sought in the private rented sector, which can also be over-crowded, with councils paying private landlords to provide those in acute need with shelter. The places that we grow up, live and work impact how healthy we are and urban areas, like inner-city London, have some of the most extreme health outcomes. Alongside their vibrancy and diversity sit stark health inequalities and high levels of homelessness. The effects of living in TA are particularly harmful for children and young people. Statistically, every classroom in the capital will have a homeless child. In some schools, particularly in areas of lower-than-average income, the number of homeless pupils can be as high as 25 per cent. One of those pupils is Timi, an 18-year-old from South London. 'I've lived the majority of my life in TA', he says. Timi, who is autistic, has been in his current temporary home for nine years with his mother and three siblings. With his lifetime of lived experience, he knows that conditions are often well below livable standards. Families living in TA often lack access to adequate cooking facilities – this is especially the case for families placed in hotels. The lack of access to healthy, fresh and nutritious food can quickly have massive consequences for children's physical and mental health, including: malnutrition, diabetes, heart disease, obesity, depression, and exhaustion. These are just some of the many ways that living in TA perpetuates health inequalities for children. 'In many places we've stayed, including where we are now, there have been rotten sofas and fridges, dirty surfaces, including mold that covered the entire bathroom for a very long time', says Timi. 'We've stayed in places where none of the cooking appliances worked, the heating didn't work, some places didn't even have a shower, so we had to use buckets to wash.' The young Londoner, who will be taking a place at university next year, has even been seriously injured due to faulty appliances in TA. He recounts an incident when 'the glass in the shower broke all over me. Paramedics had to attend and I went into urgent care… We've also had issues with sewage in the garden and toilets not flushing', he adds. 'The amount of things that go wrong with TA… you become numb to it.' Perhaps unsurprisingly, almost six in ten TA residents report that their children's physical or mental health is being negatively impacted by their living situation. Temporary housing has been linked to the deaths of at least 74 children, according to figures from an NHS-funded database. 58 of those deaths have been of children younger than one year old. Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe The effect on children's education and their access to public services more generally is also severe. 'I've been to eight schools, mainly due to moving around a lot', says Timi. 'Part of the stress is that the council can put you wherever they want to, they can move [you]because it's not part of the council's housing stock. It means that the landlord can take back the property at any time.' More than half of young TA residents have been forced to move schools. According to research by the Institute for Health Equity, children under five years old living in TA are also less likely to receive statutory checks from health visitors in their home, they are therefore also more likely to miss routine screening and immunisations. To compound all this, temporary accommodation residents are also far more susceptible to getting into problem debt, which can then be used as a reason to exclude them from waiting lists for a social rent home. This 'debt trap' is a policy barrier which has been raised by academics at Kings College London and the charity Shared Health Foundation. For many, it is all too easy to accrue these types of household debt. The housing charity Shelter found that almost nine in ten (87 per cent) of TA residents struggle to keep up with their housing costs, and almost half (47 per cent) have borrowed money to keep up with payments. Financial burdens are often exacerbated when residents are forced to reduce working hours (affecting 27 per cent) or even stop work completely (11 per cent) due to the impact of being moved around temporary housing allocations. 'Your life chances from a young age are impacted by constant moving, constant worries, constant stress,' Timi says. 'Your whole future is put on hold because you have to deal with homelessness, because you have to contribute to bills. The moment you turn 16 the council asks for evidence that you're still in education, otherwise you have to contribute to rent. I started working before I even received my GCSEs and contributed to paying bills. TA is destroying young people's futures.' But things can change. Young people like Timi are organising and becoming involved in social action. 'Last year I successfully applied to the Young Gamechangers Fund, part of the Co-op Foundation, for funding for an initiative I called Project 9.0', he says. 'The project aims to create a coalition of people who have lived experience of homelessness and TA. We want to identify solutions and create a nine-point plan to end child homelessness in London within 9 years (by 2035). We're looking for children and young people aged 11-25 with experience of homelessness, whether that's temporary accommodation, or other forms of housing insecurity, to join the campaign'. Impact on Urban Health are supporting a number of initiatives to improve security for tenants, prevent homelessness, and ensure that when TA must be used it meets the needs of children and families. Too often, TA prevents children from having access to the things they need to be healthy, feel safe, and reach their full potential. To address this, Impact on Urban Health are calling for an end to the long-term use of Temporary Accommodation and the barriers that it creates to achieving health equity for all children. If you'd like to find out more about Project 9.0 and get involved, please visit This article first appeared in our Spotlight on Child Poverty supplement, of 23 May 2025, guest edited by Gordon Brown. Related

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