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Student Yashika Bageerathi to be deported later Yashika Bageerathi's bid to stay in UK blocked
(about 1 hour later)
An A-Level student is set to be deported later from north London to her native Mauritius despite protests to allow her to stay in the UK. A High Court judge has refused to grant an emergency injunction to block the removal of an A-Level student from north London back to Mauritius.
Yashika Bageerathi, 19, is being driven to Heathrow, according to a spokesman for the Oasis Academy Hadley in Enfield, where she has been studying. Lawyers for Yashika Bageerathi, 19, had wanted the measure so she could take her case to the Court of Appeal.
The Home Office said it had received assurances the student would be able to complete her studies in Mauritius. The last-ditch application was made as the student was being driven to Heathrow Airport.
Ms Bageerathi told the BBC it was unfair to force her to leave. Her case sparked a petition which has 175,000 signatures as well as a protest through London.
Ms Bageerathi, who is two months away from taking her A-Level examinations at Oasis Academy Hadley in Enfield, told the BBC it was unfair to force her to leave.
Speaking from the immigration service van taking her to Heathrow Airport, the student said she and her family would be prepared to leave the UK for a "safe place" once she had completed her A-Levels.Speaking from the immigration service van taking her to Heathrow Airport, the student said she and her family would be prepared to leave the UK for a "safe place" once she had completed her A-Levels.
She told the BBC's home affairs correspondent Tom Symonds it was unfair she was being forced to leave the UK and said immigration service officials had told her earlier she would be flown from Heathrow at 21:00 BST.She told the BBC's home affairs correspondent Tom Symonds it was unfair she was being forced to leave the UK and said immigration service officials had told her earlier she would be flown from Heathrow at 21:00 BST.
The Home Office said it had received assurances the student would be able to complete her studies in Mauritius.
'Needlessly cruel''Needlessly cruel'
Ms Bageerathi's principal Lynne Dawes said the student was "petrified".
Keith Vaz, chairman of the Home Affairs Committee, has written to the Home Secretary asking her to "urgently reconsider" the "needlessly cruel" decision to deport the student.Keith Vaz, chairman of the Home Affairs Committee, has written to the Home Secretary asking her to "urgently reconsider" the "needlessly cruel" decision to deport the student.
Her solicitor has also lodged papers at the High Court seeking an emergency injunction to block her deportation so she can take her case to the Court of Appeal. Ms Bageerathi's school principal Lynne Dawes said the student was "petrified".
Ms Dawes, who said she had spoken to Ms Bageerathi at 14:00 BST, said: "I just cannot believe they would send her back six weeks from her exams."Ms Dawes, who said she had spoken to Ms Bageerathi at 14:00 BST, said: "I just cannot believe they would send her back six weeks from her exams."
Speaking to BBC News, she added: "You know, why can't there just be some compassion and humanity to allow her to stay and do those A-Levels.Speaking to BBC News, she added: "You know, why can't there just be some compassion and humanity to allow her to stay and do those A-Levels.
"I know there are laws but I just cannot get why, in effect, what is a few more months. It wouldn't hurt anyone over here, but it would make such a massive difference to her life.""I know there are laws but I just cannot get why, in effect, what is a few more months. It wouldn't hurt anyone over here, but it would make such a massive difference to her life."
She said there was "no compassion being shown" and that she was "embarrassed to be British".She said there was "no compassion being shown" and that she was "embarrassed to be British".
Failed asylum bidFailed asylum bid
The student, who has been in the UK since 2011, is due to take the Air Mauritius flight MK057 at 21:00 BST, according to her school.The student, who has been in the UK since 2011, is due to take the Air Mauritius flight MK057 at 21:00 BST, according to her school.
The airline had originally refused to fly her. When asked why its position had changed, it refused to comment.The airline had originally refused to fly her. When asked why its position had changed, it refused to comment.
On Tuesday, Ms Bageerathi's mother, Sowbhagyawatee, had asked the Home Affairs Committee to release her.On Tuesday, Ms Bageerathi's mother, Sowbhagyawatee, had asked the Home Affairs Committee to release her.
In the letter to the Home Secretary, Mr Vaz said that neither a senior immigration official nor Immigration Minister James Brokenshire had offered a "compelling reason" why the student should be deported before being allowed to sit her examinations next month.In the letter to the Home Secretary, Mr Vaz said that neither a senior immigration official nor Immigration Minister James Brokenshire had offered a "compelling reason" why the student should be deported before being allowed to sit her examinations next month.
"It is a hardship enough for this young woman to be separated from her family and returned to Mauritius where she claims she fears persecution," he wrote."It is a hardship enough for this young woman to be separated from her family and returned to Mauritius where she claims she fears persecution," he wrote.
"To interrupt her education at this late stage in order to do so seems needlessly cruel."To interrupt her education at this late stage in order to do so seems needlessly cruel.
"It is within your gift as Home Secretary to defer Yashika's deportation and I strongly urge you to do so.""It is within your gift as Home Secretary to defer Yashika's deportation and I strongly urge you to do so."
A Home Office spokesman said: "We consider every claim for asylum on its individual merits and in this case the applicant was not considered to be in need of protection.A Home Office spokesman said: "We consider every claim for asylum on its individual merits and in this case the applicant was not considered to be in need of protection.
"The case has gone through the proper legal process and our decision has been supported by the courts on five separate occasions.""The case has gone through the proper legal process and our decision has been supported by the courts on five separate occasions."
Ms Bageerathi has been held in Yarl's Wood Immigration Removal Centre in Bedfordshire since 19 March.Ms Bageerathi has been held in Yarl's Wood Immigration Removal Centre in Bedfordshire since 19 March.
The A-Level student was due to fly on Sunday after a failed asylum bid, but the deportation was delayed.The A-Level student was due to fly on Sunday after a failed asylum bid, but the deportation was delayed.
Her school friends held a protest in Parliament Square on Saturday.Her school friends held a protest in Parliament Square on Saturday.
She had come to the UK with her mother and younger brother and sister from Mauritius in 2011 to escape a relative who was physically abusive.She had come to the UK with her mother and younger brother and sister from Mauritius in 2011 to escape a relative who was physically abusive.
The family claimed asylum last summer, but all four now face deportation. But due to Ms Bageerathi's age, her application was considered separately and she faces returning to Mauritius alone.The family claimed asylum last summer, but all four now face deportation. But due to Ms Bageerathi's age, her application was considered separately and she faces returning to Mauritius alone.