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Bristol cricket players released from immigration centre
Bristol cricket players released from immigration centre
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Cricket Club continues fight to keep teens in country
A cricket club in Bristol that's been campaigning for the release of two teenagers from a detention centre says it won't give up fighting for them to be granted asylum.
Ahad and Anum Rizvi are facing deportation if the Home Office turns down their application - separating them from their family. Laura Makin-Isherwood reports.
Cricket siblings released from immigration centre
Two Bristol siblings have been released from an immigration removal centre after more than a month in detention.
Ahad Rizvi, 19, is a keen cricketer at the Easton Cowboys Club in Bristol; last night he was already back practising in the cricket nets. The club has run a vigorous fundraising and publicity campaign to keep the siblings in the country.
Ahad and his sister Anum, 20, came to the UK from Pakistan to join their parents, who claimed asylum here; as minority Shi'a Muslims, the family say they have received death threats from Taliban militants in their home country.
But once Ahad and Anum turned 18, they had to apply for their own asylum. These bids have failed, and they are reaching the end of the appeals process. However, after a bail hearing was cancelled this week, authorities have temporarily allowed them home to Bristol.
Local MP Kerry McCarthy, who has supported their campaign, has emphasised that their legal status has not changed with their release, however.