Joy as Jewish Iraqi family are granted asylum in UK
February 8, 2017 14:56By Lee Harpin
AN Iraqi family whose plight was taken up York’s Liberal Jewish community have been granted the right to remain in UK by the Home Office.
Delighted Sinan Nuuman this week told the JC he was “overjoyed” after learning that he, his wife Dena, and their children daughters Yara, seven, and Liza, 19 months, had been granted asylum to remain in the country for the next five years.
The family had converted to Judaism after becoming part of the fledgling York Liberal Community in June 2014 - where they are now regulars at services.
Mr Nuuman said:” "We were close to full desperation. The decision came to give us quite a huge hope for a new optimistic life that finally we can assure the safety of our children.
“I read the Home Office letters time and time again not believing that we finally have the right to stay."
A spokesman for York’s Liberal community said they were “over-the-moon” at the Home Office’s decision.
The family first arrived in the UK more than four years ago after Mr Nuuman left Baghdad to take an Iraqi government-funded postgraduate degree at York University.
In a decision which delighted her parents, Yara was offered a place at the Brodetsky Jewish Primary School in Leeds last November.
The family moved to the city to be closer to the school.
York's small Liberal Jewish community has been among the most staunch supporters of the Nuumans right to remain in Britain, raising £3,000 on their behalf.
The family claimed asylum last June after the Iraqis cancelled Mr Nuuman's funding and visa.