More British teenagers stranded abroad as result of new rules on dual nationals

A picture


Two more British teenagers have found themselves unable to return to the UK because of new Home Office border rules on British dual nationals.Their cases emerged just hours after reports a 16-year-old British schoolgirl was blocked from boarding a flight in Denmark home to the UK because she was a dual national and did not have a British passport.She has missed two weeks of school so far.A 19-year-old student, Anna*, from Oxfordshire is stuck in Madrid after a university-organised trip to the Spanish capital.She is part French and had not yet obtained a British passport to comply with the new rules, which require British dual nationals to present a passport, new or expired, or certificate of entitlement to airlines before boarding flights to the UK.

“It’s like they have brought in a new law and not considered the time people needed to get passports and to change their status ahead of upcoming changes in the rules,” said Rosemary*.“It’s just not right.It’s crazy that a little bit of leeway is not allowed.“She has her British birth certificate with her and photos of both her parents’ British passports and proof of residence in the UK.We are extremely concerned, as you can imagine.

”Another young woman, an 18-year-old British-Danish national, was left stranded in Mumbai where she and a group of friends were transiting after a two-week holiday at the end of February.Air India refused to board her because she did not have her British passport with her, separating her from her friends who returned home.“She couldn’t leave the airport as she had no visa to find accommodation.She was very, very scared,” said her mother, Kristen*.She had travelled out of the country before the rule change on 25 February and was not aware of the need to bring her British passport.

Her parents sent her a photo scan of the British passport and also tried, without success, to get assistance from the British embassy in Mumbai,To make matters worse one of the ground staff in Mumbai advised her to get an emergency visa, which “turned out to be a scam”,Kristen said that after help from ground staff, “after sleeping in the airport my daughter got on another Air India flight”,Another woman, in Yorkshire, has been left heartbroken after her son, who has been living in New Zealand since 2018, cancelled a flight due to arrive in the UK on Friday because he did not have British passports for his two children,“We were all so excited to think they were coming to visit us,” said Susan*.

“I should have been putting my arms around my two grandchildren, aged seven months and three years, and we had made so many little plans to make the visit so special.My calendar is full of silly exclamation marks and hearts around today’s date.I can hardly bear to look at it.”Susan said her family was in “dual passport hell” and there was a “total lack of communication about this new rule” which had led the long-planned trip to be cancelled.“Devastation doesn’t begin to describe it,” she said.

Multiple British citizens in Canada and Australia have written to the Guardian overnight to express their anger that they would not be able to return home with new babies who cannot travel because they do not have British passports, which could take months to acquire,One man who has a nine-week-old baby is travelling back on 4 May for his brother’s wedding, and had started the application for his newborn’s Canadian passport,“I’m reading this news about dual nationals and realise we don’t have time to apply for a British passport,” he said,The UK Visas and Immigration office was closed at 5pm UK time every day, which is “not much use” for those on the other side of the world,The Passport Office in Liverpool told him it was “too tight” a timescale to get a passport, he said.

The Home Office was approached for comment,It has consistently declined to comment on individual cases,It has said on multiple occasions that it notified the public of the new rules with postings on its gov,uk website page in October 2024,Last week, in a U-turn, it said EU citizens with settled status in the UK could travel on their second passport.

This does not apply to their children, however.The Home Office has also refused all calls to introduce a grace period to allow those who did not read gov.uk, and who have now learned of the rules in the media, to get passports.*All names have been changed.
technologySee all
A picture

First came the AI ‘teammates’, then the layoffs: the new reality for Atlassian staff now looking for work

Sacked from his “dream job” at software giant Atlassian, Rubio* wants just one thing – closure.“We were probably exceeding expectations and there’s no explanation from the company as a whole as to why any of this happened,” he says.“The only desire that I have, outside of receiving my severance package, is closure as to why I was selected.”On Thursday morning last week, Atlassian laid off 1,600 workers – about 10% of its total workforce. Nearly 500 Australian staff were among them

A picture

Fire experts ‘kept awake’ over growing hazard of lithium-ion batteries

Lithium-ion batteries represent a new technological hazard that one fire science expert has said keeps him awake at night, as fire service chiefs warn the ubiquity of the batteries in everyday products is outpacing public understanding and safety regulations.The blaze that devastated a historic building in Glasgow and resulted in the closure of Central Station, Scotland’s largest rail interchange, is believed to have started in a shop selling vapes, which are powered by lithium-ion batteries. Glasgow’s Central Station has since reopened.The latest data reveals a sharp increase in battery-related fires across Scotland, while firefighters in London attend an e-bike or e-scooter fire every other day.Paul Christensen, a professor of pure and applied electrochemistry at the University of Newcastle, underlined that, while the probability of a fire from a lithium-ion battery is very low, the hazard is “very, very high, as we’ve seen with this fire in Glasgow”

A picture

Essex police pause facial recognition camera use after study finds racial bias

Essex police have paused the use of live facial recognition (LFR) technology after a study found cameras were significantly more likely to target black people than people of other ethnicities.The move to suspend use of the AI-enabled systems was revealed by the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO), which regulates the use of the technology deployed so far by at least 13 police forces in London, south and north Wales, Leicestershire, Northamptonshire, Hampshire, Bedfordshire, Suffolk, Greater Manchester, West Yorkshire, Surrey and Sussex.The ICO said Essex police had paused LFR deployments “after identifying potential accuracy and bias risks” and warned other forces to have mitigations in place. LFR systems are either mounted to fixed locations or deployed in vans. In January, the home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, announced the number of LFR vans would increase five-fold, with 50 available to every police force in England and Wales

A picture

Meta AI agent’s instruction causes large sensitive data leak to employees

An AI agent instructed an engineer to take actions that exposed a large amount of Meta’s sensitive data to some of its employees, in the latest example of AI causing upheaval in a large tech company.The leak, which Meta confirmed, happened when an employee asked for guidance on an engineering problem on an internal forum. An AI agent responded with a solution, which the employee implemented – causing a large amount of sensitive user and company data to be exposed to its engineers for two hours.“No user data was mishandled,” a Meta spokesperson said, and they emphasised that a human could also give erroneous advice. The incident, first reported by The Information, triggered a major internal security alert inside Meta, which the company has said is an indication of how seriously it takes data protection

A picture

Cryptocurrency firms suffer heavy losses in Illinois primaries after spending big

The cryptocurrency industry spent big and lost often in this week’s Illinois primaries.As the industry prepares to make massive donations in the 2026 midterm elections to replicate its success in 2024, the Illinois losses mark an early setback for firms that are trying to establish themselves as power players in American politics.Crypto companies flooded the state’s Democratic primaries with millions of dollars to promote candidates they believed would have a light touch when it came to regulating digital assets. AI firms, meanwhile, backed opposing candidates and seemed to cancel each other out.Using Super Pacs that are allowed to spend unlimited sums of money, crypto and AI companies ran television advertising and distributed campaign fliers that only occasionally alluded to their industries

A picture

Lack of funding is stifling scientific research | Letter

Liz Kendall is right to warn that the UK must not let quantum computing talent slip through its fingers (UK must learn lessons from AI race and retain its quantum computing talent, says minister, 17 March).However, UK Research and Innovation’s current funding decisions risk doing exactly that.The government has announced £1bn for quantum computing, but it is cutting support for fundamental research in particle physics, astronomy and nuclear physics (PPAN). These are not separate issues. It is precisely the kind of blue-sky research funded through PPAN that trains the scientists and develops the ideas that underpin emerging technologies like quantum computing