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Save gran from deportation, urge Leicester campaigners

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This is Leicestershire --

A campaign has been launched to save a grandmother from deportation to her native Zimbabwe.

Evenia Mawongera, who is a member of a choir which sang for the Queen during her Diamond Jubilee visit to Leicester, fears she will be persecuted for her pro-democracy activities if she is deported.

The mother-of-two, who has four grandchildren and is an active member of the Methodist Church in Leicester, is in a detention centre in Bedfordshire and has been told she will be removed from the UK next Wednesday.

She is hoping a last-minute appeal will win her the right to remain in the UK. Lawyers are currently putting together an application on her behalf.

She fled persecution in Zimbabwe 10 years ago and settled in Leicester, joining her two daughters, who had been granted leave to stay in the UK after completing their studies here.

She has made a number of unsuccessful applications for leave to remain here.

Campaigners are appealing to Home Secretary Theresa May to release Mrs Mawongera from the Yarl's Wood Immigration Removal Centre and allow her to return to her family in Leicester while she fights her case.

One of her daughters, 33-year-old Loreen Mawongera, said: "The only thing that is certain about Zimbabwe is that the violence is getting worse and we are very worried our mother will be persecuted because she has been openly critical of the government there.

"My sister and I don't know what we can do to stop her being removed from the country next week.

"We want her to be released and allowed to come back to Leicester while we appeal against her removal."

Ambrose Musiyiwa, a University of Leicester student who is supporting the family, said: "Evenia is being told she is being removed from this country at a time when there is objective evidence of escalating violence in Zimbabwe.

"People are dying there and the Home Office in this country is aware of this.

"I spoke to her while she was in detention and she is in shock and distress because her family is about to be split up."

Enniah Dube, of the Leicester branch of pro-democracy campaign group Restoration of Human Rights in Zimbabwe, said: "To take Evenia away from her children and her grandchildren would be very cruel.

"We believe her case should be reviewed and that she should be allowed home to her family while that takes place. Surely she should be afforded that basic human right."

A Home Office spokesman said: "The Home Office only returns individuals if both we and the courts are satisfied they do not qualify for protection and have no legal basis to remain in the country. All applications are considered on their individual merits and in line with the immigration rules.

"The onus is on the individual to provide the necessary evidence to support their application. If they fail to do so, we will seek to remove them." Reported by This is 2 days ago.

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