‘Your children should feel safe and secure and happy,’ says Alifjane Begum, one of millions who live in cold homes. ‘They’re not’

Last winter Ayaat, four, was “severely ill, coughing all night”, as damp afflicted her family’s temporary council home in Dagenham, east London.

As mould spread, her sisters, Ayesha, six, and Anisa, seven, were sick too, and were regularly prescribed antibiotics. Their mother, Alifjane Begum, 27, has a cupboard full of Calpol but it doesn’t help much. Now she lives in fear of the coming winter knowing her finances won’t stretch to keeping the heating on to keep condensation at bay.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Madeleine McCann: German investigation of disappearance could last until next year

Christian Brueckner, in prison for rape in Germany, was told Portuguese police…

Sea-lice outbreak on Icelandic salmon farm a ‘welfare disaster’, footage shows

Drone images of cages shot by activist reveal open sores affecting ‘up…

GameStop surges further 40% amid frenzy; global stock markets slide – business live

GameStop jumps in pre-market trading; US regulator ‘monitoring’ Global stock markets fall…