

In the "Experience at the Immigration Office" chapter of Hidden Truths(Book based on this petititon): A Female Immigrant's Quest for Justice (published by Molly M, Kindle, September 1, 2024), she sought public funds for safety without full process details from her attorney. The interview—two days after anti-cancer injections in both legs, causing soreness, swelling, and walking pain after a two-hour train trip—turned torturous: an untrained interviewer mocked her restlessness, bullied her like a "paid actor" echoing her influential ex's threats, laughed with indifferent staff, and ridiculed her need for support. Crying through explanations of agony and travel strain, she endured blame-shifting; her passport stayed held for two years, blocking work, India travel, or basic funds—amplifying exploitation—while she wept home on bus and train, traumatized by cruelty in a justice bastion.
Follow-Up Failures and Neglect
She reported the bullying, poor training, and inhumanity to her local MP, demanding interview recordings, but hit delays: the interviewer was "on leave until January 2025" (three years post-incident), stalling probes suspiciously. Dozens of emails and calls to MPs, police, organizations, and the Indian Embassy drew zero responses, stranding her in financial vulnerability.
UK immigration staff conduct during her painful interview likely breached multiple laws protecting vulnerable applicants.
Key Equality Act 2010 Issues
Disability Harassment: Mocking her post-injection pain and mobility issues created a hostile environment.
No Reasonable Adjustments: Indifference to medical vulnerability violated Section 15 duties.
Staff Conduct Breaches
Unprofessional Interviewing: Bullying, ridicule, and laughter contravene Home Office fairness codes.
Procedural Unfairness: Blame-shifting and lack of empathy mirror ruled-illegal practices.
Vulnerable Persons Failures
Adults at Risk Policy: No protection for someone visibly impaired by recent treatment.
Public Sector Equality Duty: Home Office ignored equality advancement obligations.
Human Rights Concerns
Article 3 ECHR: Cumulative degradation could constitute inhuman treatment.
Article 8: Prolonged passport hold worsened destitution unnecessarily.
Read the full account in Hidden Truths: A Female Immigrant's Quest for Justice (buy Kindle: https://a.co/d/8KoGyOp)—sign for probes, justice.