Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

UK staffers suspended following vandalized baby birth certificate

The Passport Office apologized to the parents, who were born in Israel.

Tom Pursglove
Member of Parliament Tom Pursglove. Credit: Official Portrait by Richard Townshend via Wikimedia Commons.
Tom Pursglove
Member of Parliament Tom Pursglove, also minister of state for legal migration and delivery in the United Kingdom. Credit: Official Portrait by Richard Townshend via Wikimedia Commons.

A London family is still awaiting answers as to who is responsible for defacing their baby daughter’s birth certificate.

In February, the Jewish family (whose last name has been withheld) received their 5-month-old’s birth certificate in the mail from the UK Passport Office. On it, Israel (the birthplace of her father) had been crossed out with a pen, making the document invalid. Her mother’s place of birth, also Israel, was left untouched.

“This person has destroyed my child’s identity, their birth certificate, just because it’s a Jewish person,” said the baby’s father, who in addition to being born in Israel is also named Israel.

A recent letter from parliamentarian Tom Pursglove, the minister of state for legal migration and delivery, to Sir Michael Ellis, the former attorney general, revealed that Jo Rowland, the director general of the Passport Office, had directly apologized to Israel and his wife, Dorin.

While the contractors working for the Passport Office have been suspended, the investigation remains ongoing.

“‘I continue to take this incident extremely seriously and, while I cannot preempt the outcome of the investigation, my officials are in no doubt of the need to ensure that such an issue must not be repeated in the future,” Pursglove wrote. “Please be assured that the appropriate action is being taken.”

“The expansion of our emergency services will help us better care for patients with the most serious injuries, ensuring they receive the specialized treatment they need, when it matters most,” the hospital said.
“Once again your decisive leadership brought another great victory to America,” the Israeli leader says.
“My intent was to honor our Jewish neighbors and friends,” Nathalie Kanani stated. “We are all human, and even with the best intentions, honest mistakes can happen.”
The man was recognized by police officers while attending a court hearing of the three other suspects connected to the case.
The U.S. president warned that the U.S. military will begin targeting Iranian power plants and bridges on Tuesday if the Strait of Hormuz is not opened.
The cell posed an immediate threat to Israeli forces in northern Gaza, according to the military.