PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
April 2025
TITLE: “Justice Delayed, Justice Denied: A Mother’s Fight Against No-Fault Eviction and Systemic Injustice in the UK”
Contact:
Aquayemi-Claude Akinsanya
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RICHMOND PARK, LONDON — In a year marked by geopolitical shifts and an escalating cost-of-living crisis, the United Kingdom continues to fail its most vulnerable. Advocate, social justice campaigner, environmentalist, and young leader Aquayemi-Claude Akinsanya raises urgent national and international alarm over the ongoing delays in justice and systemic failure facing families like a mother of three disabled children, unlawfully evicted and neglected by the very public bodies meant to protect them.
The case of (Case R) —who was forcibly removed from her home under a Section 21 ‘no-fault’ eviction notice, despite safeguarding concerns and live disability needs—highlights a spine of injustice running through the British system, where public institutions enable displacement while denying due care, special educational support, and housing protection.
Key Facts:
- £90 million black hole in the British Justice System reported in Q1 2025.
- Miss Campbell’s children have been without education for over 18 months, despite confirmed placements since September 2023.
- Welfare delays include denied access to personal budgets, unlawful housing benefit suspensions, and pending EHCP (Education, Health and Care Plan) reviews.
- Racial and disability discrimination alleged against Richmond Council, Achieving for Children (AfC), and Social Work England.
“This is a test case of how justice is being priced out and delayed into oblivion—especially for disabled children, single mothers, and racialised communities,” said Mr. Akinsanya. “It’s not just a legal failure—it’s a human rights crisis happening in plain sight.”

While the Labour government promised to abolish Section 21 evictions, the continued delay leaves families vulnerable to arbitrary displacement. Meanwhile, defence and AI spending surges — sidelining welfare, education, grassroots funding, and creative industries vital to social resilience.
The case has drawn interest from international human rights observers and is being prepared for submission to UN Special Rapporteurs on Housing and Disability Rights, as well as the European Court of Human Rights, if the UK fails to act.
Demands & Action Points:
- Emergency Independent Investigation by the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman (PHSO) into systemic failures affecting the Campbell family and similar cases.
- Reinstatement of Miss Campbell’s housing and educational rights under the Children and Families Act 2014 and Housing Act 1996.
- Immediate abolition of Section 21 as part of Labour’s legislative responsibility to safeguard tenants.

- National redress scheme for vulnerable families unlawfully evicted under questionable legal practices.
This case, and many like it, reveal that Britain’s justice and social care systems are not broken — they are working exactly as designed to exclude and delay support to those who need it most.
“A country that neglects its disabled children, displaces its mothers, and defunds justice has lost its moral compass,” Mr. Akinsanya adds.
The world is watching. And families like Miss Campbell’s cannot wait any longer.
About Aquayemi-Claude Akinsanya
Aquayemi-Claude Akinsanya is a global award-winning social justice campaigner, author, speaker, and founder of The Claudes SEN Law Campaign and Fridays For Future Richmond. He has been featured by Forbes, Business Insider, and the United Nations for his work on reducing inequalities (SDG 10) and leading the call for a just, inclusive, and sustainable society.
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