
After arguing that removal would violate his human rights, a migrant father-of-nine has been allowed to remain at a retirement home with his young family until he finds more suitable lodgings.
Shahidul Haque, 59, has spent over a year fighting attempts to remove him from the one-bedroom property, where he lives with his 28-year-old wife and twin daughters.
He insisted he would fight eviction unless larger accommodation was found, arguing that forcing his family out would violate his rights under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
But the case, brought by Southern Housing, has been adjourned until after September 5, while fresh talks take place over finding the family a larger home.
The Bangladeshi national, who has lived in the UK since 1997 and now holds a British passport, is registered disabled and receives benefits for a range of conditions including diabetes, obstructive sleep apnoea, hypertension and depression.
He moved into the retirement flat at David Smith Court in Reading in July 2024, paying £110.70 a week.
But just months later, on December 20, his wife Jakia Sultana Monni and their twin daughters joined him from Bangladesh – despite the accommodation being designated for over-55s and intended for single occupancy.
Mr Haque claims he did not realise the specialist housing rules prevented him from bringing his family to live with him, claiming his limited English meant the tenancy agreement was not properly understood.
Speaking to the Daily Mail, he said: ‘When I filled out the tenancy agreement, I was on my own, and I moved into the flat alone.
‘I didn’t know that I couldn’t move my wife and children in months later. My English is not so good, and nothing was explained to me in any detail.
‘Southern Housing cannot just throw us out. We have to stay here, because we have nowhere else to go.
‘What we really need is a bigger home. This property isn’t suitable for a family. It’s too small, it’s only for a single person.
‘We have only one bedroom and so have to push two beds together. One for me and my wife, and one for my daughters. It’s too crowded.
‘If Southern Housing or West Berkshire Council can find us somewhere more suitable, then we’ll go. But at the moment we have no other place – this is it.’
Lawyers acting for Mr Haque argue that the terms of his tenancy were never translated into Sylheti, his first language, and say evicting the family would breach his right to family life under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
In a written defence, his barrister, Isabel Bertschinger, said: ‘It is averred that the Terms and Conditions of the tenancy agreement were never explained to the Defendant via a Sylheti interpreter or translated into Sylheti in a written document such that the Defendant could understand them.’
She added: ‘The Claimant’s decisions to institute, pursue and continue to seek possession of the property are incompatible with the Defendant’s rights under Article 8 of the European Convention of Human Rights and possession would constitute a disproportionate interference therewith.
‘He is disabled and has limited English language skills, and that he is in receipt of benefits and therefore has a low income.
‘His wife and children have only recently arrived in the UK and would be particularly vulnerable if made homeless.
‘To evict him from his home would have a serious and drastic impact on the Defendant’s health and wellbeing and therefore on his private life, and to prevent him from living with his wife and children would have a severe and disproportionate impact on his family life.’
But Southern Housing has pushed back, arguing Mr Haque breached the terms of his tenancy by moving extra occupants into accommodation specifically reserved for older residents.
The provider has also cited neighbour concerns regarding the young children’s loudness and disturbance.
Its solicitor, Taiwo Temilade, previously said: ‘The Defendant’s two young children have become a source of excess noise levels and anti-social behaviour, negatively affecting other residents within the estate through misuse of safety features and generally rambunctious behaviour.’
Mr Haque rejected the criticism, saying: ‘My children play and sometimes they argue, and the neighbours complain, but they are only small. I try and keep them as quiet as possible.
‘They go to a local nursery, so they’re not always at home in the day. They have sounded the emergency alarm by pulling the security cords, but I’ve wrapped the cords around the intercom phone to stop that from happening.
‘In London, I lived in a four-bedroom home. We need a house, not a small one-bed flat.’
At a previous hearing on August 4, deputy district judge Simon Lindsey acknowledged the complexity of the case and stopped short of granting an immediate eviction.
He said: ‘Fundamentally, I think the defendant probably should not be in this property with his wife and two children, but the question of how he came to be in this place appears to be unresolved and we have to get to that another time.’
Mr Haque was married to his first wife, with whom he had seven children and lived in a four-bedroom home in Plaistow, East London.
But when he divorced, he became homeless and was put up in temporary accommodation and then social housing in Newham before being transferred to David Smith Court.
A request for comment has been sent to Southern Housing.
It’s all very well and good to say ‘human rights’, but what about the residents’ human rights? They likely don’t meet the requirements to have any, and our government don’t care about the victims.

So, it appears that asylum seekers have human rights, but the British people are treated like cattle, and he might have had very limited English. Still, he has eyes to see, and surely he would have seen that the accommodation was too small to bring his family to, but this will keep happening when our government are putting our own tax-paying, hard-working citizens at the back of the queue.
The man has lived in the UK since 1997, and he still can’t understand English, except that he knows and understands all about his human rights. They are very clued up, even before they get on the boat. ‘I not understand’, ‘I not speak English’, ‘I fled physical torture’, ‘I need home for my many kids’, and ‘I have wives, but oh now I am gay, and there is risk to my personal safety’, and lastly, ‘I know my rights’.
But they don’t need to understand English anymore, do they? They have large communities here, so now they don’t even have to make the effort, and how did his wife get a visa to join her husband when he apparently doesn’t have the funds to support her and two children? – Oh, I forgot, the taxpayer can!
These asylum seekers appear to have nothing when they arrive, yet they insist that British taxpayers cover their living expenses. All they require is a few words: ‘I want’, ‘I need’, ‘I need more’, and they get it.











