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Marginalised Scottish communities entitled to receive major funding boosts as national charity opens new grants programme for summer
Marginalised Scottish communities entitled to receive major funding boosts as national charity opens new grants programme for summer

Scotsman

time3 days ago

  • Health
  • Scotsman

Marginalised Scottish communities entitled to receive major funding boosts as national charity opens new grants programme for summer

Underrepresented and marginalised communities from across Scotland could be entitled to receive funding as part of a charity initiative to get more people active for summer. Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Parkinson's UK has launched a new physical activity grants programme for marginalised communities across the UK to help more people living with the condition to get active. The pilot grants programme will run from Monday 2 June to Sunday 10 August 2025. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It will run in conjunction with the charity's established physical activity grants programme, which has been delivering funding of up to £3,000 for exercise professionals and local Parkinson's groups since 2021. Marginalised communities from across Scotland could receive up to £3,000 to help more people get active in summer. In that time, more than £700,000 has been delivered and more than 200 physical activity projects have benefited from the funding. The grants for marginalised communities aim to deliver more innovative exercise, wellbeing and physical activity projects in targeted areas across the UK. They will also offer more opportunities for those in these communities to shape the future delivery and development of the Physical Activity Grants programme. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Funding of up to £3,000 is available for any of the following social groups affected by Parkinson's: Global majority (including all those who are previously categorised as ethnic minorities) People with other disabilities, be it a physical, neurodiverse or hidden disability People from a low socio-economic background People from the LGBTQIA+ community People from Refugee, Asylum Seeker and Migrant communities Women The following community groups and organisations that support the Parkinson's community are also eligible to apply: Community-based not for profit organisations (including charities, CICs, and constituted community groups, excluding Parkinson's UK Local groups/branches) Community Amateur Sports clubs (CASCs) Community benefit societies and Co-operatives Social Enterprises Funding can be offered for exercise classes, consultation with the Parkinson's community and towards engagement events. Applicants will need to complete a brief project description and discuss their ideas with local Parkinson's UK staff and area managers. Once they have spoken with a local Parkinson's UK representative, applicants will be invited to complete an application form. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Selected locations across the UK are now eligible to receive funding if they work with Parkinson's communities from marginalised groups. A full list of these locations can be found by visiting the Parkinson's UK grants for marginalised communities page. Roma Hashim, Physical Activity Grants Manager at Parkinson's UK, said: 'We're really excited about launching the Physical Activity Grants for Marginalised Communities pilot programme this year. The Physical Activity Grants Programme was established to support the Parkinson's community and the leisure industry to develop and deliver opportunities to be active at a local and regional level. 'However, we've since recognised that there is an increasing number of people from marginalised communities getting a Parkinson's diagnosis who have limited access to support groups or programmes. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Every grant aims to support people with Parkinson's from marginalised communities to engage in physical activity, to improve their wellbeing. Their insights will also help us understand their needs and shape the future development of exercise and physical activity from Parkinson's UK.' For more information about the pilot grants programme for marginalised communities, contact physicalactivity@ or visit

Afghan man who worked as interpreter for US Army detained by ICE in San Diego
Afghan man who worked as interpreter for US Army detained by ICE in San Diego

Yahoo

time14-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Afghan man who worked as interpreter for US Army detained by ICE in San Diego

SAN DIEGO (FOX 5/KUSI) — An Afghan man who once helped the U.S. military abroad is being held in ICE detention after his arrest Thursday. It's part of a recent wave of federal courthouse arrests in San Diego and across the country. Cellphone video obtained by FOX 5/KUSI shows federal agents as they approached the asylum-seeker moments after his first hearing and repeatedly asked him for his name. The man, who was accompanied by his attorney, refused to answer and agents proceeded to handcuff the man in the hallway of the federal courthouse in downtown San Diego before producing a warrant. The man stated that he worked with the U.S. military in his home country and has documents to prove it. His attorney, Brian McGoldrick, confirmed his client was an interpreter for the U.S. Army for three years before the 2021 Taliban takeover. 'He and his brothers had a logistics company in Afghanistan, and they provided a lot of material,' McGoldrick said. Word of the arrest sent shockwaves through AfghanEvac, a local nonprofit organization dedicated to helping Afghan allies. 'Every message they're sending to Afghans is we don't want you here, get out, which is wild and especially considering how many Veterans care about this. Because if they get sent back, they're dead,' said Shawn VanDiver, President and Founder of AfghanEvac. VanDiver said the man's wife was previously threatened by the Taliban at a wedding where one of his brother's was murdered. 'So, he fled to Iran. Got to Brazil on a humanitarian visa and walked here from Brazil,' VanDiver added. 'The whole world is watching what's happening with these folks. How is anybody going to stand by us again?' VanDiver said. Meanwhile, McGoldrick is keeping his client's name confidential for safety reasons, but said he has a pending Special Immigrant visa, no criminal record and was legally paroled into the U.S. 'He finally got an appointment with CBP One and he presented himself at the San Ysidro Port of Entry, I think July 6 of 2024,' said Brian McGoldrick, immigration attorney for the Afghan asylum-seeker. He said a judge denied the government's motion to dismiss the case. 'The government simply used a statue that allows them to say that his Notice to Appear was improvidently issued,' McGoldrick said. 'That means that the Notice to Appear would've been mistakenly issued,' explained immigration attorney Saman Nasseri. He explained the approach is becoming more and more common in immigration court. 'The way that they've been justifying arresting people at these hearings is they're dismissing terminating the notices to appear, putting people in expedited removal proceedings,' Nasseri said. However, McGoldrick said when he asked for more information regarding the Notice to Appear and reasoning behind the request for case dismissal, the government's attorney refused to elaborate. McGoldrick said he hadn't been able to speak with his client while he's detained in Otay Mesa. He explained that he could remain in custody for months until his asylum hearing in September. 'It's really ICE's discretion to hold him or not,' he added. 'We don't have a relationship with Afghanistan that allows us to return immigrants. It's kind of scary to think that if he were put in expedited removal where would he go?' FOX 5/KUSI reached out to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security for comment but have not heard back. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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