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Baroness
Pola Uddin in scandal of £100k expenses
claims
(7 May 2009)
Muslim
Peer, Baroness Pola Uddin has become embroiled
in a row over House of Lords expenses claims after
The Sunday Times newspaper reported on Sunday
3 May 2009 that she was receiving more than £100,000
by claiming that her main residence was a flat
in Maidstone in Kent, while she continued to live
in her East London home a mere few miles from
the House of Lords. The row has escalated further
after it emerged that Uddin and her son both live
in separate flats in the same East London block
owned by the Spitalfields Housing Association
- residences designated as affordable housing
for low-income families. It is alleged that Uddin
is also claiming £2000 per month for maintaining
the East London flat, where the average rent charged
is just £500 per month. Uddin has said,
"I do not believe that I have done anything
wrong or breached any House of Lords rules."
Uddin is a Labour politician,
community activist, and most notable for being
the first Muslim woman in the House of Lords.
Born in Bangladesh in 1959, Manzila Pola Uddin
came to Britain in 1973 as a teenager. She began
working for Newham Social Services in 1988, rising
to become Deputy leader of Tower Hamlets in 1994.
She lost out to Oona King in the race to become
the Labour parliamentary candidate for Bethnal
Green in 1997 and was made a peer by Tony Blair
in 1998, when she took on title 'Baroness Uddin
of Bethnal Green', at the age of 38. A campaigner
on women's and ethnic minority issues, she recently
became Chair of the cross-party Black, Asian and
minority ethnic (BAME) Women Councillors Taskforce
launched in May 2008 by Harriet Harman, Minister
for Women and Equality. The taskforce is charged
with encouraging more ethnic women into politics
and local councils.
On 5 May 2009, one of the
senior Lord's official, Clerk of the Parliaments,
announced that the House of Lords authorities
are investigating the report by The Sunday Times.
Uddin welcomed the review: "I welcome this
review and will co-operate fully with him in the
hope of a speedy resolution and clarity that I
did not break the rules of the House."
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