A mum who complained about her 'tiny' flat in East London has been offered a new home by the council - 200 miles away.
Naima Bazizi, 36, pays £800 a month to live with her son in a 'tiny' two-room flat in Brimstone House in Newham, MyLondon reports.
She moved into the temporary flat in April 2021 but over a year later she is still there and has to share a bed with her son as the flat is too small.
Naima claims Newham Council told her it would just be for three months - however some residents say they have been living in the hostel for over two years.
Hundreds of families in the building are forced to share just eight washing machines in the tower block used as temporary housing by Newham Council.
Speaking to the Local Democracy Reporting Service over a year later, she said: “They said it was just for three months but they find excuses.
"There’s no space here. We sleep in the double bed together.
"I’ve got storage but I can’t use it and I have to have all my belongings in here. Now summer is coming there’s no oxygen in here.
"I have to keep the window locked because it’s dangerous.”
Ms Bazizi was studying to become a French teacher but had to drop out of her course in December 2021 because of the lack of space to study in the flat.
After complaining to Newham Council about the apartment, Ms Bazizi claims they offered her a property 200 miles away in Manchester.
She said: “They said we have got a flat in Manchester but I have got no one outside of London. Why should I move out of London? I stopped my course last December.
"I can’t study at night because it will distract my son. I started a job as a receptionist but I stopped because I was not in a stable position.”
Newham Council bought the tower block in Stratford in 2016 to provide temporary housing for homeless families.
But residents say the tiny rooms and lack of communal space make the building unsuitable for children.
Sadaf Afzal moved into Brimstone House with her son six months ago. She said Newham shouldn’t be housing kids in the tower block for long periods.
Ms Afzal said: “It’s not suitable for children. My son can open the window and climb up to it - it’s not really safe.
"It has been six months and my son has started getting skin problems. The house doesn’t have a ventilator.
"The council said we can give you a house outside London but I have been here for 22 years and all my friends are here."
Fellow resident Agnes, 46, who declined to give her surname, said her flat wasn’t suitable for her six-year-old son who has sickle cell disease.
She said: “There’s no place for him to play. It’s not good for kids - it’s too small. My son will be seven in two weeks and he really wants a bike but I can’t buy him one because the flat is too small and I’m not allowed to store things outside my front door."
Agnes said she has been living in a tiny flat in the hostel with her son for two years - despite claiming Newham Council told her she’d be there for just six months when she first moved in.
She added: “I don’t want to move out of London because my son goes to hospital here and I have all my support network here. If I moved outside it would be starting again with no help.
"It’s hard though. I bid on a council property on Friday and by the time it is Monday I’m 1,000 in the queue. It’s frustrating.”
Newham Council has been contacted for comment.