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Published 16:55 12 Aug 2023 BST
Updated 17:12 12 Aug 2023 BST

A scenic view from high up of Rodney Bay in Saint Lucia“We are running out of money. We will soon run out of food, and nobody is helping us. “We are essentially stateless – we are more than abandoned. We are prisoners in a country that we are not allowed to leave.”Last month, Clive went to the UK High Commission in Grenada and took a DNA test to prove that the baby was theirs but are still waiting for the results, they say. The hope is when the DNA test results come back, the couple will be allowed to leave with a passport for the baby and return to the UK. Iuliia said she is “traumatised” and having sleepless nights due to the stress of not being able to go home to her daughter, who is being looked after by her auntie, Kristina, 24. Iuliia, a yoga teacher, said: “I can’t sleep at night. It is traumatising.
“I am scared of the night it is hurricane season we have storms now – it is traumatising for us all. “I can’t stop crying, we are begging for help – we have been abandoned.”Clive said: “We don’t have enough money for flights. When we came over here, they were £600 each and now they are a few grand. “I am £6,000 in debt on the card. We are running out of money. “We keep being called by the Foreign Office and they ask us if we have an update for them. “They should be the ones helping us get out of here.” An FCDO spokesperson said: “We have offered consular support to a British family in St Lucia.” Read more:

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