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Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) deepened its reliance on Microsoft’s cloud technology last year as the agency ramped up arrest and deportation operations, leaked documents reveal.
ICE more than tripled the amount of data it stored in Microsoft’s Azure cloud platform in the six months leading up to January 2026, a period in which the agency’s budget swelled and its workforce rapidly expanded, according to the files.
ICE appears to be using a range of Microsoft’s productivity tools, as well as AI-driven products, to search and analyse the data it holds in Azure. Files suggest some of the agency’s own tools and systems may also be running on Microsoft servers.
The documents – obtained by the Guardian and its partners +972 Magazine and Local Call – raise questions about whether Microsoft technology is facilitating an immigration crackdown by an agency accused of conducting unlawful operations and using excessive force on a large scale.
ICE enforcement operations have surged over the past year as part of the Trump administration’s mass deportation campaign. The agency is now at the centre of a battle in Congress over its funding, sparked by the deaths of two people in Minneapolis, that has led to a partial shutdown of the US government.
In July, ICE received a $75bn budget increase, making it the highest-funded US law enforcement body. With this unprecedented increase in funds, the agency has embarked on a spending spree on technology, awarding contracts to large firms such as Palantir alongside lesser-known providers.
ICE, which has been likened to a domestic surveillance agency, enjoys access to vast troves of data on people living in the US. It has a growing arsenal of surveillance technology, including facial recognition apps, phone location databases, drones, and invasive spyware.
As the agency expanded through 2025, it boosted spending on cloud computing. Amazon and Microsoft, both longtime providers to ICE and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), have emerged as beneficiaries of deals worth tens of millions of dollars struck by third-party resellers.
The leaked documents do not specify the kinds of information stored by ICE on Microsoft servers. However, they indicate the agency has used Azure services including “blob storage” of raw data, as well as AI tools that analyse images and videos, and translate text.
In January, according to the files, ICE held almost 1,400 terabytes in Azure, which if only comprised of photographs would be equivalent to approximately 490m images. This was up from 400 terabytes in July 2025 after climbing through the second half of last year, files suggest.
ICE is also using virtual machines on Azure, according to the documents. These are effectively computers that run in the cloud but that can be accessed remotely. ICE appears to be renting these high-powered computers to run software.
The agency, which has more than doubled its workforce since January 2025, is also understood to have significantly expanded its access to Microsoft’s suite of productivity apps which provide users with access to document management tools and an AI chatbot.
It’s unclear from the files whether ICE is using Azure to store or analyse information collected through any of its surveillance or intelligence gathering activities, or whether the cloud platform supports other functions, such as the running of detention centres or deportation flights. ICE did not respond to a request for comment.
A spokesperson for Microsoft said it “provides cloud-based productivity and collaboration tools to DHS and ICE, delivered through our key partners”. They said Microsoft’s policies and terms of service “do not allow our technology to be used for the mass surveillance of civilians, and we do not believe ICE is engaged in such activity”.
The spokesperson added: “There are currently many public issues relating to immigration enforcement, and we believe Congress, the executive branch, and the courts have the opportunity to draw clear legal lines regarding the allowable use of emerging technologies by law enforcement.”

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According to Microsoft sources, several employees have in recent months raised concerns internally about ICE’s use of the company’s technology, including by filing internal ethics reports.
In December 2025, the company responded to one such report by stating that it does not have any current contracts that “support immigration enforcement”. The company later appeared to narrow this position. It acknowledged to employees it has contracts with ICE and DHS, but said it “does not presently maintain AI services contracts tied specifically to enforcement activities”.
Microsoft is not alone in facing disquiet among employees over its business with federal immigration authorities. For large US tech groups, ICE and sister agency Customs and Border Protection (CBP) have long been customers, but have become increasingly controversial for their aggressive tactics and involvement in fatal shootings.
Last week, Amazon workers and activists protested outside the company’s Seattle headquarters, demanding the company cut ties with federal immigration agencies. The company benefits from a series of large cloud deals with DHS to provide cloud infrastructure to ICE and CBP.
At Google, which provides cloud services to both agencies, more than 1,300 workers have signed a recent petition with a similar set of demands. “DHS is violating civil and national law as well as civil and human rights,” the petition reads. “We must end our complicity in powering them.”
Beyond the headlines: inside stories from the Guardian’s investigations team. On 16 March, join the Guardian’s investigations team, Paul Lewis, Sirin Kale, Lucy Osborne, David Conn and Harry Davies, for a deep dive into the stories behind some of the Guardian’s biggest headlines. Book tickets here
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→ A longtime Alaska-based cruise line ceased operations, canceled future sailings and disrupted planned vacations.
→ The CDC issued a travel alert for a popular island destination after a chikungunya outbreak.
→ A harbor pilot fell into the water while boarding a boat — prompting a cruise ship to cancel its port stop.

The Alaska-based cruise company shocked travelers when it announced it would be ceasing operations. (James D. Morgan)
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→ An island imposed new hiking fees and mandatory reservations as locals pushed back against mass tourism.
→ A passenger accidentally boarded the wrong flight and landed in another country instead of his planned stop.
→ The FAA reopened airspace around a Texas airport after initially announcing a 10-day closure.
→ Archaeologists discovered a medieval underground tunnel built into a 5,000-year-old Neolithic burial site.
→ A metal detectorist searching a former Gold Rush campsite uncovered an “extremely rare” 19th-century coin.
→ Archaeologists discovered ancient Roman military camps, unearthing more than 1,500 artifacts dating to the early third century A.D.

The 19th-century coin features Chinese characters. (Angus James, @GOLDCOINRELICS via Facebook)
A Virginia high school senior reflected on how volunteering in Kenya changed her perspective and deepened her gratitude for life in America.
Tricia McLaughlin, the Department of Homeland Security’s top spokesperson and one of the most visible defenders of the Trump administration’s deportation raids, is leaving the agency in the coming week, the department confirmed.
McLaughlin’s impending exit, comes at one of the most fraught moments in the department’s history. Public support for the administration’s immigration enforcement push has fallen to its lowest point since Trump took office, after a series of violent confrontations in US cities and the fatal shootings of two US citizens – Alex Pretti and Renee Good – by federal immigration officers in Minneapolis.
Those killings are at the center of articles of impeachment filed by House Democrats against Kristi Noem, the US homeland security secretary, , accusing her of violating public trust and obstructing congressional oversight.
The 31-year-old was originally planning to leave her post in December, but stayed on because of the shooting deaths, according to the department. Her departure was first reported by Politico.
Following Good’s killing, she wrote in a DHS press release: “Dangerous criminals – whether they be illegal aliens or US citizens – are assaulting law enforcement and turning their vehicles into weapons to attack law enforcement.”
After Pretti was shot dead, she spun it to the Guardian that he “violently resisted” and officers fired “defensive shots” in return.
McLaughlin also faces separate allegations of financial self-dealing. Federal Communications Commission documents obtained by Public Citizen list her as the DHS point person for a $220m agency advertising campaign, portions of which went to an ad firm run by her husband, Ben Yoho. The alleged conflict is cited explicitly in the impeachment articles against Noem.
Before those controversies came to light, McLaughlin had long been a combative and prominent presence in the DHS press operation, regularly attacking critics of the DHS’s immigration enforcement actions.
In the summer of 2025, she accused Democrats and journalists of using “violent rhetoric” that she said was fueling a rise in assaults on DHS and ICE agents.
McLaughlin served in the first Trump administration at the state department and treasury before becoming political communications director for the Ohio governor, Mike DeWine, and, most recently, senior adviser to Vivek Ramaswamy’s 2024 presidential campaign.
Last month, a former DHS communications official, David Lapan, told the Columbia Journalism Review: “What Tricia McLaughlin is doing at Homeland Security is unlike anything I’ve ever seen in my government service. I’ve never seen it as adversarial as this.”
Her deputy, Lauren Bis, will be promoted to replace her as assistant secretary for public affairs, according to Axios.
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The White House is escalating its clash with California Gov. Gavin Newsom, suggesting his newly announced climate partnership with the United Kingdom is inappropriate and accusing the Democrat of using his European tour to “audition for president.”
Senior White House Deputy Press Secretary Kush Desai said Newsom’s deal with the U.K. – what Desai described as “clean energy scam policies” – and push for international climate cooperation have a “proven track record of failure,” pointing to a 30% increase in energy costs under President Joe Biden and California gas prices near $5 per gallon.

British Energy Security and Net Zero Secretary Ed Miliband, left, and California Governor Gavin Newsom, right, pose after signing a clean energy agreement at the Foreign Office in London on Feb. 16, 2026. (Yui Mok/PA via AP)
“So not only is [the climate deal] inappropriate, Gavin Newsom is also just doubling down on a policy agenda that does not work and is making life worse for the people of his state,” Desai said Tuesday on “Fox & Friends First.”
TRUMP BLASTS NEWSOM’S UK PACT, WARNS FOREIGN LEADERS AS 2028 BUZZ BUILDS
He added that Newsom should focus on California’s problems instead of “frolicking around in Europe.”
Speaking at the Munich Security Conference, Newsom positioned California as a “stable and reliable” alternative to the U.S. federal government, telling an international audience that the current administration is “temporary” and will be “gone in three years.” Newsom sharply criticized President Donald Trump’s foreign policy approach, intensifying speculation about the governor’s future presidential ambitions.
“Donald Trump is on his knees for coal and Big Oil, selling out America’s future to China,” a Newsom spokesperson told Fox News Digital in response to the president’s criticisms. “Governor Newsom will continue to lead in his absence. Foreign leaders are rejecting Trump and choosing California’s vision for the future.”
RUBIO SHINES ON GLOBAL STAGE WHILE AOC, WHITMER, AND NEWSOM TAKE HEAT
Desai said that, while there is work still to be done, the economy is on a “positive trajectory.”
“We’re going to see real wages continue growing, meaning wages after inflation continue growing, and we’re going to see the American people continue getting better off,” Desai said.
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The second-term Democrat signed a clean energy memorandum with U.K. Energy Secretary Ed Miliband, which the governor’s office said would facilitate nearly $1 billion in new investment.
Newsom also entered a pact with the Lviv region of Ukraine, which he said would involve California companies in the “rebuilding and resiliency” of the war-torn nation, specifically in defense, energy and digital technologies.
Fox News Digital’s Morgan Phillips contributed to this report.
It’s like the movie Inception, but without Leonardo DiCaprio, unless you imagine him. Researchers used carefully timed sound cues to nudge dream content, and in some cases, boost next-morning problem solving. Could dreamtime product placement come next?
The team, based at Illinois’ Northwestern University, used a technique known as targeted memory reactivation (TMR) to trigger dreams of puzzles that sleep study participants were unable to solve while awake. According to their findings, among the 12 of 20 participants whose dreams incorporated the cued puzzles, solving rates rose from 20 percent to 40 percent – still not a majority, but a statistically significant jump.
The TMR technique used in the study involved playing certain audio cues while participants tried solving the puzzles in order to associate each puzzle with a specific sound. Researchers then played the sounds linked to unsolved puzzles while participants slept, hoping to prompt recall during dreaming and improve next-day solving.
In other words, the team was trying to determine whether the idiom of sleeping on a problem would actually help participants find a solution, and it appears there’s some truth to that.
The researchers also found that the effect held among the 12 of 20 participants whose dreams incorporated the cued puzzles, even when they were not lucid – that is, not consciously aware they were dreaming or deliberately steering the dream.
The team recruited people with prior lucid-dreaming experience because they are better able to control dream content and search for insight while asleep, but participants were not consistently lucid during the cued dreams.
“Even without lucidity, one dreamer asked a dream character for help solving the puzzle we were cueing,” lead author of the paper Karen Konkoly, a researcher at Northwestern’s Paller Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory, said of the findings. The results, she added, “showed how dreamers can follow instructions, and dreams can be influenced by sounds during sleep, even without lucidity.”
Of course, any study like this has to be taken with a heap of salt – the sample size was only 20 people, and the researchers admit that their attempts to link dreaming to creativity and problem solving are limited.
“This study design did not allow us to disentangle whether creativity is an inherent function of dreaming versus whether this benefit emerges when combined with pre-sleep intention,” the team noted in their paper. “Further, given that participants could not be fully blinded from the purpose of the study, we cannot rule out the influence of demand characteristics.”
We reached out to Konkoly to get her take on whether a similar technique could be used to influence people to dream about particular products in a bid to place ads inside dreams, and while we didn’t hear back, there is evidence that it’s been tried before.
Back in 2021, Molson Coors Beverage Company rolled out an unorthodox advertising campaign that invited consumers to try dreaming about Coors. Shut out of running a traditional national Super Bowl ad because of beer-category exclusivity rules, the brewer pitched the stunt as an alternative way to appear during the Big Game.
The Coors Dream Project directed users to a campaign website featuring visual and audio stimuli, including an eight-hour soundscape designed to play while participants slept, which the company said would “shape and compel your subconscious … to dream the Coors Big Game ad.”
The company claimed in press material that trial runs successfully led to volunteers dreaming about “refreshing streams, mountains, waterfalls, and even Coors itself.”
Coors said it was using a technique known as targeted dream incubation in its ad campaign, and that technique gets mentioned in the Northwestern paper as the topic of a prior project Konkoly worked on.
According to that research, reported in October 2025, “dream incubation and TMR can increase dream incorporation of real-world memories.”
It’s unlikely that such techniques could be used on consumers without them noticing at this point, given how such a scheme would require the hijacking of an internet-connected device to play trigger sounds while folks slept. Still, maybe mute that charging smartphone next time you turn in. ®
Political leaders have celebrated Jesse Jackson as a “titan” of the civil rights movement and “one of America’s greatest patriots” after the announcement on Tuesday of his death at the age of 84.
The former US president Joe Biden said history would remember Jackson as “a man of God and of the people”, calling him in a post on X: “Determined and tenacious. Unafraid of the work to redeem the soul of our Nation.”
Biden added: “I’ve seen how Reverend Jackson has helped lead our Nation forward through tumult and triumph. He’s done it with optimism, and a relentless insistence on what is right and just.
“Reverend Jackson influenced generations of Americans, and countless elected leaders, including Presidents. Reverend Jackson believed in his bones the promise of America: that we are all created equal in the image of God and deserve to be treated equally throughout our lives.
“While we’ve never fully lived up to that promise, he dedicated his life to ensuring we never fully walked away from it either.”
Bill Clinton, another Democratic former president, said he and former first lady Hillary Clinton were friends with Jackson for more than five decades, and were “deeply saddened” by his passing.
“Reverend Jackson championed human dignity and helped create opportunities for countless people to live better lives,” he said in a statement on X.
“[He] never stopped working for a better America with brighter tomorrows, including his historic campaigns for the presidency in 1984 and 1988 in which he championed the concerns of Black, Latino, Asian, and lower income white Americans.
“Hillary and I loved him very much.”
Al Sharpton, the veteran civil rights campaigner with whom Jackson worked closely after the 1968 assassination of Martin Luther King Jr, called his friend and mentor “a consequential and transformative leader who changed this nation and the world”.
In a social media post on Tuesday, Sharpton wrote: “He shaped public policy and changed laws. He kept the dream alive and taught young children from broken homes, like me, that we don’t have broken spirits.”
Senior Democrats, the party for which Jackson campaigned twice as a presidential candidate, were also quick to pay tribute.
“He let us know our voices mattered. He instilled in us that we were somebody. And he widened the path for generations to follow in his footsteps and lead,” Kamala Harris, the first Black US vice-president, write in a post on X, also calling Jackson “one of America’s greatest patriots”.
Recalling her days as a young law student in Oakland, California, Harris recalled having a “Jesse Jackson for President” sticker on her car.
“As I would drive across the Bay Bridge, you would not believe how people from every walk of life would give me a thumbs up or honk of support,” she said.
“They were small interactions, but they exemplified Reverend Jackson’s life work – lifting up the dignity of working people, building community and coalitions, and strengthening our democracy and nation.”
Jackson, she said, was “a selfless leader, mentor, and friend to me and so many others”.
Other Democrats celebrated Jackson’s stature in the civil rights movement.
“America has lost a titan in the struggle for civil rights and racial justice. From his days at the side of Dr King, to his moral leadership in this century, Rev Jesse Jackson Sr spent his life pushing our nation closer to its own ideal,” Pete Buttigieg, transportation secretary during the Biden administration, said.
The Democratic Georgia senator Raphael Warnock said America had lost “one of its great moral voices”.
In a social media post he wrote: “With an eloquence and rhythmic rhetoric all his own, Jesse Jackson reminded America that equal justice is not inevitable; it requires vigilance and commitment, and for freedom fighters, sacrifice.
“His ministry was poetry and spiritual power in the public square. He advanced King’s dream and bent the arc of history closer to justice.”
Stacey Abrams, another prominent Black Georgia Democrat and a voting rights advocate, said Jackson “understood the immense promise of America and his role in shaping its destiny”.
“With courage, tenacity and an audacious spirit, he widened our capacity for imagining true unity and deepened our commitment to justice for all. I was one of the lucky beneficiaries of a vision he never forsook. God bless him and the Jackson family,” she wrote.
Bernice King, daughter of Martin Luther King Jr, gave thanks for a life she said “pushed hope into weary places”.
In a post on X, King wrote: “Rev Jesse Jackson Sr devoted his life to lifting people in poverty, the marginalized, and those pushed to society’s edges. He pushed barriers and opened doors so Black people and other excluded communities could step into opportunity and dignity.
“With the Rainbow Coalition, he cast a bold vision of an inclusive society – uniting people across race, class, and faith to build power together and expand the table of economic opportunity. He was a gifted negotiator and a courageous bridge‑builder, serving humanity by bringing calm into tense rooms and creating pathways where none existed.”
King said her family shared “a long and meaningful history with him, rooted in a shared commitment to justice and love”.
Donald Trump, in a post on his own Truth Social network, called Jackson “a good man” and a “friend”, also claiming to have provided office space in New York for his Rainbow Push Coalition.
Trump’s post, as is often the case, quickly turned political, and about himself. The president attacked the “scoundrels and Lunatics on the Radical Left” who, he said, “falsely and consistently” called him a racist, and sought recognition for “funding Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), which Jesse loved”.
Trump also took a swing at a familiar political foe, former president Barack Obama, whom, he claimed, Jackson “could not stand”.
Iran is not being subtle.
In exercises in one of the world’s most strategic waterways, it left little doubt of its capabilities with missile strikes on dummy targets and simulated tanker seizures.
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei wasn’t mincing his words either.
“A warship is a dangerous device,” he said. “But more dangerous than that is a weapon that can send that warship deep under the sea.”
A fifth of the world’s oil supply passes through the Strait of Hormuz, and Iran’s exercises have closed it, albeit temporarily, giving a clear sense of what could be to come if the US strikes Iran.
Just a few hundred miles east, a formidable array of US military forces is also amassing.
Read more: Iran and US agree ‘guiding principles’ after talks
The USS Lincoln aircraft carrier strike group has been conducting exercises of its own. The kind you only carry out if you are preparing for offensive action.
A stretch of water the world relies on for 20% of its oil is becoming cluttered with rival navies, both drilling for war. What could possibly go wrong?
So, what are the chances of diplomacy averting the chances of conflict?
Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, emerged from talks sounding hopeful. He’s optimistic that the basis for future negotiations has been laid, but warned that an agreement could still be a long way off.
A seasoned diplomat and veteran of negotiations with the West, he cannot afford to look obstructive. The Iranians will want to play for time.
US President Donald Trump has said failure to do a deal could lead to strikes on Iran.
Read more:
Family forced to ‘pay for bullet that killed their son’
Thousands protest against Iran regime as talks held nearby
But the Iranians say a deal on the terms that Trump is currently proposing would be tantamount to surrender. Giving up its nuclear enrichment completely is a red line. Trump says it’s a prerequisite.
Squaring that, and many other circles, will be fiendishly difficult.
Without progress, the region is undoubtedly moving closer to war.
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Tom Wilson found himself in no-man’s land over the weekend.
An enforcer in the NHL, the Team Canada star knew that dropping the gloves with France’s Pierre Crinon could get him booted from Olympic competition — just as it had with the Frenchman himself.
The two men fought with about seven minutes left to play in the match that Canada won 10-2. Both players were ejected from the game under Olympic rules, but France’s hockey federation took it a step further and suspended Crinon for the rest of the Games.
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Tom Wilson of Team Canada and Pierre Crinon of Team France fight in the third period during the Men’s Preliminary Group A match between Canada and France on day nine of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on Feb. 15, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Catherine Steenkeste/Getty Images)
Wilson, a member of the Washington Capitals, appeared to seek some payback for teammate Nathan MacKinnon taking a hard hit earlier in the game, but it was clear that Crinon wanted to take things to the next level, as Wilson, the NHL’s active leader in penalty minutes, held back to an extent, but not fully.
“It was kind of a dirty hit, and it’s a little bit different in the Olympics, how you have to go about it. I obviously ended up with the same guy who had done it,” Wilson said to the New York Post.
“Hockey is an emotional game. It’s a competitive game. And when you come together with a big guy, you kind of have to make the decision quickly and the gloves came off. Got thrown down to the ice, and then from there, it’s just kind of a bit of a melee. I mean, it’s fight or flight at that point, you’re just kind of figuring out what you have to do. Obviously, the game was kind of out of hand, so it wasn’t a big deal with five minutes left in the game there that I could potentially get thrown out. I just wanted to stick up for our team.”

Pierre Crinon of France fights with Tom Wilson of Canada during the ice hockey men’s preliminary round Group A match between Canada and France at the Milan Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games in Milan, Italy, Feb. 15, 2026. (Zhang Haofu/Xinhua via Getty Images)
TEAM USA WOMEN’S HOCKEY SHUTS OUT SWEDEN, MOVES TO GOLD MEDAL GAME AT WINTER OLYMPICS
France’s hockey federation determined that Crinon’s actions were against its values and announced he’d no longer play for them in the Olympics. France lost its playoff qualifying game, 5-1, to Germany on Tuesday, marking the end of their run on the ice.
“The provocative behavior of Pierre Crinon when he left the ice, even though he had just been excluded from the match for a fight, constitutes a clear violation of the Olympic spirit and also undermines the values of our sport,” the French Ice Hockey Federation (FFHG) said, via Reuters.

Pierre Crinon of Team France fight with Tom Wilson of Team Canada during the Ice Hockey – Group A match between Team Canada and Team France on day nine of the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on Feb. 15, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Xavier Laine/Getty Images)
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“The decision was therefore taken, in full alignment with the French National Olympic and Sports Committee, not to allow his participation in the next match/matches of the Olympic tournament.”
Fox News’ Ryan Gaydos contributed to this report.
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A big case of playing with the future of students has come to light in Gurugram, the cyber city adjacent to Delhi, some children were deprived of the exam due to not being given admit card by a private school in Gurugram. Now the parents of the children are making rounds of the officials’ offices.
It was told that when the parents of the children reached the District Education Officer’s office complaining about the arbitrariness of the school management, they were left disappointed. District Education Officer Indu Bokan could not be found in his office. Parents told that when they tried to talk to the District Education Officer on phone, their call was also not received.
Actually, the children of a private school located in Sector 9 of Gurugram had their CBSE 10th paper today. But, admit cards of about a dozen children were not given by the school management. According to the parents of the students, the school management has been misleading them since the month of November.
According to the parents, the management informed that the admit card of your children has not been issued by CBSE. The family members of the children also told that when the parents gathered in the school and talked to the school management about this, they were not given proper response.
After this the parents reached DC residence. During this time, people from the school management reached outside the DC residence and tried to resolve the matter by talking to the parents. The parents met the DC of Gurugram late at night. After which he directed the District Education Officer in the night itself to investigate this matter.
The parents blamed the school management and said that the school management had not filled the forms for the children, due to which the admit card could not be received. One year of children was wasted without giving exams. The parent has also raised question marks on the Gurugram district administration. They say that the district administration is not doing any work in this matter.