The Home Office publicly declined to take action against Farah, with a spokesperson writing that this was "in line with the guidance". Farah said he was relieved by the statement. The spokesperson added that Farah's story "is a shocking reminder of the horrors that people face when they are trafficked. And we must continue to clamp down on these criminals who take advantage of vulnerable people". Meanwhile, the
Metropolitan Police commented that no reports had been made to them, but specialist officers were "assessing the available information" over the trafficking and domestic servitude.
MailOnline later claimed to have contacted the Mo Farah from whom the athlete took his name, and found that he was a 39-year-old university student in
Istanbul who had recently moved to Turkey with the aim of living in the UK. A relative told the website that the man "has struggled for all these years in silence, knowing that someone else was achieving things he could only dream about while using his name". Farah is one of the most high-profile victims of
modern slavery and child trafficking.
Sunder Katwala of
British Future said that his account could lead other trafficked people to seek help, and put pressure on the state to treat trafficked people as victims, not criminals. Figures from
ECPAT International and
Save the Children International said that victims of child trafficking struggle to discuss experiences as they fear they will not be believed and will be deported; recent legislation added time limits for victims to be eligible for support and transferred responsibilities from
social workers to
Border Force officers. Had Farah been a child under 2022 immigration laws,
The Independent reported, he would not have been eligible for
deportation to Rwanda, and would—had he been able to talk about traumatic trafficking experiences—have been eligible for leave to remain for 12 or 30 months. However, he may not have had access to legal advice. In
The Independent, Harriet Williamson argued that Farah's story—and that it he did not previously make it public—should make people reflect on their attitude towards migrants. Williamson noted the UK's "
hostile environment" policy for migrants, the
Nationality and Borders Act 2022 that limits the time a survivor of trafficking has to come forward, and the planned deportation of asylum seekers to Rwanda. Williamson wrote that "no victim should ever be afraid they will be penalised for a crime committed against them" and that "we should show complete and unwavering solidarity with Mo Farah – as well as every other person like him who lacks his fame and status".
The Guardian reported that Farah's experience with the Home Office may have been atypical, as only 2% of child trafficking survivors are given discretionary leave to remain, despite eligibility according to international law. Though some receive temporary visas lasting until adulthood, 35% of adults who were trafficked as unaccompanied children were refused asylum in 2020. ==Critical reception==