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Parents are up in arms at a school in Scotland when they discovered that the Company who takes the School classroom photos of the students, sent copies to the parents offering to remove the children who are disabled from the pictures...
Three children at Aboyne Primary School in Scotland were removed from images sent via an internet link, giving parents the option to order a photo without them in it.
Businesswoman mother-of-two Natalie Pinnell, 38, told MailOnline the decision to omit her nine-year-old daughter Erin from her class photo had 'devastated' their family.
She described the decision taken by Cornwall-based Tempest Photography as 'inhumane' and said her child had been 'erased from history'. The company says it is investigating.
Tempest Photography is run by Terence Tempest, 70, who lives in a £3million riverside lodge in Cornwall.
Ms Pinnell said: 'You can't erase them because they're inconvenient. It's just not OK.
'It's devastating to have your child be erased from a photo or give parents a choice whether she should or should not be included.
Another class that had a disabled girl in a wheelchair also had two photos - one with the schoolgirl and one without.
Natalie added: 'I queried it with the school and they queried it with the photographer. He said ''yes, that's what we have done.''
'It's been the most traumatic experience as a family that we have felt.
'I really wanted to believe there was a different reason. I was trying to look for a reason why someone would have made that decision.
'We have mourned. We have hurt. I feel like I haven't even hit the bottom of my shock. It's been absolutely devastating.
'The worst part was when I was talking to a friend about what happened and she found that there were two links for her daughter.'
Natalie said the school, which has a dedicated additional needs hub, had vowed never to use the company again.
Fury as photo firm offers to DELETE disabled children from class photo
Three children at Aboyne Primary School in Scotland were removed from images sent via an internet link, giving parents the option to order a photo without them in it.
Businesswoman mother-of-two Natalie Pinnell, 38, told MailOnline the decision to omit her nine-year-old daughter Erin from her class photo had 'devastated' their family.
She described the decision taken by Cornwall-based Tempest Photography as 'inhumane' and said her child had been 'erased from history'. The company says it is investigating.
Tempest Photography is run by Terence Tempest, 70, who lives in a £3million riverside lodge in Cornwall.
Ms Pinnell said: 'You can't erase them because they're inconvenient. It's just not OK.
'It's devastating to have your child be erased from a photo or give parents a choice whether she should or should not be included.
Another class that had a disabled girl in a wheelchair also had two photos - one with the schoolgirl and one without.
Natalie added: 'I queried it with the school and they queried it with the photographer. He said ''yes, that's what we have done.''
'It's been the most traumatic experience as a family that we have felt.
'I really wanted to believe there was a different reason. I was trying to look for a reason why someone would have made that decision.
'We have mourned. We have hurt. I feel like I haven't even hit the bottom of my shock. It's been absolutely devastating.
'The worst part was when I was talking to a friend about what happened and she found that there were two links for her daughter.'
Natalie said the school, which has a dedicated additional needs hub, had vowed never to use the company again.
Fury as photo firm offers to DELETE disabled children from class photo