Connect with us

Published

on

Asylum seekers who were housed on the Bibby Stockholm barge have claimed the Home Office did not contact them even when some on board showed signs of suspected Legionnaires’ disease.

In an open letter to the Home Office, seen by Sky News, one asylum seeker hit out at their treatment from the department, describing their move on to the barge as a “harsh tragedy”.

The author – who was speaking on behalf of the 39 asylum seekers originally on board – said a sense of “isolation and loneliness” had gripped those who were moved off the vessel following the discovery of Legionella bacteria earlier this month.

PM reacts as energy price cap falls – politics latest

The writer also claimed that one of the asylum seekers had attempted suicide, but added: “We acted promptly and prevented this unfortunate event.”

“Currently, we are staying in an old and abandoned hotel,” the author writes.

“The sense of isolation and loneliness has taken over us, and psychological and emotional pressures have increased significantly.

“We even lack the desire to live and perform any tasks. The absence of tranquillity, comfort and basic needs has become our daily concerns.”

Legionella bacteria, which is commonly found in water, can cause a serious type of lung infection known as Legionnaires’ disease.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Inside the Bibby Stockholm barge

The Home Office previously said that none of those on the barge had showed signs of having the disease and that they were being provided with “appropriate advice and support”.

But in the letter, the author describes the “shock and fear” those on board felt following the Legionella discovery on 11 August.

It later emerged that people spent four days on board the barge after the bacteria was discovered and before they were removed by the Home Office as a “precautionary measure” – prompting a blame game about what the government knew and when.

Dorset Council has said Home Office contractors were notified about the results on Monday 7 August – four days before people were moved off the barge.

The council went on to claim a Home Office staff member was informed about the bacteria on Tuesday 8 August.

However, a government source previously told Sky News there is no record of this conversation, and claimed the Home Office only received a written notification about the Legionella on the evening of Wednesday 9 August.

Speaking to Sky News, Health Secretary Steve Barclay said ministers were informed about traces of the bacteria only on Thursday 10 August.

Asylum seekers ‘displayed symptoms of Legionella disease’

In the asylum seekers’ letter, the author writes: “Some of us displayed symptoms of Legionella disease, but no one responded to us, the Home Office did not contact us, and everyone was in shock and fear.

“In the afternoon of that day, as the last individuals to learn about this problem, we were informed that we would temporarily be moved to a new location, so that the ship’s conditions could be reevaluated. We were compelled to comply with this request.”

Read more:
Bibby Stockholm ‘cramped’ and ‘claustrophobic’
Barge fiasco shows how far PM has to go to deliver on promise – analysis

The government docked the controversial vessel in Portland, Dorset, last month, saying it would be able to house up to 500 male asylum seekers who had crossed the Channel in small boats.

They claimed the new accommodation would help save money for the taxpayer, with hotel rooms for migrants costing up to £6m a day.

But the scheme has faced fierce opposition from human rights campaigners, while opposition parties have dubbed it a gimmick.

The first handful of people were moved on to the barge earlier this month, but within days a Legionella outbreak was detected in the water supply, forcing them off the vessel.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Barge reminds migrant of Islamic State

In the asylum seekers’ letter, the author says they have been “running from persecution, imprisonment and harsh tortures, with hearts full of fears and hope from the countries we were born in, to find safety and freedom in your country and our new refuge”.

They said that despite being advised by certain organisations not to move on to the barge, they decided to follow the directive from the Home Office, “even though we felt that the ship was largely a place for troublemakers and lawbreakers”.

“We are individuals who are tired of the challenges that have arisen and no longer have the strength to face them,” they added.

Government accused of ‘disastrous record’ on asylum claims

The letter comes a day after the Home Office released its latest migration statistics, showing the backlog of asylum claims in the UK had hit a new record high.

The pressure on the system has sent the taxpayer bill for asylum to nearly £4bn a year – a figure Rishi Sunak has said is “unacceptable”.

Meanwhile, Home Office figures showed that Channel crossings have topped 19,000 for the year so far, despite Mr Sunak’s promise to voters that he would “stop the boats” bringing migrants across the English Channel.

Labour said the record-high asylum backlog amounted to a “disastrous record” for Mr Sunak and Home Secretary Suella Braverman, while campaigners called for claims to be processed more efficiently.

But the prime minister defended the government’s progress, saying: “I think the current situation with illegal migration is simply ridiculous. It’s unfair and it’s unsustainable.

“That’s why one of my five priorities is to stop the boats. And I really want people to know I’m working night and day to bring that about.

“And when I became prime minister, before I outlined my plan, the number of illegal migrants coming to the UK had quadrupled in just the last couple of years. But for the first time this year, crossings are down.

“They are down about 15% versus last year. That’s the first time that has happened since the small boats crisis emerged. That shows that the plan is working.”

In response to the asylum seekers’ letter, a Home Office spokesperson said: “We are following all protocol and advice from Dorset Council’s Environmental Health team, UK Health Security Agency and Dorset NHS, who we continue to work closely with.

“Further tests are being conducted and we intend to re-embark asylum seekers only when there is confirmation that the water system meets relevant safety standards. The safety of those onboard remains the priority.”

Sky News has asked the Home Office specifically about the claim it did not contact asylum seekers when some on board showed signs of suspected Legionnaires’ disease, but we have yet to receive a response.

Continue Reading

Politics

SEC and Binance seek 60-day pause in crypto case

Published

on

By

SEC and Binance seek 60-day pause in crypto case

The SEC and Binance filed a joint motion to pause their legal case for 60 days, citing the newly formed SEC Crypto Task Force’s potential impact on regulations.

Continue Reading

Politics

Crypto’s onboarding tipping point – can verification keep up?

Published

on

By

Crypto’s onboarding tipping point – can verification keep up?

Crypto’s rapid growth brings new risks. As fraud escalates, can verification technology keep pace? AI, biometrics and regulatory shifts shape the future of secure crypto onboarding.

Continue Reading

Politics

Keir Starmer has declared war on £100m HS2 bat shed – but has he got a solution?

Published

on

By

Keir Starmer has declared war on £100m HS2 bat shed - but has he got a solution?

Has Sir Keir Starmer picked a fight with a bat tunnel that – in time – he will eventually discover he just can’t win?

For the last six months, the prime minister has singled out the most hated construction site in Britain for criticism – a kilometre-long, £100m shed to protect bats in Buckinghamshire from the high speed trains of the future.

Sir Keir regularly thunders that this is the emblem of a broken planning system. His chancellor says such things will never happen again. But is their joint political sonar advanced enough to avoid a collision in the coming months?

Recent weeks have seen a slew of announcements from Number 10 to prove they are taking on the “blockers” in order to get Britain building.

But government sources conceded to Sky News they are yet to reveal a plan which would stop such structures having to be built again in future.

Sheephouse Wood is home to several different bat species, including the most northerly known colony of the rare Bechstein's bat. Pic: PA
Image:
The rare Bechstein’s bat. Pic: PA

HS2 will continue to build this bat tunnel, due to be complete in 2027, come what may. A compromise plan – that would see developers pay into a single government-controlled pot – has left experts and industry figures unimpressed, saying it would not stop another bat tunnel.

The experts also warn that they struggle to see how the government prevents future absurd and costly structures without repealing nature and habitat laws we inherited from the EU.

More on Hs2

To roll back on these protections would mean not only war with the environmental movement, but also breaching our trade agreement with the EU – all to get Britain building again.

There is no obvious answer, yet ministers on Monday insisted one is still coming soon.

This comes as today Sky News shows the first ever pictures of the HS2 bat tunnel, showing the scale and breath of the ten-figure development through the Buckinghamshire countryside and taken despite our request for permission to go on site by the government-owned company being declined.

The bat tunnel is due to be completed in 2027
Image:
The bat tunnel is due to be completed in 2027

The prime minister says the tunnel is an emblem of a broken planning system
Image:
The prime minister says the tunnel is an emblem of a broken planning system

By scrambling through trees and trudging through muddy public footpaths, we were able access open space close enough to the structure, to film the site in detail with a drone without crossing into HS2 land – and it makes quite the spectacle.

Three miles north west of Aylesbury, cutting through the countryside like a scar and wedged between two industrial waste incinerators, we show from the sky the roofless skeleton of the kilometre-long shed which will insulate railway tracks being built in Buckinghamshire – and protect the bats.

The aim is to stop a rare breed known as the Bechstein, which lives in an ancient woodland adjacent to the route, from hitting future high speed trains when they run from London to Birmingham.

The entire structure exists so that HS2 can comply with “The Conservation of Habitats and Species Regulations 2017” – a set of regulations which protects rare species, derives from the EU Habitats Directive and remains in force in the UK to this day despite Brexit.

Although often wrongly summarised as meaning “no bat death is acceptable”, regulator Natural England did advise HS2 that to comply with this law, the company would need to maintain the “favourable conservation status” for the 300 bats once construction was complete. No easy feat.

HS2 executives mulled digging a tunnel, noise-based deterrents and rerouting the line, which would slow down the High Speed trains and prove too expensive. They also looked at barriers alongside the railway or a looser netting structure over the railway – but none of these would have been guaranteed to deliver the standard of protection required by law.

But their engineers and consultants advised the cheapest, legally safest route was the shed being built today. And after four years of meetings with the local council, construction began and continues to this day.

Undated handout artist's impression image issued by HS2 of the Sheephouse Wood bat protection structure which will run for around one kilometre (0.6 miles) alongside the wood, creating a barrier allowing bats to cross above the high-speed HS2 railway without being affected by passing trains. Issue date: Thursday November 7, 2024.
Image:
Undated handout artist’s impression issued by HS2 of the Sheephouse Wood bat protection structure. Pic: PA

The government’s growth mission champion, Dan Tomlinson MP, who visited the bat tunnel site with Sky News, said reform is vital.

“We need to find a way to reduce the cost of infrastructure in this country. Yes, protecting our wildlife too. But if we don’t do that, we won’t be able to build and we won’t be able to make this country grow again, which is something that’s been lacking for so long,” he told me.

But can they stop this in future? The government insists the answers will come in as-yet-unpublished future planning legislation and yesterday government doubled down on its ambition.

“Spending vast sums to build a ‘bat tunnel’ is ludicrous,” said a spokesman.

“For too long, regulations have held up the building of homes and infrastructure, blocking economic growth and doing little for nature. That is why we are introducing new planning reforms and a nature restoration fund to unblock the building of homes and infrastructure and improve outcomes for our natural world. This will deliver a win-win for the economy and nature.”

But a nature restoration fund may not provide all the answers, according to experts.

Under this plan, the government is proposing that developers who potentially fall foul of habitat and nature rules give money to a pot to fund delivery of wider strategic projects that help nature, rather than trying to compensate for each potential breach of the habitat regulations.

Undated handout artist's impression image issued by HS2 of the Sheephouse Wood bat protection structure which will run for around one kilometre (0.6 miles) alongside the wood, creating a barrier allowing bats to cross above the high-speed HS2 railway without being affected by passing trains. Issue date: Thursday November 7, 2024.

Lawyers think that the idea of a fund makes sense for groups of projects affecting exactly the same species and habitat, but the majority of problems arise where a single project creates its own issues – as is the case of HS2 and the bat tunnel.

“The concept of pooling funds for a grand compensation project which ticks the habitats regulations box for a number of projects onshore therefore seems challenging,” wrote Catherine Howard from law firm Herbert Smith Freehills.

“It is certainly going to take a lot of time, effort and cost for the government or regulators to think through what sort of onshore strategic compensation might need to be put in place, and then to deliver it.

“Can decisions be made in the meantime reliant on the promise that such compensation will come forward?”.

But if there isn’t a compromise option which appeals to ministers, repealing or downgrading habitat and nature rules is the only option.

This, however, would be likely to put the UK in breach of a number of international treaties, including the Trade and Cooperation Agreement entered into by the UK and the European Union in April 2021 to govern post Brexit relations and maintain a “level playing field”.

Pro-growth pressure group Britain Remade says while promises of stopping future bat tunnels should be applauded, “there is a real risk is that if their planning bill doesn’t include changes to inherited EU law on protected sites and species, we’re stuck with the worst of both worlds: a status quo that stops us building and also fails to protect the countryside”.

Read more:
Government doesn’t know how much HS2 will cost or when it will be running

MPs set for above inflation pay rise to nearly £94,000

But attempts to change those laws would cross a red line for environmental campaigners. The RSPB, which has 1.2 million members, is already sounding the alarm over the rhetoric from Sir Keir and Rachel Reeves.

Chief executive Beccy Speight told me while some parts of government are taking a “constructive” approach, her organisation would fight any attempt to water down the nature laws.

“I’m am absolutely clear that we can’t go backwards in terms of the protections we already have in place for nature, because nature is on its knees and we need to do something about that,” she told Sky News.

Sir Keir has made ending ludicrous bat tunnels the test of his planning reforms time after time. This could prove a much trickier issue than anyone anticipated.

Continue Reading

Trending