Connect with us

Published

on

Hassan came to the UK on a boat across the English Channel. Now he is sleeping rough on a Liverpool housing estate.

“Where should I go? What should I do?” he asks me, as he clears out his rain-soaked tent, which he’s pitched under some trees near to a row of semi-detached houses.

A sleeping bag he’s had since he left Calais, the last stop until Britain for more than 30,000 migrants this year, is ringing wet.

“This country is no good for asylum,” he says trying to pack his things into plastic bags.

“When you have a problem, you wait a long time for nothing.”

Hassan fled Iraq last year and travelled through Europe to reach Britain.

But his hopes of a new life have long faded.

More on Homelessness

“I have no money. No anything,” he says.

Nick Martin speaking to Hassan, who has had his asylum application denied and is living in a tent
Image:
Nick Martin speaking to Hassan, who has had his asylum application denied

His asylum application was rejected on a technicality, but he is able to reapply. With no phone and no address however, it seems impossible.

A local resident spots us filming and walks quickly towards us, and we witness first hand why immigration is set to become a key issue in the next general election.

“This isn’t happening,” the resident says pointing at the tent angrily.

“We don’t want this around here. You’ve got all the neighbours worried. Imagine this is your house and your kids are playing in the garden, and you’ve got him camping here.

“You better get it moved tonight,” he shouts.

His anger is understandable. Hassan doesn’t want to be here.

But as the government has openly admitted, the asylum system in Britain is broken. This depressing scene on a housing estate brings that into clear focus.

We’ve come to Liverpool because the council here is pleading for the government to step in and help.

Read more:
Huge rise in refugees sleeping rough after Home Office cuts notice period

Selma, a refugee who’s come here from Sudan on a family reunion visa and is now homeless
Image:
Selma, a refugee who’s come here from Sudan on a family reunion visa and is now homeless

Liverpool City Council says it is dealing with an “unprecedented homelessness problem” and says a big part of that is a sudden influx of asylum seekers.

They blame the government’s move to accelerate the processing of asylum claims to clear the backlog by the end of the year.

When people are given refugee status, they are no longer eligible for asylum seeker accommodation – but there is nowhere to go.

Around £6m a year has been spent housing asylum seekers in hotels and hostels while claims are processed.

And earlier this month, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said the government had reduced the backlog from 92,000 to 20,000.

Now cities like Liverpool say that has put them under “enormous pressure” as requests for housing are on the rise at a time when housing stock is already at a premium.

The city council told Sky News that it currently spends around £11m per year on asylum seekers and refugees in the region.

Nationally, there are 1.2 million people waiting for social housing, according to the charity Shelter.

Ewan Roberts, from Asylum Link, an organisation set up to offer help and advice to asylum seekers, says clearing the backlog has had negative knock-on effects.

Asylum Link Merseyside's centre manager Ewan Roberts
Image:
Asylum Link Merseyside’s centre manager Ewan Roberts

“People are coming through the system so quickly now with leave to remain. They’re recognised as refugees, but there’s no accommodation for them.

“The government has pushed the burden on to somebody else.

“Whether that’s the voluntary sector or local authorities or other statutory homelessness services.

“They might have solved one problem, but they’ve created another.”

Read more:
Glasgow City council declares ‘housing emergency’ due to homelessness

Asylum Link Merseyside's centre manager Ewan Roberts
Alfadal trying to keep warm in the station
Image:
Alfadal, 31, who is homeless and sleeps with his wife at a train station

Alfadal, 31, has lived in the UK for four years. His 21-year-old wife Selma has recently been allowed to join him here under a family reunion visa.

But they are homeless because he claims the council say they are not a priority.

“I went to the train station. I sleep there,” he said.

“I don’t have any place to take my wife. I’m afraid for her.”

Alfadal and his wife sheltering at the station
Where Alfadal and his wife have been trying to shelter in the station

Government and Labour wrestle with asylum

Immigration is shaping up to be one of the key issues ahead of the general election and the government’s handling of the issue will be seen as critical.

Labour is facing the dilemma of being seen as tough enough by former red wall seats but also compassionate by the other wing of its supporters.

So far, Sir Keir Starmer has committed to lowering migration but has not given any specific target.

It has been a turbulent few weeks for the Conservative Party. The Supreme Court ruling that plans to send migrants to Rwanda were illegal was a major setback.

But in response, the prime minister published emergency legislation that would declare Rwanda a safe country for asylum seekers and push through their controversial deportation policy.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak appearing before the Liaison Committee at the House of Commons, London. Picture date: Tuesday December 19, 2023.
Image:
Rishi Sunak has faced a row within the Tories over his Rwanda bill, with some calling for it to override the ECHR

A government spokesperson said: “We have always met our legal obligations by providing support and accommodation for asylum seekers who would otherwise be destitute.

“As the legacy backlog reduces, we continue to work with local authorities to manage the impact of asylum decisions and support is available on moving on from asylum support accommodation through Migrant Help and their partners.”

“Through our Rough Sleeping Strategy, we will continue to work not just to reduce rough sleeping but to end it completely. Some £2bn have been provided to councils to tackle homelessness and rough sleeping.”

Read more from Sky News:
Sunak says there is no ‘firm date’ to ‘stop the boats’

61 people found dead in ‘shipwreck’ off Libyan coast

A group of refugees and asylum seekers waiting to get housing advice at the charity Asylum Link Merseyside in Liverpool
Image:
A group of refugees and asylum seekers waiting to get housing advice at Asylum Link Merseyside, Liverpool

A Liverpool City Council spokesperson said: “Liverpool, like many local authorities, has been placed under immense pressure by the government’s decision to shift the burden from central to local government without proper planning and consultation.

“As a result we have written to the government to ask for additional help and support as well as co-operation to phase the decisions to enable us to find sustainable solutions.

“We are committed to protecting the most vulnerable in our communities and have increased capacity in our frontline services to address these issues.

“Our current spend on asylum seekers and refugees is in the region of £11m per year.”

Continue Reading

UK

Bournemouth: The seaside town ‘changed’ by immigration – where non-British-born population rose nearly 50%

Published

on

By

Bournemouth: The seaside town 'changed' by immigration - where non-British-born population rose nearly 50%

The British seaside town of Bournemouth has a complex relationship with migration. It needs migrants to work in the tourist industry, which is vital for the economy.

Some residents say it’s always been a multicultural place, but others question if too many people coming here undermines the cultural identity of the town.

On Bournemouth seafront, we find that immigration is something that some white British people want to talk about – but not openly, and not on camera.

One woman, who knows the town well, said: “Bournemouth has changed because of the migration of people who have come here. The whole atmosphere of the place has changed.

One woman, who would only speak anonymously, said the 'atmosphere of the town has changed'
Image:
One woman, who would only speak anonymously, said the ‘atmosphere of the town has changed’

“It’s strange to hear foreign languages spoken so frequently in our country. To not understand anything that’s being said around you is disconcerting,” she added.

I asked her if it made her uncomfortable, and if so, why? Is it the scale of migration which is bothering her?

“Visually, that seems to be the case,” she says. “We see what we see. I don’t see many white British people.”

I’m trying to get to the heart of what’s troubling her.

“It’s hard to define. I remember how it was. I remember the community. I’m worrying that our society as Brits is being undermined by the people who are coming in,” she says.

For decades, Britain has wrestled with the thorny issue of migration – who should be allowed into the country and from where.

The change in the demographic of the town is clear. Between the 2011 and 2021 censuses, the non-British-born population in Bournemouth’s local authority went up by 47%, and UK net migration has continued to rise significantly since then.

Read more:
Councils threaten revolt over asylum hotels

Bournemouth is a popular tourist destination
Image:
Bournemouth is a popular tourist destination

The town attracts tourists because of its long sandy beach
Image:
The town attracts tourists because of its long sandy beach

Post-Brexit changes

Nine years ago – just before Brexit – we visited Bournemouth’s Cumberland Hotel. Back then, the staff were mostly EU citizens – many from Eastern Europe.

Returning to the hotel, we speak to the manager, Sean Nell.

He said: “A lot of our workforce were EU nationals and after Brexit, a lot of them left – they found other work other than hospitality.

“A lot of our workforce we’re seeing now that we can recruit from is probably South Asia.”

Sean Nell, hotel manager in Bournemouth
Image:
Sean Nell, hotel manager in Bournemouth

One of the staff is barman Shardul Tomas, who came to the UK from India in 2022 on a student visa. Whilst studying for his master’s degree, he began working at the hotel.

“It’s good to come here and experience new culture and do what we wish to do in our fields….after Brexit, the Europeans were less, so we were able to get good jobs,” he said.

Shardul Tomas moved to the UK three years ago
Image:
Shardul Tomas moved to the UK three years ago

‘We are replaced’

Nine years ago, Margaret Kubik was the assistant restaurant manager at the Cumberland.

We tracked her down and discovered she’s now working as a self-employed driving instructor.

She said: “When we met nine years ago, we as the Polish people were very much accused of taking the jobs from English people. Now we are replaced by the South Asian people.”

Margaret Kubik came to the UK in 2004 from Poland she now works as a driving instructor
Image:
Margaret Kubik came to the UK in 2004 from Poland she now works as a driving instructor

‘It’s not England any more’

For some Bournemouth residents, hotels housing asylum seekers have almost become the focal point for wider concerns about migration – as is happening in other towns across the UK.

Visiting a protest outside an asylum hotel, we found people are less camera shy than the woman on the seafront – seemingly more comfortable talking about migration among a crowd of like-minded people.

The Britannia Hotel in Bournemouth is one site which has housed asylum seekers
Image:
The Britannia Hotel in Bournemouth is one site which has housed asylum seekers

In reference to asylum seekers, one protester, shaking her head, told us: “We don’t know who these people are. Who are they? It makes you feel like it’s not England any more.”

For a couple of hours, two angry groups face off over their differing views on immigration. But not everyone shares concerns about the impact of migration on the town.

Kevin Maidment was born in Bournemouth. I asked if he feels the fabric of the town has changed.

Kevin Maidment
Image:
Kevin Maidment

Protesters ‘need somebody to hate’

He said: “No, because it’s always been a place where foreign language students visit.

“I think this lot down the road, they need somebody to hate… now it’s refugees, 10 years ago it was the Poles and the Eastern Europeans,” he said.

Watching the two groups with opposing views trying to drown each other out is a man called Colin. He lives in a flat between two asylum hotels, a few minutes walk apart.

Colin lives in a flat between two asylum hotels
Image:
Colin lives in a flat between two asylum hotels

“Personally, the immigrants aren’t a problem on the street or anything like that at all,” Colin says, referring to those seeking asylum.

“But people are fed up with the cost. The cost is a big problem because it’s so high.”

But with more councils vowing to launch legal challenges over the government’s use of asylum hotels, the immigration protest movement shows no sign of fizzling out.

Continue Reading

UK

Two Labour-run councils ‘considering all options’ to challenge migrant hotel use

Published

on

By

Two Labour-run councils 'considering all options' to challenge migrant hotel use

Two Labour-run councils have said they are considering taking legal action to stop the use of hotels to house migrants in their areas after Epping council won a temporary injunction on Tuesday.

The leaders of Wirral and Tamworth councils both say they are considering their legal options in the wake of the Epping case, citing similar concerns about the impact of the hotels on their local communities.

Epping Forest District Council won an interim High Court injunction to stop migrants from being accommodated at The Bell Hotel, after arguing its owners did not have planning permission to use it to house migrants.

Politics latest: Judge in Epping hotel case was Tory candidate four times

In a statement, Paula Basnett, the Labour leader of Wirral council, said: “Like many other local authorities, we have concerns about the Home Office’s practice of placing asylum seekers in hotels without consultation or regard to local planning requirements.

“We are actively considering all options available to us to ensure that any use of hotels or other premises in Wirral is lawful and does not ride roughshod over planning regulations or the wishes of our communities.

Police officers ahead of a demonstration outside The Bell Hotel. Pic: PA
Image:
Police officers ahead of a demonstration outside The Bell Hotel. Pic: PA

“Wirral has always been proud of its record in supporting families and those fleeing conflict, but it is unacceptable for the government to impose unsuitable, short-term arrangements that disrupt communities and bypass local decision-making.

“If necessary, we will not hesitate to challenge such decisions in order to protect both residents and those seeking refuge.”

Carol Dean, the Labour leader of Tamworth Borough Council, said she understands the “strong feelings” of residents about the use of a local hotel to house asylum seekers, and that the council is “listening to their concerns and taking them seriously”.

She pointed out that under the national Labour government, the use of hotels has halved from 402 to 210, with the aim of stopping the use of any hotels by the end of this parliament.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Migrant hotels a ‘failure of policy’

But she continued: “Following the temporary High Court injunction granted to Epping Forest District Council, we are closely monitoring developments and reviewing our legal position in light of this significant ruling.”

Cllr Dean added that they had previously explored their legal options to challenge the use of the hotel but decided against them, as temporary injunctions were not being upheld.

However, the Epping ruling “represents a potentially important legal precedent”, which is why they are “carefully assessing” its significance for Tamworth.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Minister ‘gets asylum frustration’

“We fully recognise the UK government has a statutory duty to accommodate people seeking asylum. However, we have consistently maintained that the prolonged use of hotel accommodation may not represent the best approach – either for our local community or for the asylum seekers themselves,” she said.

“We will continue to work constructively with government departments and all relevant agencies while making sure the voice of our community is heard at the highest levels of government.”

Last night, Conservative-run Broxbourne Council also announced it was exploring its legal options, and the Reform UK leader of Kent County said she was writing to fellow leaders in Kent to explore whether they could potentially take legal action as well.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Asylum hotels: ‘People have had enough’

Use of Epping hotel ‘sidestepped public scrutiny’

The prime minister and the home secretary are under huge pressure to clear the asylum backlog and stop using hotels across the country to house those waiting for their applications to be processed.

Protests have sprung up at migrant hotels across the country. But The Bell Hotel in Epping became a focal point in recent weeks after an asylum seeker housed there was charged with sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl.

Epping Forest District Council sought an interim High Court injunction to stop migrants from being accommodated at the hotel, owned by Somani Hotels Limited, on the basis that using it for that purpose contravened local planning regulations.

The Bell Hotel in Epping. Pic: PA
Image:
The Bell Hotel in Epping. Pic: PA

The interim injunction demanded that the hotel be cleared of its occupants within 14 days, but in his ruling on Tuesday, Mr Justice Eyre granted the temporary block, while extending the time limit by which it must stop housing asylum seekers to 12 September.

Somani Hotels said it intended to appeal the decision, its barrister, Piers Riley-Smith, arguing it would set a precedent that could affect “the wider strategy” of housing asylum seekers in hotels.

A government attempt to delay the application was rejected by the High Court judge earlier on Tuesday, Home Office barristers arguing the case had a “substantial impact” on the Home Secretary, Yvette Cooper, in performing her legal duties to asylum seekers.

But Mr Justice Eyre dismissed the Home Office’s bid, stating that the department’s involvement was “not necessary”.

Read more:
Asylum seekers face being removed from Epping hotel
Labour smell dirty tricks over asylum hotel court ruling
UK drops Apple encryption demands, says US spy chief

The judge said the hotel’s owners “sidestepped the public scrutiny and explanation which would otherwise have taken place if an application for planning permission or for a certificate of lawful use had been made”.

He added: “It was also deliberately taking the chance that its understanding of the legal position was incorrect. This is a factor of particular weight in the circumstances of this case.”

Reacting to Tuesday’s judgment, border security minister Dame Angela Eagle said the government will “continue working with local authorities and communities to address legitimate concerns”.

She added: “Our work continues to close all asylum hotels by the end of this parliament.”

Continue Reading

UK

Did Robert Jenrick really ‘boast’ about opening hotels for asylum seekers?

Published

on

By

Did Robert Jenrick really 'boast' about opening hotels for asylum seekers?

A row has broken out between the Tories and Reform about previous comments on migrant hotels, so who said what and when?

At the centre of the argument is an interview Robert Jenrick did with Sky News back in November 2022, one week after he was appointed immigration minister in Rishi Sunak’s government.

His appearance came amid a crisis at an asylum seeker processing centre in Kent, which had become severely overcrowded – with migrants sleeping on the floor and families being housed in marquees.

Politics latest: Councils plan legal challenges to migrant hotels

The home secretary at the time, Suella Braverman, had also been accused of allowing the situation to develop by failing to procure sufficient alternative accommodation – such as hotels – for migrants to be taken to.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Full clip: Jenrick on hotels in 2022

Asked about this by Sky News in 2022, Robert Jenrick said: “More hotels have been coming online almost every month throughout the whole of this year.

“So, Suella Braverman and her predecessor, Priti Patel, were procuring more hotels. What I have done in my short tenure is ramp that up and procure even more because November, historically, has been one of the highest months of the year for migrants illegally crossing the Channel.”

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Council wins asylum hotel case

Fast-forward almost three years, and this clip has been seized on by Reform UK as evidence that Mr Jenrick “boasted” about how many migrant hotels he had opened.

That’s a potentially damaging accusation, given the now shadow justice secretary recently joined protests outside a migrant hotel in Essex.

Mr Jenrick responded by accusing Reform of posting a “selectively clipped” video that didn’t include the context about the Kent processing centre.

To an extent, he has a point.

Nigel Farage's party has posted clips of Mr Jenrick speaking from 2022
Pic: PA
Image:
Nigel Farage’s party has posted clips of Mr Jenrick speaking from 2022
Pic: PA

At the time, the government was fighting accusations that they were risking an expensive court action from migrants claiming they were being detained unlawfully.

The minister’s response was to point out that they were sourcing alternative options to make sure this didn’t happen and to prevent order breaking down in Kent.

Mr Jenrick has also pointed to other comments he made at the time saying, “it is essential we exit the hotels altogether” and describing the expensive hotel bill as “disgraceful”.

But that’s not to say Robert Jenrick hasn’t undergone quite a pronounced shift in both language and substance when it comes to migration.

Mr Jenrick has accused Zia Yusuf of "pushing false and petty crap"
Pic: PA
Image:
Mr Jenrick has accused Zia Yusuf of “pushing false and petty crap”
Pic: PA

For instance, in the same Sky News interview in 2022, he said: “I would never demonise people coming to this country in pursuit of a better life. And I understand and appreciate our obligation to refugees.”

At the time, this wasn’t a surprising view from a minister commonly considered to be in the centre of the Tory party.

But Mr Jenrick’s time as immigration minister saw him move further to the right.

As he has since said himself: “I could see the breakdown of the British state was doing immense damage. It angered me, and it motivated me to do absolutely everything to fix the problem.”

The following months saw Mr Jenrick significantly harden his position, to the point that he resigned over the government’s approach.

But the bigger contradiction Reform is trying to get at by picking this fight is around the Tory record.

It is a fact that the use of hotels to house asylum seekers peaked at just over 55,000 while the Conservatives were in power.

Similarly, it’s a fact that legal migration reached record levels on the Tories watch.

Mr Jenrick can fairly claim that – in the final year of his front-bench career – he did go further than most to try to change this.

But he can’t change the data from the time.

Reform knows that – just as it also knows the Tory record on migration is one of the big pull factors bringing their voters over to them.

Read more from Sky News:
US-mexico border wall to be painted black, US says
BBC should be ‘put beyond reach of politicians’

Continue Reading

Trending