Epping wins huge battle as Bell Hotel ordered to stop housing migrants after protests | Politics | News


The Home Office’s asylum accommodation plans have been thrown into disarray after a council won a legal battle to close a migrant hotel.

Epping Forest District Council has been granted a temporary High Court injunction blocking asylum seekers from being housed at the Bell Hotel in Epping, Essex.

This means dozens of migrants will now be evicted within 24 days.

The judgment could open the floodgates for similar applications around the country to clear asylum seekers out of hotels.

Lawyers for the Home Office warned an injunction could lead to โ€œsimilar applications made elsewhere that would then aggravate pressures on the asylum estateโ€.

Injunction applications could become โ€œnew norm adopted by local authoritiesโ€, lawyers for the Home Office argued.

Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said:โ€œThis ruling is a moment of relief for the people of Epping. Residents should never have had to fight their own government just to feel safe in their own town.

โ€œLocal residents have every right to feel safe in their own streets and every right to object when their community is treated as a dumping ground.

โ€œThis whole episode is the direct result of Labourโ€™s decision to throw open Britainโ€™s borders and tear up the deterrents the Conservatives put in place. The Conservatives will remove all illegal arrivals immediately and put a proper deterrent in place so that towns like Epping are never put in this position again.โ€

Two asylum seekers living at the hotel have been charged with sexual assault.

Mohammed Sharwarq, 32 is accused of kissing a man on the neck on July 25.

The protests, which have sparked demonstration at other hotels across the country, started after an Ethiopian asylum seeker living at The Bell was charged with sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl by trying to kiss her days after arriving in the UK in a small boat on June 29.

Hadush Kebatu has been charged with three counts of sexual assault, one count of inciting a girl to engage in sexual activity, and one count of harassment without violence. He was remanded in custody by Chelmsford magistrates in July after he denied all the charges, and is due to stand trial at the same court on Aug 26 and 27.

Ministers have set aside ยฃ500m to invest in a โ€œnew, more sustainable accommodation modelโ€ as they scramble to close 210 migrant hotels.

Some 32,345 asylum seekers are living in hotels, while 66,683 are living in โ€œdispersal accommodationโ€ – houses, flats and bedsits – across the country.

Lord David Hanson, a Home Office minister, revealed ministers have set aside ยฃ500 million to move migrants out of hotels and into communities across the UK. They insist this will be โ€œdeveloped in consultation with local authoritiesโ€.

This โ€œbasicโ€ accommodation, under the new cross-Government model, will be โ€œused on a temporary basisโ€ to house asylum seekers waiting for their cases to be processed.

Under one proposal, the Government could pay councils to buy or renovate properties.

Former student accommodation, abandoned care homes, empty tower blocks and converted houses and flats could also be used to house asylum seekers.

Labour wants to close every migrant hotel within four years โ€“ but the number being used has increased since the General Election.

A report by The Migration Observatory found 84% of local authorities now have asylum accommodation.

By contrast, just one in hour hosted asylum seekers in 2014, highlighting the pressure many communities are now under.

Researchers claimed it costs taxpayers ยฃ170 a night for migrants to stay in hotel rooms, down from ยฃ176 in 2023/24.

ย 

Leave comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked with *.