Protesters gather outside Altrincham hotel over arrival of 300 asylum seekers

https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/greater-manchester-news/protesters-gather-outside-altrincham-hotel-30387213?utm_source=reddit&utm_medium=post&utm_campaign=reddit

Posted by No_Rule5565

8 comments
  1. Why is the UK doing this to themselves? It’s so mind boggling to watch in real time?

  2. So unkind some people may be fake but there’s definitely going to be some that have been through hell.

    Peter 4:8-9:

    Above all, love each other deeply, because love covers over a multitude of sins. Offer hospitality to one another without grumbling.

  3. Imagine coming from a war zone and seeing these people with their pitchforks outside…

    Also, re the “house our homeless first” sign… I wonder what these people do to help homeless people?

  4. Several policy decisions are key to understanding how we arrived here.

    First, let’s go back to 1999. Before then, local authorities were responsible for housing asylum seekers in local communities. A dense population settled in London and southeast England and, to relieve pressure on these areas, a “dispersal policy” was introduced by the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999.

    That decision effectively took the choice of where they would live away from asylum seekers.

    Jonathan Darling, Urban and Political Geographer at Durham University, studied this policy and found its early years were marked by “racist attacks, resentment over pressure on services and housing, and concerns about the capacity of local authorities to meet needs of vulnerable individuals and families.”

    Next, we need to look to 2010. A new Conservative party government, led by Prime Minister David Cameron, came to power. Theresa May, a future prime minister, was appointed home secretary and in 2012 made an infamous statement. Her goal, she told the Daily Telegraph newspaper, “was to create here in Britain a really hostile environment for illegal migration”.

    It worked, impacting everything from policy to public opinion. And, in March of that year, the provision of asylum seeker accommodation was privatised.

    three contractors – large security companies Serco, G4S, and Clearel – would be responsible for liaising with participating local authorities about suitable housing options, but only the local authorities who signed up to be involved.

    Donna Covey of the Refugee Council immediately warned that the impact could be devastating.

    “We have consistently raised concerns in the past about the poor standard of accommodation provided for many asylum seekers, and the situation has the potential to deteriorate further with very large super-regional contracts,” she said.

    Since then, successive parliamentary reports have highlighted recurring problems posed by the contracting out of asylum accommodation.

    The first major study of the system since privatisation, carried out in 2016 by the University of Manchester, said the system was geared toward making profits rather than the well-being of those it accommodates.

    It resulted in an “increasingly fragmented” system, less support provisions for asylum seekers, gaps in addressing complaints, and a shortage of long-term planning and community integration.

    Sub-standard accommodation became the norm, the report said, as asylum seekers were housed in the poorest parts of the UK, in the poorest quality houses, because cheaper housing meant more profit for the contractors.

    Yet, in 2019 ten-year contracts worth £4bln were entered into by the government, giving the firms Clearsprings, Mears, and Serco responsibility for asylum accommodation. Promises of change were made but left unfulfilled.

    Housing conditions for asylum seekers remain abysmal.

    As a housing crisis in the UK grows worse, the big three contractors have decided to address the problem by putting asylum seekers in hotels for months on end.

    Hotel accommodation is a danger to mental health, and ignores personal safety (particularly of women), cultural preferences and practical needs.

    And, as things have deteriorated for those in need of help, Clearsprings, Cerco, and Mears continue to rake in massive profits. Serco reported £180m in profits in 2019. Mears said it cleared a £4.8m profit before tax in the second half of 2020. And Clearsprings’ operating profit went from £796,304 in January 2020 to £4.4m in January 2021.

    While the contractors are to blame for inhumane living conditions, it is the government that is ultimately responsible for allowing the private sector to profit while asylum seekers suffer.

    When we start treating asylum seekers as human beings, not as a business to make money from, change will happen. Until then, the status quo will continue, with some of the most traumatised people in our communities, traumatised even further through poor housing.

  5. ECHR still govern us and they say uk has to accept so many then they get distributed throughout local councils they have a duty to house a certain amount or there budgets get cut

  6. Are these dangerous extreme far right terrorists in prison now? Or do they need to choose a few rapists to release in order to make room first?

  7. You all know that to apply for asylum in the uk, you have to get into the uk first?

Comments are closed.