Afghan families in Yorkshire issued with eviction
letters from Suella Braverman
Refugees, including a special forces soldier and a
political adviser, receive ‘notice to quit’ letters from home secretary
Rajeev Syal
Tue 16 May
2023 06.00 BST
Afghan
refugee families uprooted from London to Yorkshire earlier this year have been
issued with eviction notices in the name of Suella Braverman.
This will
be the fourth time that some of the families have been forced to move home,
sometimes leaving jobs and schools, since being airlifted out of Kabul to the
UK in August 2021. They were invited to the UK under Operation Pitting because
at least one family member worked closely with the British authorities and it
was believed that their lives would be at risk if they remained in Afghanistan.
The letters were delivered after the UK government
announced in March that it would move all 24,500 Afghans out of temporary
bridging accommodation or hotels this year and said they must accept the first
offer of accommodation from the Home Office.
The letters
said: “For the avoidance of doubt, if possession is not delivered upon by the
notice date, you will be a trespasser and the secretary of state for the home
department shall be at liberty to evict you from the property.”
The
families, including a special forces soldier, a translator and a political
adviser, say they have attempted to find homes themselves but have been
thwarted by slow bureaucracy within the Home Office and local councils.
Mohamed,
one of the Afghan residents, said he had found and then lost two available
properties in outer London after problems that the Home Office could not solve.
He said:
“There has been problems for all of us – with either the guarantor, the deposit
or the eligibility of the local authority, or not having a job. This has all
been made worse because we have been moved from London to Yorkshire, leaving
jobs and contacts behind.”
A previous
letter sent to the families implied that the Home Office would find them a
place to live, the residents said.
The letter,
sent last Thursday and seen by the Guardian, says: “When you receive a housing
offer from us, it is strongly advised that you accept so that you can start
your settled life in the UK.”
But on
Saturday, Home Office officials said the hotel residents might not be offered
any alternative accommodation and may have to find their own accommodation
instead.
Asked for a
comment, a Home Office spokesperson said:
“Hotels are
not, and were never designed to be, suitable long-term accommodation for
Afghans resettled in the UK. That is why we have announced a plan, backed by
£285m of new funding, to speed up the resettlement of Afghans into long-term
homes.
“Where
available, the government will continue to make offers of suitable housing,
which we strongly encourage Afghan families to accept. Where an offer cannot be
made or is rejected, increased government support is available to help Afghans
find their own homes and begin rebuilding their lives here.”

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