Home Office buys tents to house asylum seekers
Report says that up to 2,000 people could be placed in
marquees despite possibility of legal action against plan
Donna
Ferguson
Fri 28 Jul
2023 00.01 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/jul/28/home-office-buys-tents-to-house-asylum-seekers
Tents could
be used to house up to 2,000 migrants on disused military sites next month,
under plans drawn up by the home secretary, Suella Braverman, in an effort to
avoid accommodating asylum seekers in hotels.
The Home
Office bought the marquees in recent days ahead of an expected rise in small
boat crossings in August, despite warnings by some in government that housing
asylum seekers in tents could trigger legal challenges based on inhumane
treatment.
More than
14,000 people have made unauthorised crossings already this year, despite Rishi
Sunak’s vow to “stop the boats”, and the summer is expected to be the busiest
time for crossings. Last year, a record 47,755 people arrived in the UK by
small boats, with 51% of the arrivals taking place in August, September and
October.
Last
autumn, the Home Office erected a number of temporary marquees at the Manston
processing centre, in the grounds of a former army barracks, with Home Office
employees later reporting people slept on mats on the floor in overcrowded
conditions and were shut up without access to fresh air. “None of it had been
set up with decent hygiene facilities, bedding or anything,” an official, who
asked not to be identified, told the Guardian. “I saw people lying on opened-up
cardboard boxes … It was pretty awful to see.”
While these
makeshift tents were not designed to be used for more than a few days, the new
tents bought by Braverman will be erected alongside other “temporary
facilities” such as portable toilets and showers, with heaters “on standby” if
temperatures drop, the Times reported.
A
government source told the newspaper that a similar proposal to use tents was
put forward under Boris Johnson’s government, but was rejected due to fears it
would lead to legal challenges. It was even compared with concentration camps
by some in government, the newspaper was told.
The Home
Office refused to confirm the report but said the government’s position for
some time has been that the use of hotels to accommodate asylum seekers is “not
acceptable” and that the Home Office is working across government departments
to look at “a range of accommodation options” for asylum seekers.
Meanwhile,
it is understood that a small number of positive results for tuberculosis have
been detected among those housed at the former RAF site at Wethersfield in
Braintree, Essex. Tests are under way to see if the cases are active.
Other
asylum seekers at the site have been diagnosed with scabies and there is one
case of scurvy.
The Home
Office told the Times there was no risk to the wider public.
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