Epping
asylum hotel protesters ‘upset for legitimate reasons’, minister says
Jonathan
Reynolds says ‘I understand the frustrations people have’, as police brace for
further unrest
Eleni Courea
Political correspondent
Thu 24 Jul
2025 09.54 BST
Protesters
outside a hotel housing asylum seekers in Epping are “upset for legitimate
reasons”, a cabinet minister has said, as police brace for further unrest over
the coming days.
Jonathan
Reynolds, the business and trade secretary, said there was “huge frustration
that is shared by the government” about the asylum system and the pressures it
created on housing.
Police have
issued a dispersal order at Epping after a series of demonstrations outside
Bell hotel, which broke out after an Ethiopian asylum seeker who had recently
arrived on a small boat was charged with sexual assault against a local girl.
Hundreds of
people, many of them local residents, have been participating in the protests.
Far-right activists have become involved in promoting them online and have been
present, in some cases clashing with police. Officers are braced for further
protests on Thursday evening and over the weekend.
Asked
whether he was worried about the unrest spreading, Reynolds told Sky News the
government, police and other enforcement agencies were “prepared for all
situations”.
“I think
what we’ve got to talk about is: why are people unhappy with, say, the asylum
system? Are they reasonable? Are they upset for legitimate reasons? Yes, we
share those as a government,” he said. “That is why we are sorting it out.
“And I
understand the frustrations people have, but ultimately, you solve those
frustrations and solve the problem by fixing and getting a grip of the core
issue, which is what we’re doing.”
Reynolds
said the number of hotels being used to house asylum seekers in the UK had
halved from 400 to about 200.
Speaking to
BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Reynolds said there was “frustration, huge
frustration, that is shared by the government. I think what people felt under
the last government was that it was completely out of control”.
“There is
clearly more to do but that came from an asylum system where there wasn’t a
proper grip of it ... We are starting to change that […] the number of
deportations is up, there are fewer asylum hotels.”
Reynolds
said “the solution is not putting people in different forms of accommodation,
it’s about having a system where if people shouldn’t be in the UK, they have to
leave the UK”.
He added
that voters were unhappy about the way net migration had continued to rise
after Brexit and felt “that was not the deal that they voted for”, saying: “You
can be pro-talent and people coming to the UK and also say there’s got to be
control, there’s got to be limits.”
Tiff Lynch,
the chair of the Police Federation, which represents rank-and-file officers,
warned police could be diverted from neighbourhood duties to keep the peace at
protests if the unrest spread over the summer.
In an
article for the Daily Telegraph, Lynch said the protests in Epping were a
“signal flare” for more and that police officers were being “pulled in every
direction”. “It is dangerous to assume that they can continue to hold the line
indefinitely, without the support they need or the recognition they deserve,”
she wrote.
Essex police
have issued a dispersal order in Epping that is in force from 2pm on Thursday
until 8am on Friday. It gives officers the power to tell anyone suspected of
committing or planning antisocial behaviour to leave the area or face arrest.

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