'People
are angry': Behind the wave of asylum hotel protests
Published
9 August
2025
Updated 9
August 2025
Tom
Symonds
Correspondent,
BBC News
"We
are not happy with these men in this hotel because we fear for our
children," Orla Minihane tells me. "If that makes me far-right then
so be it."
Orla has
lived near Epping since she was a child and describes herself as a "very
boring woman who has worked in the City of London for 25 years". Last year
she joined Reform UK and hopes to stand as a local candidate for the party.
On a busy
road leading to the Essex town, The Bell Hotel, now fortified, is one of more
than 200 across the country where the government houses asylum seekers.
In the
last month a series of protests, sometimes totalling several hundred people
from both sides - and on one occasion up to 2,000 according to Essex Police -
have taken place over the use of hotels for asylum seekers. About 20 more were
planned for Friday and Saturday this week.
The
latest round of demonstrations began at the 80-room Bell in July, after a man
living in the hotel was arrested, and subsequently charged, with sexual
assault, harassment and inciting a girl to engage in sexual activity. Hadush
Kebatu, 41, from Ethiopia, has denied the offences and is in custody.
The case
has sparked a wider conversation about the effect of housing asylum seekers in
hotels in communities across Britain.
"Before
there were women and children in the hotel - there was a little bit of crime,
most people got on with it," Orla says. "But now it's the fact that
it's all men. It's not a balanced culture."
Orla
Minihane is involved in the asylum hotel protests in Epping
The
protests have been promoted on social media under red, white and blue banner
text with slogans such as "Protect Our Community", "Safety of
Women and Children Before Foreigners" and "All Patriots
Welcome".
We have
identified far-right activists at some of the protests and activists who oppose
them are watching what is happening closely.
The
activist group Stand Up To Racism sees this as far-right organisations
"stirring up racist violence" and trying to repeat the violence that
flared after the murders of three young girls in Southport.
However,
the protests are often organised by people with little experience of street
campaigning, including mothers with families and professional careers, like
Orla. That they are getting involved suggests that in some communities, with
hotels close by, there is a shift in the public mood about Britain's asylum
hotels.
Outside
The Bell, which is surrounded by steel fencing and guarded by a 24/7 security
team, one of its residents, Wael, from Libya, is a year into his asylum claim
and waiting for his fourth Home Office interview.
Wael, a
man with curly hair, is wearing a navy blue jumper. He stands in front of fences outside the Bell
hotel in Epping which has temporary metal fences outside.
"I
spoke with one of the protesters," Wael says. "Everything's good.
Epping is nice. We can sit and stay. People respect us.
"I
want to learn English and work. In a car wash or something. I will not stay
here and take food. I have a dream - to make money and play football and have
fun with my time. It's a small dream."
Wael is
happy to talk, give his name and have his picture taken. But two other young
Iraqi Kurds who are staying at The Bell, and allowed to freely come and go, are
more cautious and less positive.
They tell
me a gang of youths in masks and on motorbikes, has just shouted expletives at
them. Shortly afterwards I catch sight of the bikers nearby.
One of
the asylum seekers says that living in a hotel room 24 hours a day is messing
with his mind. When I ask about their dealings with the Home Office they hurry
inside The Bell.
Shortly
afterwards a passing driver yells, "Burn it down".
Last
summer in the wake of the Southport murders, that is what some protesters tried
to do at other hotels.
This
summer, there have been isolated clashes, when activists on each side of the
argument, anti-fascists and hard-right, have faced each other, or the police.
Often the
migrants have watched from the sidelines, penned up behind the fencing, or
filming from upstairs windows.
The
police have largely kept control, sometimes facing criticism for their methods,
including the false claim that Essex Police used buses to transport pro-migrant
activists to a protest in Epping. For now, arrest numbers are way below those
in 2024.
I ask
Orla, who made an impassioned speech at a recent protest, why she is so
aggrieved by the asylum hotel.
She says
friends have described their daughters being "grabbed" by young,
non-white men in the area. She has seen shoplifting, she says, in the local
Marks & Spencer.
"Everyone
knows they are asylum seekers," Orla says, "Epping is very
white."
She adds
of the hotel's occupants: "You know they are coming for freebies and when
they come here they abuse the privilege. It's ridiculous."
Asylum
seekers would say they are seeking protection by coming to the UK, although
some are ultimately judged not to be eligible for asylum status.
Last
month Stand Up To Racism claimed Orla had shared a stage with an alleged member
of a neo-Nazi group at a hotel protest. She told BBC News she had "no
idea" who he was, and he says he has since left the group.
Asylum
seekers are not normally allowed to work in the UK. Successive governments have
judged that paying for their accommodation and food is preferable to allowing
them to compete with British workers in the jobs market, offering an incentive
to come here.
In June,
the government warned some asylum seekers may be illicitly working as food
delivery drivers.
Sixteen
miles south of Epping, residents in Canary Wharf, east London, live in gleaming
glass towers and traditional East End houses alongside another asylum hotel. It
is a very different place but many locals share similar opinions.
Asylum
seekers recently arrived during the small hours at the wharf-side four-star
Britannia International - 610 rooms, but, according to a former staff member,
no longer the "luxury hotel" described in some reports. Rumours that
they were coming triggered protests by local residents, many of them office
workers in the Canary Wharf business district.
Outside
the hotel, Chengcheng Cul, who is Chinese, draws a distinction between his
"legal migration" to the UK, and "illegal asylum seekers".
"If
people can come over the Channel illegally, and easily, what encourages decent
people to come legally, pay their tax, and get involved in this society? Is
this setting a good example? This country has opened the border to illegal
migrants."
Lorraine
Cavanagh, who works for charities on the Isle of Dogs, echoes the concerns in
Epping. "I don't know who they are.
"They
are unidentified men who can walk around and do what they want to do with no
consequences," she says.
That
comment, "I don't know who they are", lies at the heart of the
opposition to asylum seekers in these communities.
It can be
very hard to establish basic facts about the young men in the hotels, the
system that put them there, or the impact they might have on locals.
While
growing in number, asylum seekers who come by small boats across the English
Channel are a small proportion of total immigration to the UK, and in 2024,
just over a third of all asylum seekers.
The
government has contracted out the task of accommodating them to three
companies: Serco, Clearsprings and Mears. They buy up rooms in houses and in
hotels, usually taking them over completely.
Ministers
regularly talk about their ambition to "smash the gangs", but say
less about the hotels. The government won't confirm where they are because of
concerns they might be attacked.
Madeleine
Sumption from the Migration Observatory points out there is a problem
publishing information about small groups of asylum seekers when it might
identify them by age or sex, a long-standing approach for public bodies.
We know
how many hotel places are being used in each region - the vast majority are in
the south of England. They cost £5.77m a day for the government to provide. The
estimated cost over the decade to 2029 has spiralled from £4.5bn in 2019 to
£15.3bn.
But there
are no specific figures for the age and sex of hotel occupants, no details
about their countries of origin, or their claim for sanctuary in the UK.
So when
local communities allege crime rates go up when asylum hotels are opened, or
raise fears about the hotels being full of only single adult males, it is often
impossible to prove the point either way.
There
were 35 sexual and violent offences reported in Epping town in May. In the same
month, the year before, when there were no asylum seekers at The Bell, 28
sexual and violent offences were reported. In May 2023, the hotel was being
used by the Home Office for migrant families. The number of reported offences
was 32.
But how
many of these offences involved asylum seekers? The police do not publish
statistics about exactly where crimes happen or who is reported to have
committed them.
So in
many ways, we don't know "who they are".
Orla
believes more information would help reduce tension and is furious at the
government's handling of the asylum system.
"If
you conceal the truth and you act as if you are hiding something, people are
going to be angry," she says. "If they said there are 70 in the Bell
Hotel, five are from Sudan, five from somewhere else, I think most people would
feel better."
Epping
Forest District Council's Conservative Leader, Chris Whitbread recently said
that "it is important to be transparent" about asylum hotel
information.
In a
recent report, the Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration,
David Bolt, criticised how the Home Office deals with asylum hotels. "It
is clear that the Home Office still has a long way to go to build trust and
confidence in its willingness to be open and honest about its intentions and
performance," he wrote.
The Home
Office says it removed 6,000 people from hotels in early 2025 and has already
closed 200 hotels. In its manifesto, Labour pledges to close them all by the
next election.
On the
other side of the political divide from the anti-migrant campaigners, in north
London outside a meeting "to organise against the right wing", Sabby
Dhalu from the protest group Stand Up To Racism wants the government to work
more closely with councils so that their residents are better informed.
Sabby
Dhalu thinks more transparency is a good idea
This
should include "explaining why these people are here, where they come
from, what's happening in those countries," she says. "That they're
in the process of seeking asylum and going through the application process.
Settling them in with the community."
"I
think you've got far right organisations that are determined to repeat the
events of last year," she added.
"And
because for their own cynical reasons, they want to stir up racist violence,
and in order to build their own political organisations."
That
said, she feels that voices on the right are "whipping up" and
weaponising a wider feeling of discontent among the public over Labour's cuts
to public spending, and that the government is "making silly
concessions" to the right in doing so.
Stopping
the boats is a challenge which haunts the government, as it did the
Conservatives. The Home Office has managed to cut the asylum claim backlog,
currently standing at 79,000, but the claimants keep coming and the cost of
accommodation is soaring. There is a feeling the government is struggling to
cope and ignoring the views of communities.
Many are
in agreement that having more than 200 hotels, full of asylum seekers often
waiting for lengthy periods for decisions on their applications, is not a
sustainable situation.
Whether
or not the current protests continue, the government will have to find a
solution.
This
article has been updated to include more detail from Essex Police about the
size of protests, with total numbers including both protesters and counter
demonstrators.

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