
Fear has ‘never left' asylum seekers after last summer's disorder, warns charity
It followed false rumours spread online that the suspect was an asylum seeker who arrived in the UK by boat.
During the disorder, Conversation Over Borders, a charity which supports those seeking sanctuary, tried to counter the narrative and delivered thousands of messages of welcome to asylum hotels across the country.
Chief executive Colette Batten-Turner said: 'It's been a year since the riots, but for many of the people seeking asylum that we work with at Conversation Over Borders, the fear never left.
'People are still stuck in the same unsafe hotel system that became sitting targets for racist violence and enabled the attacks in the first place.'
The charity said the hotel system is isolating people seeking asylum from communities, and many who are survivors of trauma are 'exhausted' and describe their accommodation as 'prisons'.
Freedom From Torture's Kolbassia Haoussou also said 'nothing has changed' over the fear felt last year by those the charity supports.
He said some people did not go out, missed GP appointments and therapy sessions with the charity, or did not take their children to school 'because they were scared somebody's going to attack them'.
Mr Haoussou, also a survivor of torture who sought refuge in the UK 20 years ago, recalled his own fear during last summer's disorder and said he did not go to the office for a week.
'I was also fearful… because I said that if I'm going out now, I'm black, an African looking guy, if I end up in front of those people, they're going to beat me up, absolutely,' he said.
'I was also having a conversation with some of my colleagues that maybe we need to gather as a group in order to go to the office.
'The fear, the vulnerability, it is not just only for those people in a hotel, but also for us that being here now you know, we are not a refugee anymore, but still we're also target, because nobody's going to ask you, are you asylum seekers or not? They're going to attack your face.'
In the lead-up to the anniversary of the disorder, Freedom From Torture has been preparing for the potential of something similar happening again, including looking at putting on virtual meetings for clients.
Mr Haoussou, the director of survivor leadership and influencing at the charity, also said it is vital not to give 'too much oxygen' to those such as the far right to legitimise their actions.
'I think the most important message is that we are a very vulnerable group of people, that we don't have much protection, but we are not the cause of people suffering in this country,' he said.
'We are not coming, taking people's food, taking people's job, taking people's houses, all those kind of misinformation.
'I think those people that they need to ask a question about why, what is happening with the economy, with the society, is those sitting at Westminster.'
Multiple demonstrations have been held outside a hotel housing asylum seekers in Epping since July 13, after an asylum seeker was charged with allegedly attempting to kiss a 14-year-old girl.
Essex Police said there was an 'escalation of violence' during protests at the same site on July 13, 17, 20 and 24, involving hundreds of people.
Mr Haoussou said it is a legitimate concern when someone is accused of sexual assault in your community, but then it is for the 'full force of the law' to apply to those people.
He added it does not reflect the whole population of migrants in the UK, adding: 'Allow the law to do justice, but let's not really criminalise everybody, putting everybody in the same level.
'The majority of us, all we want is the opportunity just to rebuild a safe life.'
Events in Epping show why housing people in hotels is a 'tinderbox', Ms Batten-Turner said, adding: 'We are appalled that the Government still has not learnt its lesson, nor enacted change.
'If Labour is serious about change, it must act on its promise. No more delays, no more hotel contracts, no more treating people seeking safety as problems to be contained.
'With Reform gaining support, and the far-right rising again, the Government has an opportunity to set out an alternative vision for the asylum system. Instead, it's pandering to an anti-migrant vote it will never win.'
Conversation Over Borders is urging ministers to adopt cost-effective plans for safe housing of asylum seekers a year on from the disorder.
Creating community-based housing such as the Homes for Ukraine scheme and moving away from private contractors are among the calls in a letter sent to the Home Secretary, co-signed by 62 local and national organisations including Refugee Action and Refugees at Home.
Ministers have vowed to end the use of hotels for housing asylum seekers by the next election, and are piloting different ways to provide accommodation.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


STV News
3 hours ago
- STV News
Migrant Channel crossings reach 50,000 since Labour took office
The number of migrants crossing the Channel since Labour came to power has passed the significant milestone, as ITV News Political Reporter Jasmine Cameron-Chileshe explains More than 50,000 migrants have arrived in the UK after crossing the English Channel since Labour came into office. Home Office figures showed on Monday that 474 migrants have arrived by small boat since July 2024. Speaking on Tuesday morning, government minister Baroness Jacqui Smith described the numbers as an 'enormous problem,' saying she understood the public's 'concern'. Pointing to the government's recently implemented returns deal with France, Smith said the government remained determined to bring the number of crossings down. The Home Office released images earlier this month showing the first migrants detained under the new France-UK deal. / Credit: Home Office Earlier this month, the government began detaining migrants under a new 'one in, one out' deal with France. Under the scheme, some migrants who crossed the Channel illegally will be detained and returned to France in exchange for asylum seekers with links to the UK. The scheme is currently being piloted, and the UK government hopes to expand it further. Critics say the number of migrants being returned remains a long way off what is needed to either bring the numbers down or serve as a legitimate deterrent. The government will not confirm how many migrants this involves, although it has previously been reported that the number stands close to 50 a week. 'We need to build camps,' says Kemi Badenoch in response to the number of migrants currently arriving in the UK There have been 27,029 arrivals so far this year, which is 47% higher than the same point of 2024 when the figure stood at 18,342, and 67% higher than 2023's figure of 16,170. Shadow home secretary Chris Philp described those crossing the Channel as 'an invasion'. Reacting to the milestone being reached, Philp, the Conservative MP for Croydon South, said: 'Labour has surrendered our borders, and the consequences are being felt in our communities, from rising crime to shocking cases of rape and sexual assault by recent arrivals.' ITV News filmed a small boat of people assumed to be migrants crossing the Channel on Monday morning. Speaking from the Isle of Wight, Tory leader Kemi Badenoch claimed that if she were in office, she could bring the numbers down 'very quickly'. She went on to say Labour lacked a deterrence as she called for the return of the previous Conservative government's Rwanda scheme, where migrants' asylum claims would have been processed in the African country, with successful applicants being granted leave to remain in Rwanda. Pushed on whether the Conservatives could reduce Channel crossings to zero, Badenoch said, 'I think that we can,' adding, 'It wouldn't happen straight away, but it would happen quickly'. Badenoch said, 'My team are now looking at what we can do in terms of detention centres, but stopping people from coming here in the first place – if they think they're going to be sent to Rwanda and not get here, get a free hotel, get benefits, then they won't come here.' Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country


ITV News
20 hours ago
- ITV News
Migrant Channel crossings reach 50,000 since Labour took office
More than 50,000 migrants have arrived in the UK after crossing the English Channel since Labour came in to office. Home Office figures showed on Monday 474 migrants arrived by small boat. Speaking Tuesday morning, government minister Baroness Jacqui Smith described the numbers as an "enormous problem," saying she understood the public's "concern". Pointing to the government's recently implemented returns deal with France, Minister Smith said the government remained determined to bring the number of crossings down. "We need to build camps," says Kemi Badenoch in response to the amount of migrants currently arriving in the UK. There have been 27,029 arrivals so far this year, which is 47% higher than the same point of 2024 when the figure stood at 18,342, and 67% higher than 2023's figure of 16,170. Responding to the milestone, Leader of the Opposition Kemi Badenoch said if she was in office she could bring the numbers down "very quickly." She went on to say Labour lacked a deterrence as she called for the return of the previous Conservative government's Rwanda scheme, which would have seen migrants asylum claims processed in the African country with successful applicants being granted leave to remain in Rwanda.


South Wales Guardian
21 hours ago
- South Wales Guardian
Channel migrants reaching 50,000 under Labour ‘unacceptable' – ex-home secretary
Baroness Jacqui Smith of Malvern, who is an education minister, admitted it is a challenge for Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, but she believes initiatives in place will bring numbers down. Official figures from Monday suggested 49,797 had crossed in small boats from northern France. However the figure is expected to pass 50,000 when official data is released on Tuesday. Lady Smith returned to Government last year, having served as home secretary for two years during Gordon Brown's premiership. 'It's a very big challenge,' she told Nick Ferrari on LBC, citing Government action such as 'doubling' asylum cases being determined and 'increased numbers of people being returned overseas'. Speaking to BBC Breakfast, she added: 'It is an unacceptable number of people. It sort of demonstrates the way over the last six or seven years that the criminal gangs have got an absolute foothold in the tragic trafficking of people across the Channel.' Before entering Government, Labour had promised to 'smash the gangs' to bring numbers down. The problem had plagued Rishi Sunak's government, which had struck an agreement with Rwanda to send asylums seekers there to have their claims processed. However it was cancelled under the incoming Labour Government, after only a handful of migrants had gone to the central African country, voluntarily. Ms Cooper claimed the Tories had spent £700 million on it. The issue has remained a thorn in the Government's side. The 50,000 milestone has been hit earlier under Sir Keir than compared to Mr Sunak. Sky News reported the number would be hit in under 401 days under Labour, if it was reached on Tuesday, compared to 603 under Mr Sunak. Earlier on Tuesday, Lady Smith told Sky News that Ms Cooper has a tough job to tackle the gangs as she placed responsibility on Mr Sunak and his former ministers. 'I think it's tough because the last government enabled this hideous criminal activity to really get its roots into across Europe,' Lady Smith said. 'There's really important action that's being taken to tackle it, the way in which there's a much stronger focus on getting decisions made more quickly, returning more people who come here and don't have the right to stay, and in the last few months, the new deal that we have with the French, we've already detained people who've come here illegally, they'll be returned directly to France.' She added: 'There was also a lengthy period, at the time, in which the criminal gangs, the criminal masterminds, the organised crime, who are behind this, had the opportunity to have this operation set up and really embedded, and that's the task that this Government now has, to deconstruct that, to build on the arrests that we've already made of people who are responsible for this, and to cut the numbers.'