Asylum seekers have revealed how they have been staying in taxpayer-funded hotels for 15 months and doing £5 an hour cash in hand jobs as the Home Office faces increasing pressure to sort out the migrant crisis.
Officials are spending an eyewatering £6.8million a day to pay for hotel rooms amid a shortage of official accommodation after the asylum backlog soared past 120,000.
One Iraqi Kurd told MailOnline he has been staying at a hotel in south east London since last summer as he waits for his claim to be dealt with by the Home Office.
Another man complained about receiving just £8 in ‘pocket money’ to spend on clothes and toiletries per week – less than he got in Germany. Typically, the German government pay individuals living in state-run accommodation around €135 (£116) per month.
Alan Khdr, 22, an Iraqi Kurd, arrived on a small boat from France a year ago and is staying at a hotel in south east London
Ahmad Khaled, a 41-year-old Iraqi who is staying in the same hotel as Mr Khdr, said: ‘I came from France and have been here for three months since I came here on a boat’
At a hotel in Newcastle, an Afghani said a ‘lot of people’ were doing cash in hand jobs for £5 an hour – below the minimum wage – to get round a ban on them working.
Others said the food was so bad at the hotels they didn’t eat it and bought their own instead using money sent over by relatives.
There are currently more than 37,000 asylum seekers in hotels costing the UK taxpayer £5.6m a day, while the cost of accommodating Afghans in ‘bridging’ hotels is £1.2m a day.
Recent figures show only four per cent of asylum applications from last year have been processed, with the average claim now taking 480 days to complete.
Home Secretary Suella Braverman has announced asylum staff will get a bonus of £2,500 if they stay in their job for two years or longer.
Around 25 migrants could be seen leaving a hotel in south east London over the two hours when MailOnline visited.
Ahmad Khaled, a 41-year-old Iraqi, said: ‘I came from France and have been here for three months since I came here on a boat. I came from Iraq and through Turkey and Greece up to Italy then France then England.
‘I have no documents and no solicitor. The staff are angry and they do not respect anyone. But everybody loves England so much here, England helps everyone. In Iraq there are problems and every day people are dead.’
One man, who did not want to be named. said: ‘I have been here for one year and three months. I have nothing. I only eat once a day in the morning and that is it.
‘The food is so bad. People look for the bin nearby to get rid of it because it is not good. But staff at the hotel are good.
‘After four months the Home Office sent me £8 a week. Some people here have been in Germany before and they say they were given 120 euros a week.
‘How can you live on just £8 a week? You can’t even buy one drink with that.’
The man’s asylum application read: ‘I fear persecution [in Iraq] because of my membership of a particular social group. I believe if I return I will be subject to torture, inhumane and degrading treatment and unlawful killing.’
He added: ‘I was placed on a boat, but didn’t know where we were going.
‘At first we were told we were going to America then we ended up in the United Kingdom. I also suffer from a neurological condition.’
Alan Khdr, 22, an Iraqi Kurd, arrived in the country on a small boat from France a year ago and had his application to stay accepted within a month.
Despite this, he is still living at the hotel in south east London. He says he is being well treated but he wants to be able to study and learn English.
Mr Khdr said: ‘The hotel is very good and the rooms are very nice. I had to leave Kurdistan because it is no good and people get killed.
‘I walked for four months to get here across Turkey, Bulgaria, Serbia, Italy and France. I wanted to go to Dover and come here on a boat.
Emily Hernandez, Carleta Espinosa and Rebecca Hernandez (left to right) arrived in the UK by plane from El Salvador to seek asylum
A man stands outside the front steps of the hotel in south east London where the asylum seekers are staying
A security guard was manning the front entrance at the site, which belongs to a budget chain
‘It was very dangerous because 30 to 40 people were crammed into a boat and it took five hours.
‘When I arrived at Dover I was happy because here it is very nice. I have food and they have given me a home, and I have got a nice room.
‘France is not good, it is not good. I like the UK, it is nice, I don’t like France. I have been granted asylum and have an ID card but I don’t have a passport.
‘I am very, very happy it has been granted because now there is no danger. Now I am here I want to learn English and I want to study and work.’
In Newcastle, asylum seekers have been staying in a four-star hotel with a swimming pool and a gym just outside the city centre.
Speaking anonymously, one man from Lebanon said: ‘I came to the UK for my own safety. I was fighting against ISIS and I was getting death threats.
‘I have tried speaking to the Home Office but you don’t hear anything back. It is very bad here and I am still afraid.
‘I’ve been here seven months but I know some who have been here a year and are no further forward.
‘The staff here just shout at you and tell you to speak to the Home Office if you have questions.’
He added: ‘I don’t eat the food because it’s so bad. I go out and buy it.
‘The money I spend comes from my family back home. It’s very bad. I would rather be somewhere else.
‘I stay in my own room but I leave to get shopping and then I come straight back.’
Residents at the Newcastle hotel included a man from Lebanon (right) who said he came to the UK after fighting against ISIS
In Newcastle, asylum seekers have been staying in a four-star hotel just outside the city centre
A meal provided to asylum seekers at a hotel near Hull. Residents described conditions as good but said they were bored
Another young refugee, from Afghanistan, who also wished to remain anonymous, said: ‘We are in a four-star hotel and I don’t think it is too bad. But the main issue is with the food, which is not good. I think the whole system is broken.
‘A lot of people are doing cash in hand work for £5 an hour but it’s not safe for them. They could get into trouble. The Government need to fix the problem.’
A Home Office spokesman said: ‘The number of people arriving in the UK who seek asylum and require accommodation has reached record levels, placing unprecedented pressures on the asylum system.
‘The Home Office and partners identify sites for accommodation based on whether they are safe and available.
‘While we accept that hotels do not provide a long-term solution, they do offer safe, secure and clean accommodation, and we are working hard with local authorities to find appropriate accommodation during this challenging time.’
Ministers could change law so Channel migrants can he held at Manston camp for four days rather than 24 hours to ease pressure to move them into hotels around the country
By David Wilcock, Deputy Political Editor for MailOnline
Channel migrants could be held at the controversial Manston camp in Kent for up to four days under a law change being considered by ministers.
Currently the processing hub is meant to be transit only with arrivals there for no more than 24 hours under current laws.
After that they are meant to be found accommodation elsewhere in the country.
But the site has been at the centre of major rows in recent weeks over the number of people being held there, often for several days, and outbreaks of diseases including diphtheria.
Tory MP have also reacted furiously to arrivals being taken to hotels in their constituencies to ease the overcrowding.
The change would allow migrants to be held for three or four days – up from the current statutory limit of 24 hours – to give officials more flexibility in the event of another surge in Channel arrivals
The change would allow migrants to be held for three or four days to give officials more flexibility in the event of another surge in Channel arrivals, according to The Daily Telegraph.
It comes after figures revealed more than 43,000 migrants have crossed the Channel to the UK so far this year, heaping pressure on Home Secretary Suella Braverman.
The Ministry of Defence said 884 people were detected in 17 boats on Tuesday, which suggests an average of around 52 per boat.
The latest crossings take the provisional total for 2022 to date to 43,500, according to PA news agency analysis of Government figures.
The Telegraph says ministers are considering amending the ‘short term holding facility rules’, which limit the amount of time an asylum seeker can be held, via a statutory instrument in Parliament.
It comes after figures revealed more than 43,000 migrants have crossed the Channel to the UK so far this year, heaping pressure on Home Secretary Suella Braverman.
A Home Office spokesperson said in a statement: ‘Staff across the Home Office have worked tirelessly under challenging circumstances to source alternative accommodation as quickly as possible for those who have been processed at Manston.
‘The site remains at acceptable capacity levels and improvements continue to be made to ensure it is well-resourced to process migrants safely and securely.
‘The global migration crisis continues to place an unprecedented and unsustainable strain on our asylum system, which is why we remain focused on deterring illegal migration and disrupting the criminal gangs responsible for these dangerous crossings.’
North Thanet MP Sir Roger Gale, whose constituency covers the Manston centre, told The Telegraph: ‘I don’t want anybody to be detained any longer than necessary but if you have a sudden influx and have to move them on, in certain circumstances it might take more than 24 hours especially if they have to be screened to ensure they have not got any infections.’
The former military airfield near Ramsgate has been dogged by controversy recently, with ministers coming under fire over the conditions.
The site has been at the centre of major rows in recent weeks over the number of people being held there, often for several days, and outbreaks of diseases including diphtheria.
At its peak in early November, the Manston facility housed 4,000 people – at least double its 1,600 capacity – in what was branded a ‘breach of humane conditions’.
It has since been cleared, however there has been fresh criticism of the facility following an outbreak of diphtheria among asylum seekers, with the Home Office revealing a man may have died from the highly contagious disease.
The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) said there had been an ‘increase’ in cases of diphtheria reported among asylum seekers arriving in the UK, with 50 identified as of November 25, including children. The figure was 39 on November 10.
The Government said any asylum seekers with symptoms of diphtheria will be put into isolation while they are treated, and all migrants are being offered a vaccine on arrival in the UK.
Border Force intercepts hundreds more Channel migrants as yearly total rises above 43,400: First boat lands in Dover at 5am as crossings continue throughout the day with traffickers taking advantage of calm waters
By Elly Blake for MailOnline
At least 400 migrants crossed the Channel in small boats yesterday as the total for the year surpassed 43,400, according to official government figures.
While the Government is yet to confirm the official figures for Wednesday, several Border Force boats – each with around 50 asylum seekers on board – arrived in Dover, Kent throughout the day.
The first group of around 40 people were escorted to shore before daybreak – arriving in the dark shortly after 5am.
They could be seen wearing face masks and had blue blankets wrapped around their shoulders after battling low temperatures at sea.
On Tuesday, 884 migrants were intercepted during 17 English Channel crossings
Yesterday, a Border Force vessel brought a large group of around 40 people into the harbour at Dover with limited visibility
The crossings continued into the afternoon, with more migrants expected to reach British soil later today as people smugglers take advantage of a break in bad weather.
Dozens of asylum seekers were brought into Dover, Kent around 3.30pm on board Border Force vessel Ranger.
The mostly male group, who wore orange life jackets, had blankets draped over the heads and shoulders after facing low temperatures at sea.
Around half-an-hour later, another Border Force vessel brought dozens more asylum seekers – including a small number of women – into the port.
One older woman appeared to be limping as she was supported off the vessel by two other migrants.
It comes after 884 migrants were intercepted in 17 separate incidents on Tuesday, an average of 52 people per vessel.
The official total now stands at 43,472 with a month to go until the end of the year – dwarfing the 28,526 who made the crossing in the whole of 2021.
Some 3,571 people have braved the treacherous crossing of the busiest shipping lanes in the world in November alone.
And dozens more migrants have already made it across the Channel today as traffickers took advantage of flat calm conditions at sea.
The number of migrants to have crossed the English Channel in small boats to the UK so far this year has now surpassed 43.400, according to official government figures.
The French coastguard prevented a further 240 people from reaching the UK the same day.
In the early hours of the morning the sea rescue boat Notre-Dame-du-Risban was tasked with rescuing 23 stranded migrants from the Calais Straits.
The French Navy vessel Flamant then intercepted 61 asylum seekers who had got into difficulty off the coast of Leffrinkoucke. The same boat intervened to rescue a further 34 people on a second boat a short while later.
All 95 people were dropped off at the port of Calais.
Later in the morning, the maritime affairs patrol boat Jeanne Barret, which was carrying out surveillance near Boulogne-sur-Mer, came across a group of migrants clinging to their sinking boat.
A total of 61 people – several of whom were in a state of hypothermia – were pulled out of the water and dropped off at the port.
Around midday a further 61 asylum seekers were rescued after getting into difficulty off the coast of Calais and were taken to the port of Dunkirk.
Once on shore, all migrants were taken care of by the departmental fire and rescue service and the border police.
A Border Force vessel brought a large group of around 40 people into the harbour at Dover with limited visibility
On Tuesday, despite thick early morning fog, 17 dinghies with an average of 52 people on each boat left the French coast heading across the 21-mile Dover Straits to Kent.
Royal Navy, Border Force and RNLI lifeboats were all dispatched to the middle of the English Channel as people smugglers take advantage of the clearing weather.
A Border Force vessel brought a large group of around 40 people into the harbour at Dover with limited visibility.
Many of the mainly male group were wrapped in blankets to protect them from the cold.
They were brought ashore around 9am at the former jetfoil terminal in the western docks before it is expected they are moved to the Manston processing centre near Ramsgate, Kent.
The Border Force vessel Hurricane has also brought at least two groups of people into the harbour at Ramsgate.
Border Force patrol boat Ranger was also out at sea.
The Dover and Deal RNLI lifeboats have also responded to incidents in the channel while Royal Navy vessels HMS Explorer, HMS Severn, HMS Ranger were also positioned in the middle of the Channel overseeing operations.
It comes after a further 426 arrived in small boats on Monday despite choppy conditions at sea according to official numbers.
An average of 60 to 61 people were crammed into just seven flimsy inflatable boats.
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