A joint investigation by The Independent and Liberty Investigates has unearthed accounts from 10 asylum seekers who alleged their movements were restricted at two hotels – one in Hounslow, near Heathrow airport, and a second near Gatwick.
According
to report, asylum seekers as young as 16 years old claim they have been
prevented from leaving their Home Office hotels for days in conditions an
expert described as “effective detention”, an investigation has found.
People who
have crossed the Channel to seek refuge in the UK have been taken to
“short-term stay hotels” for interviews and have said they were told they could
not leave in a potential breach of the law.
The Home
Office said migrants stay at the hotels for 48 hours on average while
completing screening when it hasn’t been possible to complete checks at holding
facilities in Kent, and claimed they “can come and go freely as they wish”.
The Humans
for Rights Network (HFRN) said it had received pleas for help from seven
“distressed” young people at the Hounslow hotel, whom it believed were minors
but whose ages were disputed by the Home Office. Three of them claimed to have
been stuck inside the hotel for two weeks.
Three
adults also claimed to have been restricted, while an NGO worker who visited a
third hotel in Slough claimed to have witnessed guards “push” an adult asylum
seeker back through the front entrance as he attempted to leave.
Experts
said the alleged restrictions on movement amounted to “a form of
incarceration”, bringing into question Home Office claims that “no one in
[short stay] hotels is detained”.
The Home
Office would not confirm how many short-term stay hotels it is operating, or
how many people had stayed in them. But two asylum seekers staying at the
Hounslow hotel claimed to have been among hundreds accommodated there since
May, while an asylum seeker at the Gatwick hotel reported seeing dozens come
and go.
Maddie
Harris, director of HFRN, claimed that seven suspected unaccompanied children
were “deprived of their basic rights” while staying at the Hounslow hotel
alongside adults they did not know.
All claim
to be aged 16 or 17, but officials in Dover deemed them adults after a “rapid”
assessment upon arrival in the UK, Harris said. The charity is supporting them
to undergo full age assessments.
Under-18s
must be housed by local authorities in regulated accommodation or in specific
child-only hotels. But the young people were instead transported to Hounslow
the day after arriving by small boat – all between 19 July and 16 August –
where they recalled being told they could not leave until their screening
interviews were over: up to two weeks in some cases, the charity said.
The Home
Office denied that children were placed in adult short-stay hotels and said
individuals claiming to be children were placed in hotels for adults only if an
initial age assessment had concluded they were over the age of 18.
Adults
with potential vulnerabilities and medical issues were also among those who
claimed they had had their movements restricted.
Qudrat Hijrat, 29, was taken to the Hounslow hotel after arriving in Britain in a small boat and claimed to have spent more than two months there. During this time, he was witnessed by reporters being stopped by security as he attempted to leave to pray at a mosque.
The Afghan
asylum seeker was eventually allowed out after a guard radioed colleagues, but
he claimed to have been sent back inside on other occasions.

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