Louise adamsBBC News, Essex And
Ivan DavisBBC Radio 4 PM Program
According to a migrant living in a hotel in a hotel in Essex, his future has been left “in the dark”.
There are people kept inside the bell hotel in Epping Causes to take out by 12 September His presence after a High Court judge violated the plan laws.
There are thousands Participated in anti -immigration protests And counter-scorption outside the hotel from July.
Abdi, a Somalian person who said that he was taken to the hotel in May, said: “We don’t know that one day a bus comes and says that we are going out from here.”
Bell is a hotel and home office lawyer Challenge the temporary prohibition This meant that 138 male shelter seekers would need to be evicted from the site.
In the court of appeal, judges are expected to pronounce their verdict on 14:00 BST on Friday.
Abdi, his real name is not, BBC Radio 4’s PM told the program that closing the hotel will not solve the root cause of the problem.
“If this happens – if we are taken out of this place – they will definitely take us from every place that we go. It is going to be the same,” he said.
He said that the residents of the hotel “no-one calls nothing”, saying: “We are just in the dark.”
Fleeing from a terrorist group, he said that he traveled to Britain for three years, reaching a small boat and paid to the board € 1,000 (£ 864).
He said that he had “from Turkey to Austria to France” but several asylum applications in previous countries were rejected.
Abdi criticized some of his companions living in the Bell Hotel and said that he had seen the use of quarrels, drugs and drugs.
“Some people have not good behavior, it feels very bad to the rest of us,” he said.
An Ethiopian Hadush Kebatu, an Ethiopian living in the hotel, is on testing several crimes of many crimes Sexual harassment with a 14 -year -old girl In epping. He denies crimes.
“Ever since the incident, we don’t go out,” he said.
,[We face] Real threatening, real enmity. First time [the protests] It happened that I was like ‘Are they going to come in?’
Abdi said that some people would insult him when he left the hotel to get food or go to a job job.
“People come to you in empty areas [and] He says that ‘crook, you, you’ – the word derogatory, “he explained.
“Before that, there was nothing like that.”
Despite his situation, Abdi said that he understood why many people were angry about those who were refugees.
If he was safe in Somalia and there he branded the “Mass Migration”, he admitted that he would not accept it.
“I am on the side of those who say this is enough,” he said. “It is logical, it is appropriate, it makes sense.”
The government has promised not to use the hotel for those who seek house shelter till the end of this Parliament.
Border Security Minister Dame Angela Eagle said that the government would continue to work with local authorities and communities to remove legitimate concerns “.