A former military base in Kent will continue the shelter seekers despite the previous concerns about the situation of bad situation.
The house office was due to stopping the use of Napier Barracks in Folkstone to accommodate migrants applying for asylum from September, but has since decided to expand its use by the end of the year.
Despite being described by a judge as “squalid” by a judge in 2020, the former military site has been used in Folkstone to accommodate asylum seekers since 2020.
The decision to increase its use comes A High Court’s decision This stopped the use of a hotel for the house to the refugees – and paved the way for similar legal action at other hotels.
Napier Barrack started as an accidental residence for migrants seeking asylum at the beginning of the Kovid epidemic.
But in 2021, after the fire and outbreak of the virus on the site, a High Court’s judgment found that the housing provided was insufficient.
Mr. Justice Linden found that the barracks were crowded, ran away with “dirty” features and included “Nirod-jasi” settings for men.
The home office said the next year that it has “significantly” improved in the site – but still Call MPs to close it,
Under Labor, in March this year, it was said that Napier Barrack would stop working as housing for shelter seekers in September. The deadline has now been extended by December.
A home office spokesman said that it was “to fulfill our commitments to fulfill our statutory obligations and reduce the cost of asylum housing and to end the use of asylum hotels by the end of this Parliament”.
The announcement was made a few hours later after the Home Secretary announced an overhaul of the refuge, which was aimed at cutting the number of people kept in the temporary residence while waiting for the Sharan’s decision.
Yvette Cooper said that a new body of independent assistant would make rapid track decisions on the appeal, which currently takes more than a year on hearing.
During this time, the applications of asylum seekers have failed, adjusted to the taxpayer’s expenses. Currently 32,000 shelter seekers are being kept in hotels.
The government’s pledge to eliminate its dependence on hotels for the house migrants is as follows. Protests in Britain On their use.