New plans call for migrants to be housed on military facilities and abandoned boats.
The government is anticipated to unveil plans within the next several weeks to begin relocating migrants out of hotels and into military sites or potentially decommissioned boats. Ministers have already stated that they do not want to use hotels to house asylum seekers. Previous ideas to use holiday camps and student halls are less likely to be implemented. It comes as Conservative MPs plan to rebel against Rishi Sunak's illegal immigration measure next week. A number of top Conservatives and former ministers have signed an amendment that would exclude the European Court of Human Rights from the UK's mechanism for dealing with illegal migration. The amendment was proposed by Boris Johnson's former Political Secretary Danny Kruger and is supported by a number of MPs, including Sir Iain Duncan Smith, Sir John Redwood, and Simon Clarke. The Commons will debate the prime minister's legislation on Monday and Tuesday, with rumours that he may meet with prospective dissidents in the coming days. According to government sources, an announcement on hotel accommodations is due within the next several weeks. The announcement comes after communities, politicians, and historians voiced resistance to plans to accommodate asylum seekers at a Royal Air Force facility in Lincolnshire.
The now-decommissioned RAF Scampton could host up to 1,500 asylum seekers. The airfield, which closed last year, was the previous home of the Red Arrows aerobatic display team and the Dambusters - the squadron responsible for one of the most renowned air raids of WWII. A £300 million plan to turn the base into a heritage site could be canceled as a result of the proposal. Following a COVID epidemic, the choice to place asylum seekers in army barracks was labeled as a "serious error of judgement." Conditions in Napier Barracks in Folkestone, Kent, and Penally Camp in Wales were "utterly unacceptable," with "serious failings on the part of the Home Office," according to chief inspector David Bolt's April 2021 report. In response to Saturday's statement, Liz Saville Roberts MP, Plaid Cymru Westminster leader and home affairs spokeswoman, said the government had "learned nothing from their failures." "Inspectors assessed Penally barracks in Pembrokeshire as "impoverished, run-down, and unfit." "Penally was thankfully shut down, and people were relocated to more suitable housing." "Reports of plans to relocate asylum seekers to army bases within weeks demonstrate yet again that this Tory government is motivated by cruelty rather than policy outcomes."
By Covenant


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