Asylum seeker jailed in case that sparked UK protests

In July, an Ethiopian asylum seeker was sentenced to 12 months’ imprisonment for a woman and a young girl who led to angry protests outside the hotel near London, where she and other immigrants were hosted.
The protests outside the Bell Hotel in EPPING, 30 km north of the British capital, have been a touch paper for demonstrations between the tensions on immigration.
Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu was sentenced to sexually assaulted a 14 -year -old girl and a woman at the Chelmsford Magistrate Court in early September for encouraging sexual assault and sexual activity and harassment.
Kabatu acknowledged that he was aware of the unrest caused by his crime and that other asylum seekers who followed the laws were impressed by the public because of the public, not only in EPPING, but Judge Christopher Williams told him.
“This mass demonstrations and the fear that children in the United Kingdom were not safe,” the judge said on Tuesday. He said.
Migration has become a dominant political issue in the UK, and since the country’s small boats on the channel faced both a record number of asylum claims and arrival, he shaded concerns about a weakening economy.
Kebatu, who came to Britain on a small boat and moved to Bell Hotel just a week before the incident, rejected all the charges by saying that he was not a wild animal.
According to figures until the end of June, there are more than 32,000 immigrants in hotels around the country.
The government plans to stop the implementation in the next election that should be paid in 2029.

