Asylum seeker’s passionate message to Keir Starmer | UK | News

After a young asylum seeker preserves his right to stay in the UK today, he expressed his heartfelt gratitude to Keir Starmer.
24 -year -old Khadar Mohamed thanked the support government for residing in the contentious Bell Hotel in ESSEX, ESSEX, who is now allowed to stay in the UK on the grounds of human rights. Now, the young man who will live in Bradford, Western Yorkshire is eager to work and contribute to society.
“I was told that I won my right to stay in the last two weeks. It was allowed on the grounds of human rights.
He continued: “I believe that many of us will be allowed to stay. Many people in the hotel pass the same situation and I believe they will win … People need to calm down. We are not bad people.”
In the summer, protests exploded outside Bell Hotel because the tensions around immigration threatened to increase. Anti -Göçmen demonstrators – some of them are gathered to protest, reports mirror.
Khadar, an asylum seeker from Somalia, who lives in a hotel in Oxford, expressed his fear and desire to contribute to the society. While talking with Daily Mail, “I want to work, I want to contribute … Let’s stay. I want to work and contribute.”
He believes that the British gradually accepts the fact that asylum seekers will stay here.
A “OUT” scheme aimed at preventing boat crossings with France was implemented this week. The first immigrant, an Indian citizen who came to England with a small boat last month, was returned by plane on Thursday morning.
Interior Minister Shabana Mahmood praised the removal as “an important first step” and is expected more flights this week.
A eryriter man is challenging his decision to send him back to France today. At a hearing in London, his lawyers argued that the decision was “fair in terms of procedures” because there was not enough opportunities to provide evidence to support the claim that “allegedly a smuggling victim”.
However, the Ministry of the Interior opposed the attempt to temporarily stop the removal and said the Supreme Court was not a “serious problem to be tried”.
EPPING REGIONAL Council announced that it would take the case to close Bell Hotel to the High Court. This comes after the Court of Appeal, after the decision of a temporary Supreme Court, which will force the 138 asylum seekers to leave until September 12th.




