Fury as refugees handed £300k town houses with electric car charging | UK | News

The asylum seekers have moved to the luxury 300,000 £ 300,000 £ 300,000 £ 300,000 £ completed with electric vehicle charging points and underfloor heating – angry anger from local residents who say they were kept in the dark.
Four private, three -bedroom property, which is specially owned, has a rental value of £ 1,200 per month, and while the applications are processed, the public service company working on behalf of the Ministry of Interior to host immigrant families was rented to Serco. Reports the Sun.
The controversial movement in a Suffolk village, which we did not name for security reasons, was quietly announced last week with a council member who claimed that the community responded “very positive” last week. Just a few days after judges overthrew the explosive EPPING Hotel Asylum decision.
Natives demand answers
However, the angry peasants returned, why the local families did not propose the first premium properties of the local families, and demanded the authorities to explode the plan to keep them completely dark.
Movement, labor expensive asylum hotels closure and immigrants to private housing throughout the country comes with the promise of moving.
62 -year -old Bahçıvan Clive Bloomfield, who lives in the village throughout his life, told Sun to Sun: “We all happened without knowing it. Our views seem to be not counted.
He continued: “There are people who work hard to get on the staircase and are not considered.”
64 -year -old wife, Susan, added his anger to the arrangement: “We pay for all this. Why are we working hard to get everything for asylum seekers for free?”
Community division
40 -year -old customer advisor Laura Garland announced that the movement caused turmoil along the strictly connected community.
He said: “There are people born in this country, paying taxes that cannot buy housing.
“Then you get these families directly in the brand new three-bedroom houses. We didn’t know the worst thing. We were kept in the dark.”
26 -year -old local Joiner Dylan Keseru expressed his disbelief to see that the national housing crisis came to the door.
“You hear the news and you think it is in towns and cities. But now it hits the house. The door next door. There are many young people who can ask for an opportunity to buy a place in the village, so it is incredible for the permission of asylum seekers paid by taxpayers,” he said.
68 -year -old Ricky Morgan, who moved from Walthamstow in North East London only a year ago, launched a scary attack to the government to “give everything to immigrants free”.
Some offer support
However, not all residents opposed newcomers. Lizzie Simmonds said that her mother and other peasants provide basic needs to help families settle.
Lizzie Sun told: “If people need to come here, let me.
“Let them have opportunities that they have not been given before. There is a reason they go.”
At least one immigrant family already moved to luxury accommodation. It is believed that they come legally instead of small boats before they make asylum applications when their visas expired.
Housing crisis
The debate opposes a ground of severe housing shortages in the region. The latest figures of the Suffolk Council reveal that approximately 800 people were on the waiting lists to bid for the property of the Council or Housing Association last year.
Nationally, the scale of the asylum accommodation crisis is surprising. Until July, more than 106,000 people received asylum support in England. While 32,000 of them are in expensive hotels, 70,000 people were placed in other accommodation, including private houses and houses.
Earlier this year, it turned out that Serco offered five -year -old rental agreements to immigrants to private hosts. Comprehensive packages include free property management, full repair and maintenance services and all invoices.
Government defense
The workers’ government committed a manifesto to close all shelter hotels as part of the revolution of the immigration system.
Last week, the Ministry of the Interior celebrated the appeal for a Supreme Court decision that made a temporary measure to the EPPING Forest Region Council in ESSEX and prevented the use of Bell Hotel for asylum seekers.
Yesterday, the educational secretary Bridget Phillipson defended the decision to keep the bell and argued that the closure would lead to “too much disruption” and would leave “streets” asylum seekers.
In the meantime, conservative opposition plans to force the parliamentary vote to have more authorities before the local authorities can be allocated to asylum seekers in the fields of property.
Great announcement
Today, the Minister of Interior Yette Cooper is expected to update about Britain’s return agreement with France as part of the government’s efforts to deal with illegal migration.
It will also announce that the National Crime Agency has successfully disrupted the 347 crime network connected to illegal immigration last year and represents a significant annual increase of 40 %.
The Ministry of Interior defended his approach: “The summit had 400 asylum hotels at a cost of about 9 million £ 9 million a day, less than two years ago.
“Last year, we acted in a urgent way to correct this system, double the asylum decision making rate and reduce the amount of money spent on shelter hotels almost one billion pounds.”
The Ministry of Interior insists that he carefully listens to local concerns while determining the appropriate sites for asylum accommodation.
Serco refused to comment to report the Sun.