Epping council wins bid to stop Bell Hotel housing asylum seekers

A council won the Supreme Court proposal to temporarily prevent asylum seekers from taking on Bell Hotel in Essex – although the government is a late offer to intervene.
The EPPING Forest Region Council was searched by the EPPING Forest Region Council to stop its placement in the place in EPPING, owned by Somani Hotels Limited.
After being accused of sexual harassment of a 14 -year -old girl who lived there, thousands of people protested near the site.
Mr. Justice Eyre decided after rejecting a 11th hour effort to reject the Council’s case from the home secretary, Yette Cooper.
The Ministry of Interior warned that the result would “significantly affect the ability to host asylum seekers in hotels in the United Kingdom.
However, conservative council leader Chris Whitbread said that repeated protests in EPPING increase tensions in society and cause “irreparable damage”.




