Migrant hotel turns idyllic village into ‘no-go zone’ as locals scared to let kids outside | UK | News

Fed-up natives say that their beautiful villages have turned into a ‘still region’. (Picture: Tom Malısem / Swns)
Fed-up natives say that after the opening of an immigrant hotel, their beautiful villages turned into a “immobile area”. Ibis Hotel in the village of Northamponshire, Crick, has been operating as a Make Gear Shelter Center since last November. With a population of less than 2,000 people, the pastoral village has reeds houses, a marina and its own cricket club.
However, residents claim that the region has gone downhill with football matches and men’s packages walking through the streets late at night. Some of the locals are very afraid of their children coming out of the dark after the darkness was attacked in the nearby Rugby Warwickshire last week. Ahmed Muhammad Almahi, 32 -year -old asylum seeker, was accused of sexual assault and will appear next month at Warwick Crown Court.
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An immigrant hotel was opened near the village of Crick in Northamponshire. (Picture: Getty)
The alleged attack news was shocked by local residents and on Friday evening, the 111 -room hotel led to hundreds of angry crowds that protested outside the hotel.
The community leaders are now demanding Serco, who is now responsible for asylum seekers, to take a harder attitude towards immigrants staying at the hotel.
Crick Parish Council made a statement: “Parish Council is aware of the latest events containing Ibis Hotel in Crick.
“Regarding the use of the playground, Parish Council contacted Serco directly. Serco said that they could not impose curfews and that the residents were not prevented from leaving the hotel.
“Serco said that they will talk to the hotel residents about using the playground and making noise at night.
“It is worth repeating that the decision to host immigrants in IBIS is a central government decision and both of them are not supported by the West Northamponshire Council or Crick Parish Council,”

Crick is a mile away from where immigrants are located in an Ibis hotel. (Picture: Tom Malısem / Swns)
The Council also called for the police to contact the police if they witnessed any criminal activity. The residents living in the village specified in the Domesday book, let’s say “overflowing” by immigrants.
“I don’t want them here – they came here illegally, but they are treated as guests. We really have a big problem in Crick. All places seem to have been invaded with them.
“They go to the park in the afternoon and play football, sometimes late at night and always in big groups. Escapes and people living nearby cannot sleep.
“They were told to stop doing this, not for adults, but a park for children, but they just continued. We heard that a child’s football was stolen there.
“When walking the dog is quite scary and you encounter these packages of men everywhere.”
His two father said he was “worried” to let his daughters go out after dark. He said: “As the father of two young girls, I’m worried even when walking around a friend’s house in the corner.
“I can understand that these people are bored and expecting to be processed, but they make our lives into misery. If I could carry my family to another town, but I don’t think anyone would want to act next to a migrant hotel.”
Another said: “I see them playing them regularly throughout the green. They get on the bus and don’t bother to pay a fee, which causes all kinds of problems.
“I know whether people with problems, but they need a place to go. Not just here. The government has a lot to answer – turns our village into a hell hole.”
The Conservative Deputy Stuart Andrew of the Daventry Constitution, which covers Crick, said that the security of the residents in the region was the “highest priority”.
“I’m constantly creating concerns with the Ministry of Interior about the situation in Crick. I will continue to work closely with local authorities to ensure that our communities are safe for everyone.”
Rosie Humphreys, a member of the liberal Democratic Assembly, representing Crick Ward, said earlier: “Crick Parish Council is not fully compatible with IBIS’s position as an emergency hotel.

Local deputy residents’ safety ‘the highest priority’ he said. (Picture: Tom Malısem / Swns)
“There is no facility near IBIS, and in a remote place – he believes that the home office can think that it is appropriate to use this hotel again.
“The government continued:” Even if it has inherited a shelter system that has been broken, thousands of people inherited to accumulated accumulated without the allegations, this is not a reason to make a bad decision again by re -opening the IBIs for asylum seekers. “
Northamponshire police used extra patrol to the village to “provide assurance” to the inhabitants.
A spokesman for a force said: “We know that a man from Crick was accused of sexual assault by Warwickshire police after an incident in Rugby on Tuesday (August 5th).
“We know that this incident is concerned for the people living in the region, and our neighborhood police team is completing extra patrols in Crick to provide assurance recently.”




