Thousands of locals swarm streets of Waterlooville in protest after ‘Home Office secretly plotted to move asylum seekers into £250,000 flats’

A town’s high street shops continue to protest a protest to stop immigrants – as thousands of indigenous ‘turmoil’ if plans continue.
After the Ministry of the Interior revealed Fury last week, they planned to bring 35 asylum seekers to a whole new apartment development in Waterlooville, Hampshire.
The movement, which is a part of a wider plan to reduce the numbers in hotels and reduce the ‘scattered’ immigrants in the UK and cities, was called ‘shame’ by the locals after interviews with the local council.
Thousands of protesters were gathered outside the 19 -storey development by shaking the banners that detonated Beatles this evening and read St George’s flags and ‘illegal Native People’.
Others’ Send them home ‘and’ whose streets? The streets! ‘An activist told the crowd how Waterlooville was sold from the river.
A protester, the dying street, long housing waiting lists, homelessness and unemployment referring to ‘enough’ he said.
Speaking with the Daily Mail in the protest, 41 -year -old Craig Jones from Waterlooville disappointed that immigrants were put in front of the local people.
An EPPING -SYST Protest to stop the hosting of immigrants on a town’s high street shops – Thousands of locals warn about ‘turmoil’ if the plans continue
After the Ministry of the Interior revealed Fury last week, they planned to re -place 35 asylum seekers to develop a whole new apartment in Hampshire, Waterlooville.
Thousands of people gathered with flags and banners on high streets
Separated development is a newly transformed block called Waterloo House. Director Hersch Schneck’s Mountley Group, who owns an immigrant hotel in nearby Cosham
He said: ‘We are against illegal men. I have not seen any veterans or homeless people in the region for the last two years.
They are in the middle of ‘Waterlooville’.
‘I know the people on the housing list for years. This is given to veterans, homeless, disgusting. Everything is always stored as a secret. ‘
Separated development is a newly transformed block called Waterloo House. His director Hersch Schneck also belongs to Mountley Group, an immigrant hotel owner in the nearby Cosham.
At the top of the market, the apartments can bring £ 250,000, but the falling house prices mean to get them out of the market and to enter into an agreement with Clearsprings, a company that provides accommodation for asylum seekers on behalf of the home office.
The reason for this is that the government is presented at the beginning of the market fees in order to put immigrants into the housing. As a result, Mountley Group can enjoy fixed guaranteed rates for several years and cannot carry a market turbulence risk.
In addition to special rents, the Ministry of the Interior is looking for medium -sized sites such as old student accommodation and old tower blocks to host immigrants.
The apartments are located on a Brac store called Junk Emporium, once a peacock clothing store and a tesco before him.
Thousands of protesters gathered out of 19 flat development this evening and detonated Beatles and shook the banners of St George’s flags and ‘illegal natives’
Jdarno Osborne, a mother with a harsh medical needs, says that the hotel is angry because it fought to buy stable housing in the past
Others’ Send them home ‘and’ whose streets? The streets! ‘An activist tells the crowds how to sell it from the river to the crowd.
Jdarno Osborne, a mother whose children have challenging medical needs, says the hotel has left her angry because it has been fighting to buy a stable housing in the past.
The 36 -year -old child, who lived in the region throughout his life, told The Daily Mail last week: ‘It is funny that they can host people quickly from outside the country, but we don’t have their own support.
“ I have six children, I lived in two beds for thirteen years, and someone can come and help immediately.
“ My daughter is now 15 years old, sometimes they come here to hang with friends. But there are things that begin to worry, because you hear rape, harassment, follow -up cases.
‘We have to deal with it, but people seem to not care.’
Another activist said to the crowd: ‘You want to see homeless and veterans in these apartments?
“ This is our country and we must promise to fight for it.
We don’t know who they are, we don’t know where they come from. They have no reason to be here. They are here because of the workers’ government and policies. ‘
Protesters are gathering at Waterlooville High Street, which protested against immigrant residences in the city center
Separated development is a newly transformed block called Waterloo House. Director Hersch Schneck’s Mountley Group, who owns an immigrant hotel in nearby Cosham
46 -year -old Gary Weaving, a fourth generation soldier who served as a royal engineer in Afghanistan, said: ‘Veterans were literally thrown by the government.
“ There are many people in the British society that are so disadvantageous. I want to live in a multicultural Britain where everyone lives in peace.
“ I talked to many local people, we are depicted as animals, this is not a lower class issue, but a problem throughout the whole society.
The mood of the country is at the point of boiling. Unless you do this peacefully now, it will only lead in one direction.
“ We benefit from us. These are not refugees fleeing the war. These are economic immigrants whose first action is to violate the law. Not all bad people. ‘
42 -year -old James Glancy, who has been living in Waterlooville since the age of 12, said that he was homeless and that the houses were not going to the locals.
Daily Mail told me: ‘I was homeless. Not good at all. I saw that this place was going to S ***.
‘You have a lot of families with children in a single bed, this is an absolute joke and they help them [asylum seekers] outside.
“ They throw tail.
“ They are forming new laws for this. Should not be. What and what happened, that’s it. Rules are rules.
“ We have to go and look for a job, but they take everything like that.
“ You need to pay to go to a different country, you need to get a visa like everyone else, but this is not just here.
‘We have to take care of ourselves.’




