The Citizen (Gauteng)

1 500 migrants for town

BRITISH VILLAGERS PROTEST: ASYLUM SEEKERS TO OUTNUMBER RESIDENTS

- Linton-on-Ouse

►► Sewage system already failing, no high-speed internet nor police presence.

The village of Linton-onOuse is usually a sleepy place, but its residents are up in arms at a UK government plan to house up to 1 500 asylum seekers, whose numbers will dwarf local residents.

In mid-April, 43-year-old Steve learnt of the proposal from visiting reporters. They “asked what I thought of what was going on”, Steve said.

It was then he found out that ministers want to open a centre for male asylum seekers in the heart of the village, in northern England.

The project is based on a similar one in Greece, which has seen a wave of migrants crossing the Mediterran­ean Sea land on its islands.

It aims to help reduce the number of migrants crossing the Channel from northern France in small boats, which has soared to record highs in recent years despite government promises to tackle the issue post-Brexit.

According to the interior ministry, the existing accommodat­ion on a closed former Royal Air Force base “will help end the government’s reliance on expensive hotels” where tens of thousands of asylum seekers live at a cost to taxpayers of £4.7 million (about R93 million) per day.

“Fifteen hundred people in a village of 700 seems to have an absence of proportion­ality,” argued Olga Matthias, another local.

While they say they back the idea of housing refugees in their village, Steve and Olga could not understand why the Home Office chose to send such a large number to Linton-on-Ouse.

“There is nothing to do here,” said Matthias, glancing down the deserted street with immaculate front gardens.

The pub closed a long time ago and the only shop does not sell much except newspapers. There is a bus four times a day that goes to York, the nearest large city about 16km away, but the price of a return ticket at £6.50 is more than an asylum seeker’s daily allowance of £5.66.

“It’s a lose-lose scenario,” said Steve. “They have a right for a peaceful life especially after the countries these people are coming from, so they have the right to be here.”

But he said the village did not have the facilities to allow its population to more than triple. The sewage system was already failing, there was no high-speed internet nor police presence.

One local, 19-year-old Mya Aston, said that for her, the prospect of 1 500 more men walking in the streets was “daunting”. Another voiced concerns about how the plan might affect home prices.

Furious at not being consulted, the villagers are now fighting to halt the project, even as the first asylum seekers are set to arrive.

The local Conservati­ve MP, Kevin Hollinrake, said he was considerin­g legal options.

“Nobody wants this. Nobody. Not the far-rights, not the villagers, not refugee charities, only the home office wants this to happen,” said Nicola David of Ripon City of Sanctuary, a group helping refugees.

The public debate has been dominated in recent weeks by a government proposal to send asylum seekers who arrive illegally

to Rwanda.

But David argued that the opening of a reception centre in Lintonon-Ouse is far more problemati­c.

“The Rwanda [plan] was really shocking cause it’s massive and it’s bizarre. But the Refugee Council did some calculatio­ns and they reckon probably 200 people would get sent to Rwanda so that’s actually quite small and there is a very strong chance it won’t go ahead at all,” she said.

In the case of Linton-on-Ouse, “this is happening right now and it’s happening right here”, said David, worried about the condition of planned accommodat­ion, while the government has been vague about how the site will be managed.

She gives the example of Napier former military camp in Kent, which has been used since 2020 to house asylum seekers, prompting criticism over the squalid living conditions and migrants being held in semi-detention. –

Nobody wants this... only the Home Office

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