Travel & Tours

Manston Migrant Centre Like A Zoo- Asylum Seeker

Conditions at an overcrowded migrant center in Kent were akin to living in a prison or a zoo, a recent resident has told the BBC. Ahmed - not his real name - said people at the Manston processing center were treated like "animals" with 130 people forced to share a single large tent. More than 4,000 migrants have reportedly been held at the camp - meant to host 1,600 - in recent days. But Immigration Minister Robert Jenrick has insisted numbers are coming down. Ahmed - who left the center on Monday after 24 days there - described being forced to sleep on the floor, and being prevented from going to the toilet, taking a shower, or going outside for exercise. 

He told the BBC that he fled his home country in search of freedom and to avoid persecution, saying that he had been living in fear for his life. But after arriving in the UK and at the center, Ahmed said people were prevented from calling their families to let them know they had made the crossing to the UK safely. "For the 24 days I'm in there, I can't call to my family to say to them I'm dead, I'm living - they don't know anything about me," he said. "All people in there, have a family. They should know what is happening to us."

Manston, a former military base in Kent, opened as a processing center in February for the growing number of migrants reaching the UK in small boats. Migrants are meant to be held there for short periods of time while undergoing security and identity checks. They are then supposed to be moved into the Home Office's asylum accommodation system, which often means a hotel due to a shortage of available accommodation. 

But Manston became even more crowded at the weekend when 700 migrants were sent there from another center in Dover, which was firebombed. Several hundred asylum seekers were relocated from the Manston center on Tuesday, according to one of the MPs in Kent, Conservative Sir Roger Gale. More will leave throughout the week he said, tweeting: "This must never be allowed to happen again." Mr Jenrick tweeted on Tuesday that the number of migrants held at the center had "fallen substantially". "Unless we receive an unexpectedly high number of migrants in small boats in the coming days, numbers will fall significantly this week," he said. "It's imperative that the site returns a sustainable operating model and we are doing everything we can to ensure that happens swiftly." 

Chart showing number of people arriving in small boats

But the British Red Cross said "the serious problems at Manston are indicative of the wider issues facing the asylum system". A huge number of migrants have arrived in the UK this year. So far this year, there have been almost 40,000 arrivals in Kent - with nearly 1,000 crossing the Channel on Saturday alone.

Writing in different languages is seen scrawled on the walls above a row of plastic chairs, fixed to the floor. The BBC understands the facility is used to process unaccompanied asylum-seeking children. The government has come under huge pressure to tackle the rise in small boat crossings and to speed up the processing of migrants already in the UK. 

Home Secretary Suella Braverman has been accused by opposition parties of ignoring legal advice that said she had to source additional hotel accommodation to prevent overcrowding at the centre. Ms Braverman rejected the accusations. The home secretary was also accused of using inflammatory language, after saying southern England was facing an "invasion" of migrants during a heated House of Commons session. The Refugee Council said her language was "appalling, wrong and dangerous". 

Her immigration minister Mr Jenrick later said politicians must be careful with their language around migration issues. And the prime minister's official spokesman said Rishi Sunak told his cabinet at a meeting on Tuesday that the UK would "always be a compassionate, welcoming country". Meanwhile, counter-terror police have taken over the investigation into an attack the firebombing of an immigration processing centre in Dover in Kent on Sunday. Detectives have said Andrew Leak, 66, from High Wycombe in Buckinghamshire, likely carried out the attack in "some form of hate-filled grievance" before killing himself.

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