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MP Kemi Badenoch calls for prison at Wethersfield
MP Kemi Badenoch calls for prison at Wethersfield

BBC News

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • BBC News

MP Kemi Badenoch calls for prison at Wethersfield

A prison should have been built at the former RAF air base at Wethersfield in Essex, MP Kemi Badenoch Conservative leader said her party promised to turn it into a prison during the 2019 election and "that should have been built by now". However, the site, which has housed hundreds of single male asylum seekers since July 2023, was set to be expanded under the Labour government's plans to end the use of asylum hotels and save money.A government spokesperson said: "No decision has been made on the long-term future of this site." 'Need more prison places' While the North West Essex MP visited Carver Barracks, she said: "I know many people in the area did not necessarily want a prison, but the people in the surrounding area of Essex did want one and we have to do the right thing..."We need more prison places. I stood on a manifesto to deliver that." The last government produced proposals for two prisons at Wethersfield in 2021, which could have housed 3,430 government at the time said it would create local jobs and help meet demand for prison was local opposition with campaigners arguing the site was too remote and lacked the road infrastructure for the prisons to be government instead used a special development order to use the former RAF base to house migrants, to reduce the use of Labour government announced plans to build four new prisons by 2031 and increase capacity in jails by 14,000 places; however, Wethersfield was not part of the current prisons BBC understood that asylum facilities, such as Wethersfield and another in Huddersfield, were under consideration for came after Chancellor Rachel Reeves pledged to stop using taxpayer-funded hotels by 2029 in her Spending Review, saying this would save £1bn. One of the ways the Home Office hoped to achieve this was by moving asylum seekers from hotels into cheaper alternative forms of accommodation. Follow Essex news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

Fury over bid to expand Britain's biggest asylum seeker camp: 'Threatened' villagers living next to ex-RAF base fear arrival of hundreds more 'intimidating' young men to quiet Essex countryside
Fury over bid to expand Britain's biggest asylum seeker camp: 'Threatened' villagers living next to ex-RAF base fear arrival of hundreds more 'intimidating' young men to quiet Essex countryside

Daily Mail​

time17-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Daily Mail​

Fury over bid to expand Britain's biggest asylum seeker camp: 'Threatened' villagers living next to ex-RAF base fear arrival of hundreds more 'intimidating' young men to quiet Essex countryside

Residents near Britain's biggest asylum seeker camp fear controversial plans to expand its capacity will put more strain on their quiet village. Wethersfield air base in Essex currently houses around 500 migrants but this is set to increase as part of Labour's pledge to end the use of hotels. Chancellor Rachel Reeves pledged last week that all asylum seekers would be moved out of hotel accommodation by the time of the next general election, due in 2029. Latest figures show £3.1 billion was spent on housing asylum seekers in hotels in 2023-24, out of a total asylum support bill of £4.7 billion. Using former military bases like Wethersfield - which has an overall capacity of 800 - is considered cheaper than paying for hotels. Yet local residents in Wethersfield village are up in arms about the prospect of the site being expanded. Celia Harris, 76, and her husband Robert, 77, live close enough to the camp to hear conversations from behind the fence from their garden. Celia, a retired cleaner, said: 'We did all the protests against it. We did not feel then and still do not feel that it's an appropriate place. 'They've got to stop them coming in the first place. We're not racist. But why is taxpayers' money being spent on them when our winter fuel allowance has been stopped?' Alan McKenzie, head of campaign group Stop Wethersfield Airbase Prison (SWAP), was infuriated by the news. 'If they are intending to increase the capacity in Wethersfield, it would be another folly on the part of the government - It's already been shown not to be value for money,' he told the BBC. 'If they're talking about increasing the accommodation further, then it's sheer people get unhappy up there, it's a very enclosed environment, it's a long way to the centre of Wethersfield village where there are no facilities.' Personal assistant Christine Blake, 72, was also angered by plans and said: 'I'm a single female, there are many single females in this village, and we all feel threatened and concerned.' Retired office administrator Melody Temperley and her husband Alan, both 77, live with their extended family in bungalows on a large plot of land near the camp. The couple said the camp had made it much harder to sell property. Melody said: 'We can never sell this property - they said it should be worth £900,000 but now we can't sell it.' Asked what she thought about the idea of using the camp to move asylum seekers out of hotels, she said: 'They're not going to settle in a camp after hotel life. 'I don't think they should be here at all. If they increased the number of people in the camp we would have a lot more men standing about doing nothing. 'People feel intimidated. They should process them much quicker and then they could be integrated. But then they're going to take all the social housing.' Charles, who is in his 70s, didn't want to give his name due to fears of being labelled racist. 'It's quite intimidating because I am living next door to many hundreds of men who are allowed out to roam wherever they like including after dark,' he said. 'It's left me feeling vulnerable. I have put a big steel gate up. It's the threat of young men and having them shouting. 'It would be better if they were prevented from coming in the first place. I feel like the politicians have let us down.' Wethersfield parish councillor Nick Godley lives with wife Mair in the village centre. Nick, 75, believes asylum seekers would be better off housed elsewhere, but insisted he has never had any problems with them. He said: 'There's no hypocrite like a politician. When they opened this asylum camp the Labour party was against it and now they're all in favour of it. 'Setting aside whatever people feel about the way these guys get in and whether they should be here or not, sticking them in an old camp in the middle of nowhere is not good for anyone. 'Nobody can sell their house. It is affecting people's way of life. 'However, the asylum seekers are not causing any harm. Whatever happens in the village that's unfortunate, the guys up there [asylum seekers] get the blame. Sometimes it's true, but mostly it's not. 'I never felt unsafe for one moment [near the camp]. They are incredibly polite.' Earlier this year, four former Wethersfield residents brought legal action against the Home Office for their stay there between July 2023 and February 2024. File photo John Sutcliffe, 77, and his wife Simone, 78, live next door to the camp with their dog Remy. John, a retired mechanic, said: 'All I know is they make a right noise. I walk down the main lane and there's a deep ditch with a plastic sheet in it and body wipes and someone has been using it as a toilet. Why? 'They've got to go somewhere and the only thing is to stop them coming.' Simone, who used to run her own curtain-making business, said: 'You cannot take them out of four-star hotels and put them in temporary accommodation like that. 'They are all going to be up in arms aren't they? Living in isolation like that is what brings trouble.' Any expansion to Wethersfield would against Sir Keir Starmer's election pledge to close it. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper herself insisted last year that the site could not be 'seen as either a sustainable solution for housing asylum seekers nor value for money for the taxpayer'. The mooted expansion of the former airbase and the separate site in Huddersfield - which consists of a 650-capacity former student accommodation block bought by the Home Office last year - was revealed by the BBC. In response to the reports, a Home Office spokesman said the government was seeking to develop 'a more sustainable and cost-effective asylum accommodation system'. 'Our use of any property or Home Office-owned site will be used in line with the permissions set by planning permissions,' they added. More than 30,000 asylum seekers, many of whom arrived illegally in small boats, are currently housed in about 200 hotels across Britain. Earlier this year, four former Wethersfield residents brought legal action against the Home Office for their stay there between July 2023 and February 2024. They claimed officials acted unlawfully by housing them at the site when it was 'not suitable' because of their characteristics which included being victims of torture and human trafficking or being disabled. The Home Office opposed the challenge, saying its allocation system was 'not incapable of being operated lawfully'. But High Court judge Mr Justice Mould backed the four men's claim and accepted the site had not been a 'suitable' place to house them. He said: 'In this case, the only conclusion I am able to reach on evidence is that the defendant did not attempt to assess the equalities impacts of the proposed policy change.'

Mixed views on Wethersfield expansion plans
Mixed views on Wethersfield expansion plans

BBC News

time16-06-2025

  • Politics
  • BBC News

Mixed views on Wethersfield expansion plans

The Wethersfield asylum base could be expanded under new government plans. The BBC asked residents near Braintree, in Essex, what they thought about the news. 'I feel for them' Susan Duffin, 69, said there is not enough to do in the village, and while they were "no trouble", asylum seekers needed to be in bigger towns with more amenities."It's a totally unsuitable place for people to live who have come from another country, another culture; they need to be where there is some access to life in general, so I just feel for them," she said. "They're no trouble to us, but they're just wandering around, really not knowing what to do with themselves, and that's not right." 'Sheer madness' Alan McKenzie, chair of campaign group Stop Wethersfield Airbase Prison (SWAP), was exasperated by the news."If they are intending to increase the capacity in Wethersfield, it would be another folly on the part of the government - It's already been shown not to be value for money," he said."If they're talking about increasing the accommodation further, then it's sheer people get unhappy up there, it's a very enclosed environment, it's a long way to the centre of Wethersfield village where there are no facilities."He added: "I think locally everybody would want the government to adhere to what they've promised in the past, that the air base will be shut as soon as practically possible." 'Human beings, not aliens' Sheila Collar, 88, was enjoying the sun with Barbara Boxall, Collar said: "They've got to live somewhere, we've got to put them somewhere and they are human beings, not aliens.""They haven't worried us at all. We were very concerned when we knew it was coming, but they haven't bothered Wethersfield in the village."Ms Boxall added: "The asylum seekers have not been any problem to us at the moment… we don't see them at all really," 'Send them to Rwanda' Retiree Ian Dalziel, 69, was disgusted at the prospect of the site backed the Rwanda scheme, which was brought in by the previous Conservative government and aimed to send people who arrived illegally in the UK to the East African country. It was scrapped when Labour came into power after winning the 2024 general election."They shouldn't even be in this country, let alone being out in the countryside here, where there is nothing for them," he said. "It's just free handouts."Rwanda, that's where they should be. Put them up in that nice big hotel we paid for, which is empty. Stick them there, that's all there is to it." 'Prefer families over young men' Pruning her front garden in Finchingfield, Christine Ashford-Hodges, 78, said she would have been happy to help refugee families settle in, but is less comfortable with the high proportion of "young men" at the site."Not that I've seen them doing anything they shouldn't do, but it's intimidating sometimes, and it worries me there's going to be even more," she said."The traffic flow has certainly increased because obviously... staff, food, maintenance." 'Threatened and concerned' Personal assistant Christine Blake, 72, was watering her plants outside her home in Wethersfield."I'm a single female, there are many single females in this village, and we all feel threatened and concerned," she said."I have dogs which I walk and have walked for many years around the fields here, feeling completely safe and at home, but now it is a concern for all of us."It's not the right place, it's too remote and we really can't deal with it."She added: "I really and truly feel that the government needs to take control of the whole situation, never mind placing asylum seekers somewhere else, the whole situation needs to be dealt with." What does the government say? This week, the BBC revealed that Wethersfield was one of the sites that was being considered for an extension.A Home Office spokesperson said it was looking to deliver a "more sustainable and cost-effective asylum accommodation system", after Chancellor Rachel Reeves said that stopping the use of hotels would save £1bn. Follow Essex news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

Asylum sites to be expanded as ministers bid to end hotel use
Asylum sites to be expanded as ministers bid to end hotel use

BBC News

time15-06-2025

  • Politics
  • BBC News

Asylum sites to be expanded as ministers bid to end hotel use

Large asylum seeker sites like Wethersfield air base in Essex are set to be expanded under plans to end the use of asylum hotels, the BBC can Rachel Reeves pledged to stop using taxpayer-funded hotels by 2029 in her Spending Review, saying this would save £ of the ways the Home Office hopes to achieve this is by moving asylum seekers from hotels into cheaper alternative forms of Keir Starmer pledged to close the Wethersfield asylum facility during last year's election campaign, but the BBC understands that site and another in Huddersfield are among those under consideration for extensions. A Home Office spokesperson said the government was "making strong strides to deliver a more sustainable and cost-effective asylum accommodation system"."This includes ending the use of hotels, testing new locally-led models, and working closely with local authorities and other departments to ensure a fairer, more efficient approach," they added."Our use of any property or Home Office-owned site will be used in line with the permissions set by planning permissions."The taxpayer cost of asylum hotels has rocketed in recent years, with total accommodation contracts now set to be worth £15.3bn over a 10-year while extending large sites might be cheaper, the move is likely to anger local residents and refugee rights April last year, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said the Wethersfield site couldn't be "seen as either a sustainable solution for housing asylum seekers nor value for money for the taxpayer".Conservative MP Sir James Cleverly, whose Braintree constituency includes Wethersfield, said the existing cap on the number of people living at the facility "was there to protect the safety and security" of constituents, and "those working at and living on the site".Sir James, who became home secretary shortly after the first asylum seekers moved into Wethersfield, said the government plan to potentially expand the site was "disgraceful and shows just how out of touch they are with the concerns of local communities".In March, the High Court found the previous Conservative government's use of Wethersfield to house asylum seekers was unlawful, after three men argued they were living in "prison-like" former RAF base has been housing asylum seekers since 2023. It has a current capacity of 800, but is thought to house closer to 500 people at Home Office contract for the base is held by Clearsprings, whose founder Graham King recently became a billionaire, according to the Sunday Times rich Helen Bamber Foundation, a human rights groups, has previously said that accommodating people at the base causes harm to their physical and mental Dorling, the group's director of policy, told the BBC that Wethersfield "should be closed immediately, not extended".She said: "Housing people, including survivors of torture and trafficking, in an isolated, overcrowded camp reminiscent of an open-air prison, with inadequate healthcare and legal services, is an inhumane way to treat those seeking protection." Savings target A pair of former student accommodation blocks in Huddersfield, acquired by the Home Office last year, could also be buildings, constructed in 2019, have a current capacity of 650 but have never been occupied because of safety extensions to asylum seeker accommodation would be paid for using money earmarked for investment from the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, meaning it could be borrowed without falling foul of the chancellor's strict spending Office figures released last month show that as of March, there were about 100,000 asylum seekers in government-funded accommodation, with about 32,000 of those in hopes to end the use of hotels by reducing small boat crossings, speeding up the asylum application process and moving people into alternative the chancellor's Spending Review, there had been some confusion over what that alternative accommodation might secretary to the Treasury Darren Jones told BBC Newsnight the government would be "upgrading current facilities, which will include some extensions".But on Thursday, the prime minister's official spokesman refused to comment on whether new accommodation would be built.A senior Home Office source has now confirmed to the BBC that while there were no plans for entirely new accommodation blocks, extensions of current facilities will be built and other existing accommodation such as unused student blocks will be £1bn saving which the chancellor said would come from reducing hotel use has already been taken out of the Home Office Home Office has a new target for how much additional asylum accommodation needs to be created to help achieve the saving, but that exact figure is BBC understands that moving around 14,000 asylum seekers from hotels into other forms of accommodation would likely achieve a saving of £1bn.A senior Home Office source said they were "confident" they could save the required money, but acknowledged that failing to hit the target would force the department to ask Reeves for more funding to avoid having to make cuts number of asylum seekers in hotels is far lower than the record figure in 2023, but has increased since Labour came to power last latest statistics go up to March and therefore don't take into account the knock-on effect of increased small boat crossings in the months since.

Runners take to Standish Park for Wethersfield Community Run
Runners take to Standish Park for Wethersfield Community Run

Yahoo

time09-06-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Runners take to Standish Park for Wethersfield Community Run

WETHERSFIELD, Conn. (WTNH) — Runners laced up their shoes and hit the pavement on Sunday for the 24th annual Wethersfield Community Run at Standish Park. The run gave kids a space to find enriching experiences, benefitting the Keane Foundation and the Laura's Garden Foundation. 5K in Waterbury honors veterans and raises money for child abuse prevention 'The two organizations have so much in common, born of two magnificent Wethersfield residents, Dick Keane and my little sister Laura Hart, that it made a lot of sense these foundations present places as well as programming for the Wethersfield community, and to see the turnout here today is proof positive that both organizations are having a positive impact,' Co-Founder, Chairman, and President, Laura's Garden Foundation Steve Kirsche Jr. said. This year's event added a 3K race for parents running with strollers. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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