Further charges after 'violence' at asylum hotel

A police officer in black and a yellow high-vis jacket stands next to a blue sign reading "The Bell Hotel - restaurant and bar banqueting suite and conference rooms". There are a group of people huddled in the background and a police van in the background.Image source, PA Media
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More than 1,000 people were estimated to have been at The Bell Hotel on Sunday

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Three more men have been charged after alleged violent disorder outside a hotel housing asylum seekers.

Protests took place outside The Bell Hotel in Epping, Essex, on Thursday and Sunday, where police officers were injured during clashes.

A 47-year-old and a 36-year-old man, both from the Epping Forest district, were charged with violent disorder on Tuesday, while a 34-year-old man from Wickford was accused of failing to remove a face covering.

They were due to appear before Chelmsford Crown Court on 18 August, Essex Police said.

Officers were granted extra power to force people to remove face coverings on Sunday.

Ch Supt Simon Anslow said: "We will not hesitate to make arrests when criminality takes place."

It followed Waitrose worker Dean Smith, of Madells in Epping, appearing before Chelmsford Magistrates' Court earlier.

The 51-year-old entered no plea to a charge of using or threatening the use of unlawful violence, and was remanded in custody until the August hearing.

Several police officers in dark trousers, yellow high-visibility jackets and riot helmets stand outside The Bell Hotel in Epping. There is a police van on the left hand side of the photo, and a female police officer holding a camera on a monopod. There is blue and purple smoke in the background, and the hotel is blocked off by metal fencing.Image source, PA Media
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Essex Police said the cost of policing the incidents at The Bell Hotel had reached £100,000

District Judge Christopher Williams was told of a WhatsApp group with 600 members who were planning to attend the hotel.

Hundreds of people gathered on Thursday, with a smaller group of people holding a pro-refugee demonstration at the same time.

The peaceful protests "quickly escalated" into violent disorder, prosecutor Elizabeth Connor told the court, with fireworks, eggs and bottles being thrown.

She said more than 100 police officers attended but became "overwhelmed" by the protest.

Ms Connor said Mr Smith attended the protest on Thursday and returned on Sunday, when he was arrested after being identified on several pieces of footage.

Defending Mr Smith, Richard Moughton said his client attended for a "peaceful protest", and on the Thursday he returned home before a police dispersal order was put in place.

A man holds a St George's flag standing in front of a line of armed police officers with yellow high-vis jackets and face shields. There are flats either side of them and police vans behind them.Image source, PA Media

Another protest staged on Sunday was attended by more than 1,000 people, with projectiles thrown towards police vans blocking the hotel entrance.

Mr Smith was the second person to appear before magistrates in connection with protests at the hotel.

Keith Silk, 33, of Torrington Drive in Loughton, Essex, appeared before Southend Magistrates' Court on Monday to deny violent disorder, but entered no plea to another charge of criminally damaging a sign at the hotel by shaking it.

He was released on conditional bail, forbidding him from entering Epping and attending any protest in the UK, and will also appear before Chelmsford Crown Court on 18 August.

The demonstrations followed a man living in the hotel being charged with sexual assault, harassment and inciting a girl to engage in sexual activity.

Hadush Kebatu, 41, from Ethiopia, has denied the offences and was remanded in custody during a hearing on Thursday.

Two Conservative MPs in Essex - Neil Hudson and Alex Burghart - called for the hotel to be closed, while the Tory leader of Epping Forest District Council, Chris Whitbread, described it as a "powder keg" situation.

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