West Oxfordshire authorities 'not informed' about migrant hotel

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Migrants being brought to DoverImage source, PA Media
Image caption,

Authorities said they could have been better prepared if they had been informed sooner about migrants being moved to west Oxfordshire

Authorities were not given enough notice about the transferral of 100 asylum seekers to a hotel, it has been claimed.

The migrants are currently staying at a west Oxfordshire establishment, having been housed there by the Home Office.

MP Robert Courts said he was unhappy with how the department dealt with the situation and was seeking "urgent answers".

The Home Office described it as a "short-term solution".

Some of the migrants are understood to have come from the beleaguered Manston migrant processing centre, and a third are children.

Mr Courts told the BBC: "I wasn't given any prior consultation or any notification and it is very disappointing."

He added: "I've made clear how unhappy I am about the process that's been carried out on this occasion, but we will have to do everything we can to make sure people are assisted.

"Everything is much better put together if people are given notice in advance."

'Unprepared'

He said immigration minister Robert Jenrick had assured him steps were being taken "to avoid situations like this".

He also said residents were concerned about the "appropriateness" of the hotel being used in such a way, and that the migrants had to be "looked after so local residents are reassured as well".

Andy Graham, leader of West Oxfordshire District Council, said: "The Home Office was organising this arrangement directly with the hotel without any consultation with local councils, so we're really disappointed... we could have been much better prepared."

Mark Goldring, director of Asylum Welcome, said: "We know that the local councils, health services, and emergency services weren't warned significantly in advance and didn't have a chance to prepare, so the work is being done... but it's really starting after people arrived rather than before."

The Home Office said it would not comment on "operational arrangements for individual sites".

But it said the use of hotels to house asylum seekers was "unacceptable".

"It's a short-term solution and we are working hard with local authorities to find appropriate accommodation," it added.

Asylum seekers were also recently moved to a hotel in Oxford. MPs were told last month that the UK was spending almost £7m a day on hotels to house asylum seekers across the country.

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