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    Home»Politics»Epping council wins bid to stop Bell Hotel housing asylum seekers
    Politics

    Epping council wins bid to stop Bell Hotel housing asylum seekers

    By Emma ReynoldsAugust 19, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Epping council wins bid to stop Bell Hotel housing asylum seekers
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    Dominic Casciani

    BBC News, Home and Legal Correspondent•@BBCDomC
    Lewis Adams

    BBC News, Essex

    PA Media A group of police officers in fluorescent tabards speaking into talkback devices and holding riot helmets - there is a large police van in the background at the entrance to a building with a Bell Hotel sign PA Media

    The Bell Hotel has been at the centre of intense protests, and counter-protests over the summer

    Asylum seekers are due to be removed from an Essex hotel after a council was granted a temporary High Court injunction blocking them from being housed there.

    The injunction was sought by Epping Forest District Council to stop migrants being placed at The Bell Hotel in Epping, which is owned by Somani Hotels Limited.

    Thousands of people have protested near the hotel in recent weeks after an asylum seeker living there was charged with sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl in the town.

    Mr Justice Eyre made his judgement after refusing an 11th-hour effort from Home Secretary Yvette Cooper to get the council’s case dismissed.

    All asylum seekers must be moved out of the hotel by 16:00 BST on 12 September, the judge ruled.

    The Home Office had warned the decision would “substantially impact” its ability to house asylum seekers in hotels across the UK.

    Protests staged outside The Bell Hotel have been attended by both people against its use for asylum seekers and those in support of migrant rights.

    But Conservative council leader Chris Whitbread said the repeated demonstrations were escalating tensions in the area and risked causing “irreparable harm”.

    Reacting to the court ruling, he added: “The last few weeks have placed an intolerable strain on our community but today we have some great news.

    “We have seen the protests that started off quite violently become peaceful protests, run by the people of Epping Forest.

    “What I call upon the residents tonight is if they decide to go outside The Bell Hotel, don’t protest, don’t over-celebrate. This is the beginning. It is not the end.”

    The Bell Hotel, a white building, is on the left with an entrance to the right which says The Bell Hotel, Best Western. A tree is in front of the two-storey building with three traffic cones outside.

    Epping Forest District Council applied for the injunction on 12 August

    Sixteen people have been charged with offences relating to disturbances during several protests, which Essex Police said became violent on occasion.

    Representing the council, Philip Coppel KC agreed some protests “have unfortunately been attended by violence and disorder”.

    He said Somani Hotels “did not advise or notify the local planning authority” to seek its views on the use of the site which he argued was not a hotel in the usual sense any more.

    He told the court it was “no more a hotel than a borstal [was] to a young offender”.

    Lawyers for the hotel and home secretary confirmed in court they wished to appeal against the injunction before a full hearing was listed in the autumn.

    It followed a failed last-minute attempt by the Home Office to get the case dismissed.

    Edward Brown KC, for the government, said any injunction could lead to other councils making similar applications.

    “That would aggravate the pressures on the asylum estate,” he added.

    Footage from 17 July showed projectiles being thrown towards police officers

    Reform UK leader Nigel Farage described the ruling as a “victory for parents and concerned residents of Epping”.

    “This community stood up bravely, despite being slandered as far right, and have won. They represent the vast majority of decent people in this country,” he added.

    Protests began outside the building after 41-year-old Hadush Kebatu, from Ethiopia, was charged with sexual assault, harassment and inciting a girl to engage in sexual activity.

    He denied the offences and remained in custody ahead of a two-day trial, due to begin next Tuesday.

    asylum Bell bid council Epping Hotel housing seekers stop wins
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    Emma Reynolds is a senior journalist at Mirror Brief, covering world affairs, politics, and cultural trends for over eight years. She is passionate about unbiased reporting and delivering in-depth stories that matter.

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