A man pops a bottle of bubbly to celebrate the High Court decision
Nigel Farage has declared victory after hearing news that asylum seekers will be moved from an Essex hotel.
Epping Forest District Council was granted a temporary High Courtinjunction stopping migrants from being accommodated at the Bell Hotel in Epping.
The injunction means the hotel’s owner,Somani Hotels Limited,has to stop housing asylum seekers there within 14 days.
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage hailed the High Court decision in Epping as a ‘victory’ and said he hoped it ‘provides inspiration to others across the country’,while the shadow home secretary argued that residents have ‘every right to object’ to people being housed in their area.
Mr Farage indicated that the 12 councils where Reform UK was the largest party would consider legal challenges following Tuesday’s ruling.
Who owns the Bell Hotel in Epping?
The Bell Hotel in Epping is owned by Somani Hotels Limited.
Filings on Companies House suggest Somani Hotels Limited have owned the Bell Hotel since 2003.
Piers Riley-Smith,representing Somani Hotels,had argued that an injunction would cause the owners ‘financial harm’.
‘It is clear that recent protests have expanded far beyond the local community and have gone into concerns about wider ideological or political issues,by those from outside the community,’ he told the court.
Ethiopian man Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu,38,has been charged with three counts of sexual assault,one count of inciting a girl to engage in sexual activity,and one count of harassment without violence.
A second man who resides at the hotel,Syrian national Mohammed Sharwarq,has separately been charged with seven offences.
The council said last week it was seeking an injunction due to ‘unprecedented levels of protest and disruption’ in connection with the hotel.
Triumphant residents gather outside The Bell Hotel,Epping,Essex.(Pictures: Jacqueline Lawrie/LNP)
At a hearing on Friday,barristers for the council said that the site’s ‘sole lawful use’ was as a hotel and that Somani Hotels had breached planning rules by using it to house asylum seekers.
Philip Coppel KC said: ‘There has been what can be described as an increase in community tension,the catalyst of which has been the use of the Bell Hotel to place asylum seekers.
Demonstrators were met with counter-protestors (Picture: LNP)
He stressed: ‘It is not the asylum seekers who are acting unlawfully. It is the defendant,by allowing the hotel to be used to house asylum seekers.’
Piers Riley-Smith,for Somani Hotels,said the disagreement with government policy doesn’t ‘justify a draconian injunction’.
He also said that contracts to house asylum seekers were a ‘financial lifeline’ for the hotel,which was only 1% full in August 2022,when it was open to paying customers.
Authorities were previously investigating a ‘racially motivated’ attack against security staff at a migrant hotel after video of the bloodied workers went viral.
Two hotel workers who had just got off the bus to begin their shift at the Essex hotel were ‘set upon by a group of men’,mistaking them for guests at the hotel.
In the vile video,men shout,‘Go home,you c***,’ at the hotel security worker who is heavily bleeding from the face.
Another woman rages: ‘That’s what happens when you’re an illegal immigrant’ at the worker who is escorted into the hotel with blood spattered across his white shirt.
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