News

The government spent nearly a third less on hotels to house asylum seekers between April 2024 and March 2025, according to ...
An investigation by the Mail on Sunday into the true scale of serious crime committed by migrants living in hotels in communities across Britain, revealed that at least 312 asylum seekers have been ...
The Home Office has launched an immediate probe after the scale of the migrant crimewave blighting Britain was exposed. It is claimed at least 312 asylum seekers receiving bed and board courtesy of ...
Because the usual asylum accommodation capacity has been exceeded, the Home Office has had to increasingly rely on leasing hotel rooms. In March 2023, according to a Commons Library report, around ...
HUNDREDS of asylum seekers living in taxpayer-funded hotels have appeared in court charged with criminal offences including rape, robbery and GBH, a Sun investigation has found.  Court ...
Hundreds of asylum seekers who have been housed in taxpayer-funded hotels have appeared in court charged with criminal ...
Asylum seekers sent to Rwanda will stay in a hotel with a football pitch and bedrooms with prayer rugs if migrant flights go ahead.. Now that the Government's Rwanda Bill has passed, the Prime ...
Taxpayers were paying £6 million a day in hotels for asylum seekers, ... showing that it would cost £169,000 per person to send an asylum seeker to Rwanda—£63,000 more per person than ...
The money is meant for Rwanda to house the refugees in specially built hostels and hotels. Each asylum seeker to Rwanda is expected cost, on average, $213,450, according to the British government.
Those against the plans to send asylum seekers to Rwanda have cited the country's record on human rights. More than 160 organisations opposed the plans in April and protests over the flights continue.
LONDON — A British court ruled Thursday that a plan to send asylum-seekers on a one-way trip to Rwanda is unlawful, delivering a blow to the Conservative government’s pledge to stop migrants ...
With the contentious Rwanda plan in disarray, experts say the U.K. government should focus on a huge backlog of asylum cases, including 50,000 people in hotels.