Home Office officials warn of risk to child refugees in hotels
Home Office
officials have privately warned ministers that the decision to put
unaccompanied child refugees in hotels risks exposing them to sex offenders.
The
department had resorted to block-booking hotels after becoming overwhelmed by
the number of child refugees crossing the Channel in small boats. However,
officials have expressed significant concerns over the welfare of children
placed in the Stade Court hotel in Hythe, Kent, and the Langfords hotel in
Hove, East Sussex.
Next month it
will become illegal to house children in hotels but the Home Office has booked
the hotels “indefinitely”, suggesting that it is planning to continue doing so.
A source
said: “Home Office officials are very worried something is going to go wrong
and have warned ministers. They are worried that there’s not sufficient
support. Kids are getting very depressed and something could go wrong.
“There
is a major risk of a safeguarding incident such as a kid attempting suicide,
kids going missing, absconding or disappearing.
“Sex
offenders could be operating in these hotels — the Home Office has no
oversight. We’ve heard many times before how kids who are placed in
inappropriate accommodation are groomed. And this is a seaside town.”
One of the
hotels has written to the Home Office asking for extra clothes and activities
for the children at the hotel because they are “bored with nothing to do”.
Another
source compared the lack of support for children in the hotels to “putting
Covid patients in a Nightingale hospital but providing staff with no medical
equipment”.
More than 120
unaccompanied children arrived in small boats last month. They were among more
than 3,000 migrants who crossed the Channel in July — a third of this year’s
total number of crossings so far.
Home Office
officials are also said to be urging Priti Patel, the home secretary, to force
councils to help look after unaccompanied children. The department took over
responsibility for children arriving in small boats after Kent county council
declared its social services were full in mid-June.
Patel
announced an overhaul of the National Transfer Scheme in June in an effort to
persuade other councils to share the burden of looking after unaccompanied
child refugees.
She rebuffed
calls to make it mandatory and instead attempted to encourage local authorities
to “step up and play their part” by offering them a share of £20 million.
However, she admitted last month that councils were “reluctant” to come forward.
Out of the
400 unaccompanied child refugees that Kent county council has taken into its
care, 42 have been distributed to other local authorities.
Government
sources say Patel is under “increasing pressure” from officials within her own
department to make the National Transfer Scheme mandatory.
A government
spokesman said: “We have had to use temporary accommodation to manage demand
but we are determined to end the use of hotels as soon as possible and our
Nationality and Borders bill will fix the broken asylum system.
“The
Department for Education and Home Office are working closely together to ensure
that the needs of newly arriving unaccompanied asylum-seeking children are met
and that permanent placements are secured for them at the earliest opportunity.
“We are working with local public health bodies to ensure appropriate health requirements are in place and all hotels have staff on-site 24/7 to keep unaccompanied asylum-seeking children safe