Revealed: child migrants racially abused and threatened with violence at Home Office hotel

Whistleblower tells of threats and illegal detention in fresh revelations about failures that drove children into hands of criminals

Read more: The car drew up. The children got in … a narrow escape from kidnap

Children seeking asylum in the UK were threatened and subjected to racist abuse by staff at a Home Office-run hotel, a whistleblower has claimed as pressure grows on the government to act over the growing crisis in the system.

The source, who worked in the Brighton hotel for more than a year, said that in such an environment of “emotional abuse”, scores of children, who had arrived in the UK without parents or a carer, were driven on to the streets and into the hands of criminals.

An Observer investigation last week that revealed dozens of young people have been kidnapped by gangs from the same hotel, prompting calls for such places to be closed and for a public inquiry.

Child protection sources and a whistleblower working for a Home Office contractor described how youngsters were abducted from the street outside the hotel and bundled into cars. More than 200 children are missing after vanishing from hotels managed by the Home Office.

Another whistleblower has now come forward, claiming that some children in the Brighton hotel were also threatened that their asylum claims would be harmed if they “misbehaved” while others were punished by being detained – illegally – in the hotel for days.

The allegations of violent threats to youngsters – many of whom fled persecution in their home countries and are profoundly traumatised – will add to mounting pressure on Rishi Sunak to intervene and stop the Home Office’s “unlawful” use of hotels for unaccompanied children.

The whistleblower, speaking out after accusing Home Office officials of ignoring his concerns, told the Observer: “I heard staff threatening to throw children out of the window and joking about them going missing.”

He added that when instances of inappropriate staff behaviour were reported, no apparent action was taken by the hotel, one of seven run by the Home Office to look after lone children who were seeking asylum.

“There was a lot of xenophobic stuff, like: ‘Fuck off back to your country.’ Somebody heard one senior staff member calling a child a ‘fucking terrorist’.”

The whistleblower added that staff regularly talked about children being abducted from nearby streets and that the targeting of youngsters was common knowledge.

“We heard things about boys being taken, that this boy got taken by a car, things like that. They went missing. The hotel was unsafe. Everybody knew this was a place of vulnerable asylum seekers, so it became a target.”

Sussex police are investigating a potential trafficking case after three children got into a car outside the Brighton hotel. The car was then driven towards London before police intercepted it. Home Office sources say they have no evidence of children being kidnapped.

The whistleblower added that most children in the hotel appeared to be at high risk of exploitation, with the majority owing money to and in contact with the traffickers and smugglers who arranged their small boat crossing from France.

“A lot owed money to the agencies who got them out of Calais. They have to pay that money off as soon as possible. Their trafficker will have someone who can, for example, get them work in London.”

Since last week’s Observer investigation, pressure has mounted on the government to stop its “dereliction of duty” and adequately safeguard the children. Last week, more than 100 charities demanded that Sunak act to stop the Home Office placing vulnerable youngsters in hotels, which it had no legal basis for doing.

A total of 76 child asylum seekers are missing from the Brighton hotel, with a further 70 unaccounted for from Home Office-run hotels in neighbouring Kent.

Patricia Durr, chief executive of children’s rights organisation Ecpat UK, said the revelations from the whistleblower pointed to a “scandalous and growing child protection failure”.

It was shocking, she added, that a number of the 4,600 unaccompanied children who have passed through Home Office hotels may have encountered staff who, instead of looking after them, “threatened and treated them like they are worthless”.

The group joined calls for a public inquiry to prevent similar mistakes.

The whistleblower added that the quality of food the children were given in the hotel was dire enough for them to want to leave. Produce was frequently out of date, with some ready meals dated March 2021 – four months before the Brighton hotel began accommodating unaccompanied children.

Another factor driving children from the site were “safety plans” designed to keep youngsters from absconding, but which have the opposite effect. Children under a safety plan – those judged to be at most risk of being trafficked – were checked by staff every hour to make sure they were in their room. “But it meant they couldn’t sleep: it was like torture,” said the whistleblower. “A significant proportion of these kids left because they couldn’t sleep.”

In addition, said the whistleblower, although it was illegal, some staff arbitrarily detained children inside. “They said: ‘You were out yesterday, so you can’t go out today.’ They let them think they’re not allowed out.”

A Home Office spokesperson said: We have not received any complaints in relation to these claims. The wellbeing of children in our care is an absolute priority. Robust safeguards are in place to ensure they are safe and supported as we seek urgent placements with a local authority. When issues do arise, we take complaints extremely seriously and they are acted upon quickly.

“In October, the independent immigration watchdog found young people in hotel accommodation unanimously reported feeling safe, happy and treated with respect.”

Contributor

Mark Townsend

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Child asylum seekers detained as adults after UK Home Office ‘alters birth dates’
Unaccompanied child refugees describe attacks in notorious Manston camp after officials ‘ignore or discount’ ID documents

Mark Townsend Home Affairs Editor

27, Nov, 2022 @8:00 AM

Article image
‘They just vanish’: whistleblowers met by wall of complacency over missing migrant children
As scores of youngsters are disappearing from hotels run by the Home Office and being trafficked across the country, sources claims warnings over their safety were ignored

Mark Townsend Home affairs editor

21, Jan, 2023 @6:14 PM

Article image
Child refugees were ‘dumped’ in unsafe hotel, claims Brighton council
Law firm says attempts to evaluate a 15-year-old Afghan held in a hotel had been prevented, breaching the child’s rights

Mark Townsend Home affairs editor

25, Sep, 2021 @3:11 PM

Article image
Revealed: scores of child asylum seekers kidnapped from Home Office hotel
Call for inquiry after Observer investigation uncovers scale of trafficking by criminal gangs

Mark Townsend Home affairs editor

21, Jan, 2023 @6:14 PM

Article image
Home Office ‘mistakes and delays’ mean girl, 4, must stay trapped in Ukraine
Alika has a UK sponsor, and applied for visa in March, but is one of few children left in her Kharkiv neighbourhood

Mark Townsend Home Affairs Editor

24, Jul, 2022 @5:45 AM

Article image
Fears grow over police collecting data from lone child refugees in UK
Welfare groups claim information could be used by Home Office to deport asylum seekers

Mirren Gidda

16, Apr, 2023 @7:00 AM

Article image
Revealed: dozens of vulnerable asylum seekers have died in Home Office housing since 2020
Data shows number of deaths is higher than admitted as experts question safeguarding and fear chances to save lives were missed

Jessica Purkiss, Aaron Walawalkar, Mirren Gidda, Eleanor Rose & Mark Townsend

25, Jun, 2022 @12:00 PM

Article image
Migrants housed in Essex hotel find themselves at mercy of local hostility
Far-right For Britain party leading the charge against asylum-seekers with false claims of ‘crime surge’ in Epping

Mark Townsend in Epping

23, Aug, 2020 @5:20 AM

Article image
Thousands of victims of child trafficking denied right to stay in the UK
New data reveals significant number of young vulnerable people put at risk of deportation by the Home Office

Mark Townsend Home Affairs Editor

17, Oct, 2020 @11:44 AM

Article image
Revealed: Suella Braverman sets Home Office ‘No boats crossing the Channel’ target
New home secretary upsets civil servants with speech on migrants, trashy TV and back-to-office call

Mark Townsend

10, Sep, 2022 @12:00 PM