‘We need your help’: young girl throws note over fence at Manston

Letter in a bottle from overcrowded Kent processing centre compares facilities to prison and says sick people are held there

A note thrown over the fence by a young girl at the Manston processing centre begging for help has compared facilities to a prison and claimed that pregnant women and sick people were being held there.

Witnesses said they saw security guards at the site ushering detainees back inside when members of the press were walking by the fence. The girl was among a group of children who broke past them at the controversial Kent centre where concerns are growing over the mental health of people detained for weeks in cramped and unhygienic conditions.

The letter was addressed to “journalists, organisations, everyone”. It said 50 families had been held at Manston, a disused airfield site near Ramsgate, for 30 days.

“We are in a difficult life now … Some of us very sick,” it said, adding that some pregnant women are held there and “they don’t do anything for them. We really need your help.”

The letter also claimed there was a disabled child at the site. “He’s really bad, they don’t even care about him … It’s not easy for someone who has children. There are a lot of children, they shouldn’t be here. They should be in a school, not prison,” it said.

The letter, which was in a bottle, added that the food made them sick. “We got no phone, no money … We want to talk to you but they don’t even let us go outside.”

It comes amid an outcry at the treatment of asylum seekers at Manston. The local MP, Roger Gale, said he has been told by ministers that the total number held within the facility will be cut from 4,100 on Monday to 1,500 by the weekend. However the immigration minister, Robert Jenrick, appearing on ITV’s Peston programme, said on Wednesday night there were still around 3,500 people there.

Rishi Sunak said his government was getting to grips with the problems at the Kent centre, but admitted that “not enough” asylum claims are being processed.

The bottle thrown by a young girl at Manston processing facility, containing a letter addressed to ‘journalists, organisations, everyone’.
The bottle thrown by a young girl at Manston processing facility, containing a letter addressed to ‘journalists, organisations, everyone’. Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA

Gale, the MP for North Thanet who on Monday accused Suella Braverman of deliberately failing to find alternative accommodation for people at Manston, said coaches were now arriving to take migrants away.

“Robert Jenrick has got a firm grip on this since he visited Manston with me on Sunday. He has already reversed the perverse decision not to find more hotels for the people at Manston.

“I’m told that around 600 people were moved out of Manston on Tuesday, and another 600 are due to go today. The figure is supposed to be down to 1,500 by the weekend,” he said.

The Guardian revealed on Wednesday that the Home Office had bussed asylum seekers from Manston into central London and left them at Victoria railway station without accommodation or warm clothing. The group of 11 people were stranded on Tuesday evening with nowhere to stay, without winter coats, many of them in flip-flops, according to volunteers with the Under One Sky homelessness charity, who provided them with emergency supplies of food and clothes.

Kevin Mills, a branch secretary for PCS union which represents border force staff, said his members working at the site have become increasingly concerned over the wellbeing of those held there.

The letter thrown over the fence.
The letter thrown over the fence. Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA

“There is a real worry for the mental health and wellbeing of the people held there. Being there in that environment and in those conditions must take its toll. They can see that it is a problem for people who have already been through a lot to get here,” he said.

The potentially unlawful conditions at Manston has exposed those working there to legal action by asylum seekers and even criminal investigation.

Mills said: “It is like a simmering pot ready to boil over. The staff’s greatest concern is that if there is a major violent incident, they will have to call the police who could take a while to get there.”

In parliament, the prime minister backed Braverman’s handling of the issue, saying she has taken “significant steps” to address the problem of overcrowding at Manston.

In a further development, the new human rights head at the UN has condemned Braverman’s claim that southern England faces an “invasion” of asylum seekers as “horrible” and “dehumanising”.

On Monday, Braverman told MPs she was serious about “stopping the invasion” on England’s south coast, while referring to people who travel across the Channel in small boats and seek asylum.

Volker Türk, who became UN high commissioner for human rights two weeks ago, said such terms were not appropriate.

“We will really have to work very strongly (so) that it doesn’t poison … issues that are about human beings,” he said.

A Home Office spokesperson said: “Manston remains resourced and equipped to process migrants securely and we will provide alternative accommodation as soon as possible.”

Contributor

Rajeev Syal

The GuardianTramp

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