Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jun 25
UK Plans 3 Military Sites for 3,750 Asylum Seekers as Hotel Use Falls to 170
Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jun 25

UK Plans 3 Military Sites for 3,750 Asylum Seekers as Hotel Use Falls to 170

3 articles · Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jun 25

Summary

  • Three former military sites in Bicester, Barnham and Linton-on-Ouse could house about 3,750 asylum seekers, while the government also wants to extend use of camps in Crowborough and Wethersfield.
  • Twenty more asylum hotels were shut on Thursday, cutting the total to 170 as Labour tries to end a system that cost £2.1 billion in 2024-25 and once housed 56,000 people.
  • As of March, 20,885 asylum seekers—21% of the total—were still in hotels, while 72,768 were in other accommodation awaiting decisions on their claims.
  • The expansion faces political and local resistance: Conservatives demanded faster deportations, the Red Cross warned barracks can retraumatise refugees, and a planned Inverness site was dropped after protests.
  • The move comes ahead of an Immigration and Asylum Bill due next week that would increase forced removals, with Labour already under pressure after 41,472 small-boat arrivals in 2025.

Insights

If watchdogs warn military bases can be costlier than hotels, is the UK's new asylum plan actually about saving money?
With a 121,000 case backlog in tribunals, is the focus on accommodation a distraction from the system's core processing failure?