Asylum seekers set to be removed from Essex hotel as council granted temporary injunction

The Bell Hotel in Epping's been the focus of protests over the past few weeks.

The Bell Hotel in Epping, Essex.
Author: Luke Reevey/Callum Parke and Nina Massey (PA)Published 19th Aug 2025
Last updated 19th Aug 2025

Asylum seekers are set to be removed from an Essex hotel after a council was granted a temporary High Court injunction blocking them from being housed there.

Epping Forest District Council had asked a judge to issue an interim injunction stopping migrants from being accommodated at the Bell Hotel in Epping.

The injunction sought by the council meant the hotel's owner, Somani Hotels Limited, would have had to stop housing asylum seekers there within 14 days.

The hotel has been at the centre of a series of protests in recent weeks after an asylum seeker who was staying there was charged with sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl.

In a ruling on Tuesday (19 August), Mr Justice Eyre granted the temporary injunction, but extended the time limit by which the hotel must stop housing asylum seekers to September 12.

Several protests and counter-protests have been held in the town since a then-resident at the hotel was accused of trying to kiss a teenage girl.

Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu has denied charges against him and is due to stand trial later this month.

A second man who resides at the hotel, Syrian national Mohammed Sharwarq, has separately been charged with seven offences, while several other men have been charged over disorder outside the hotel.

The council said last week it was seeking an injunction due to "unprecedented levels of protest and disruption" in connection with asylum seeker accommodation.

Chris Whitbread, leader of the council, said the situation "cannot go on" but the Government "is not listening".

He added: “I am delighted. This is great news for our residents.

"The last few weeks have placed an intolerable strain on our community but today we have some great news.

"For the first time in weeks we can see a chink of light at the end of the tunnel.

“This is not the end of the matter. Having obtained an interim provision the next stage is for the council to return to the court and seek a permanent injunction.

“Home Office policy ignores the issues and concerns of local residents that the council represents.

"Today we have made a step towards redressing the imbalance and showing that local people do have some say, whatever the Home Office thinks.”

At a hearing on Friday (15 August), barristers for the council said that the site's "sole lawful use" was as a hotel and that Somani Hotels had breached planning rules by using it to house asylum seekers.

Philip Coppel KC, for the authority, said the situation was "wholly unacceptable" and provided a "feeding ground for unrest".

He said: "There has been what can be described as an increase in community tension, the catalyst of which has been the use of the Bell Hotel to place asylum seekers."

Mr Coppel continued: "It is not the asylum seekers who are acting unlawfully. It is the defendant, by allowing the hotel to be used to house asylum seekers."

He added: "It really could not be much worse than this."

Piers Riley-Smith, for Somani Hotels, said that "disagreement with Government policy" did not justify a "draconian" injunction and that there would be "hardship" caused to the company and those housed at the hotel.

He also said that contracts to house asylum seekers were a "financial lifeline" for the hotel, which was only 1% full in August 2022, when it was open to paying customers.

Mr Riley-Smith said: "It is clear that recent protests have expanded far beyond the local community and have gone into concerns about wider ideological and political issues from those outside the community.

"Those particular ideological, non-community concerns are not relevant to planning."

Chris Philp MP, Shadow Home Secretary, said: “This ruling is a moment of relief for the people of Epping.

"Residents should never have had to fight their own government just to feel safe in their own town.

“Local residents have every right to feel safe in their own streets and every right to object when their community is treated as a dumping ground.

“This whole episode is the direct result of Labour’s decision to throw open Britain’s borders and tear up the deterrents the Conservatives put in place.

"The Conservatives will remove all illegal arrivals immediately and put a proper deterrent in place so that towns like Epping are never put in this position again.”

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