Cameroon Opposition Figure Faces Court Action Concerning Post-Election Violence, Government Declares
-
- By Summer Wright
- 08 May 2026
Asylum organisations have portrayed proposals to accommodate thousands of asylum seekers in a pair of unused military sites as impractical and excessively pricey as community discontent grows.
The official body has announced that two barracks: one in the Scottish city and Crowborough training camp in East Sussex, will be employed to house around 900 men for now. Authorities are striving to locate further locations.
The facilities were earlier employed to house Afghan families removed during the withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021 while they were relocated to different locations. This arrangement concluded earlier this year.
Representatives say the initial group will be the first of as many as 10,000 individuals whom the department is hoping to accommodate on army facilities as it works with the defence ministry to locate several more vacant sites.
The chief executive of a prominent refugee organisation stated that proposals to house such significant quantities in military facilities were tried by the previous government and failed.
"These plans announced recently by the authorities to shelter 10,000 applicants seeking refugee status on military sites are impractical, overly costly and highly complicated operationally," he asserted.
The official suggested that the government could cease the utilization of commercial lodging soon, without turning to military facilities, by putting in place a one-off scheme that would give authorization to reside for a specific duration – undergoing comprehensive security checks – to people from states highly likely to be approved as refugees.
"This system would allow people who will ultimately remain in the UK to be able to get on with their lives, obtaining employment and contributing to their local areas," the representative continued.
A different group head stated the present administration was failing to keep its commitment to end the utilization of military facilities to accommodate applicants, leaving the citizens to escalating expenditure.
"Opening further sites will only act to cause additional harm more people who have already endured traumas such as war and abuse. And, as government audits have outlined in regarding other locations, they are more expensive than the hotels they aim to take the place of when you account for the extremely high setup costs of such locations," the official commented.
The regional authority has condemned the UK government of neglecting to evaluate the regional consequences of transferring hundreds of refugee applicants to army sites in the centre of the city.
In a firmly expressed declaration, local authorities stated it had frequently requested the official body for confirmation of its plans to employ Cameron barracks, which is close to tourist attractions such as Inverness castle, as temporary accommodation for asylum seekers.
A unified declaration from the local authority's leadership released on recently commented: "The council are waiting for further information on how this location was chosen over other potential locations and how community cohesion will be sustained given the significant quantity of asylum seekers proposed compared to the community residents.
"The main issue is the impact this plan will have on local integration given the scale of the arrangements as they presently exist. This location is a relatively small area, but the possible consequences locally and across the larger area seems not to have been evaluated by the national authorities."
By recent months, approximately 32,000 individuals were being housed in temporary lodging, reduced from a peak of more than 56,000 in 2023 but a significant number more than at the equivalent time the previous year.
Expected expenses of government shelter arrangements for 2019 to 2029 have more than tripled from a substantial amount to £15.3bn after what government groups termed a dramatic increase in requirements.
A government minister hinted on Tuesday that the price of transferring people to the sites could be more than accommodating them in temporary lodging.
Questioned about whether it would be more expensive, the minister told media that "the public want to see those temporary accommodations shut down".
"We're considering what's achievable and, in particular situations, those bases may be a alternative expense to commercial lodging, but I think we need to reflect the public mood on this. Asylum commercial lodgings must be shut down," the minister stated.
A seasoned casino analyst with over a decade of experience in online gambling, specializing in slot machine reviews and player strategy.