Overcrowding, delays and disease – it is crucial that the Home Office learns from the lessons of the past as it proceeds with migrant camp plans at RAF Scampton.
The future of the retired airbase has been in the spotlight following plans to use it as a site to house people claiming asylum.
The backlog has spiralled out of control, topping 166,000 – a record high – in recent weeks.
The use of hotels in Skegness and Boston has proved controversial, prompting the Home Office to turn to one of Lincolnshire’s retired airbases, RAF Scampton.
However this large-scale detention centre will raise spectres of the government’s Manston migrant centre, which closed amid fears of overcrowding and disease.
Lessons to learn from Manston migrant centre
| Photo: Guardian News via YouTube
Manston, a former military base in Kent, became a national news story when it opened in February 2022 as a processing centre to deal with the growing number of migrants arriving in the UK via boats.
The plan was for migrants to be held there for short periods of time while security and identity checks took place – but the reality was far from this vision.
Home Office plans were for the site to have around 1,600 people passing through it each day, and for checks to be completed in under 24 hours.
However, a local Conservative MP visited the site in October to find that around 4,000 migrants were being kept in cramped conditions for long periods of time.
Claims were made that migrants had been sleeping on cardboard due to a lack of beds, prompting an outbreak of diphtheria at the centre.
Home Secretary Suella Braverman.
The Home Office said that a migrant who died in hospital on November 19, following a time being held at Manston, may have been a result of diphtheria – and just three days later the site was empty.
The emptying of Manston prompted a sharp rise in the use of hotels to house asylum seekers, with Skegness being a prominently used area for this scheme.
East Lindsey District Council, along with Boston and Skegness MP Matt Warman, claimed that they weren’t given enough notice by the Home Office – similarly to the situation at Scampton.
This recent revelation at RAF Scampton is not the first time the Home Office have allegedly gone behind the backs of local authorities to push through their immigration policy plans – and it is imperative that the same mistakes aren’t made inside the base itself, should it go ahead.
Morton Hall: Home Office’s last RAF site turned detention centre in Lincolnshire
Morton Hall in Swinderby, near Lincoln. | Photo: Home Office
Lincolnshire has previous history with a former military base turning into an immigration centre, and the outcome was a damning one.
Morton Hall was originally an RAF Base before it was converted into a prison and opened in 1985. It was re-fitted to a semi-open women’s prison in 2001, but a decade later it became an immigration removal centre for those awaiting deportation.
A report from the Home Affairs Committee in 2019 found that the Home Office had been “utterly failing” in its responsibility to oversee safe and humane practices for those at the site.
The government faced intense scrutiny at this time, as the then-Home Secretary Amber Rudd was barred from her 2018 attempts to deport a witness of one of these deaths before they could present evidence.
Morton Hall ceased operations as an immigration removal centre in July 2021 and was reverted back to a prison later that year.
While the situations at Morton Hall and RAF Scampton fall under different circumstances, the Home Office will be keen to ensure that scandals of this nature do not reemerge at Scampton.
Reaction to Scampton plans
The Home Office and Home Secretary Suella Braverman’s proposals have been widely condemned across the local community, not least by Lincolnshire MPs and councillors.
The village of Scampton – population 1,358 – would be smaller than the 1500 asylum seekers that will be housed at the RAF base.
Lincoln MP Karl McCartney called it “wrong” and vows not to support any government plans to house asylum seekers at RAF Scampton.
Gainsborough MP Sir Edward Leigh objected to the plans for asylum seekers at RAF Scampton | Photo: Parliament.TV
The news came just hours after West Lindsey District Council unveiled plans to purchase RAF Scampton as part of a £300 million redevelopment.
Leader of the council Owen Bierley said the site would be “unsustainable” for migrants, commenting: “Any suggestion that the site might be used, albeit on short or medium term, to house asylum seekers would immediately jeopardise those plans.”
There are suggestions that these proposals are not just an insult to the servicemen and women of RAF Scampton’s past, but also the local community of Scampton and surrounding villages and towns.
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Exciting news for MyLocal app users and The Lincolnite readers! Our latest update is now available to download from your app store and comes packed with the best local news experience you can enjoy.
Revamped News Feed: Enjoy faster loading times and smoother scrolling that make catching up on local news a breeze.
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