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Manston arrivals and processing centre
Manston arrivals and processing centre is a centre used for the processing of migrants who have crossed the English Channel, located on the former site of RAF Manston in Manston, Kent, United Kingdom. Opened in February 2022, it was intended to house around 1,000 to 1,600 people for less than 24 hours at a time, though by autumn 2022 it housed over 4,000 people at a time for up to 33 days.
The site is located three miles inland from Ramsgate, and is largely hidden from public view. As of August 2023[update], outsourcers operating at the site included Management and Training Corporation, Mitie and Interforce. It accommodates both adults and children, featuring a family section which includes facilities for parents with babies and toddlers.
The centre opened in January or February 2022 as a direct response to the influx of people arriving across the English Channel in small boats. It was initially designed to hold 1000 people, or 1600 people at maximum capacity, for less than 24 hours at a time. Improved weather for Channel crossings led to increasing arrivals, which then led to conditions in the centre quickly deteriorating by that summer.
In the autumn of 2022, over 4,000 migrants were staying at the centre, with hundreds being detained for up to 33 days longer than the legal 24-hour limit and guards being sourced from private security firms. Many were held in wedding marquees. This influx led to overcrowding and a resultant spread of diseases including diphtheria, of which there were 50 cases, as well as scabies and MRSA. Local officials had raised issues with the Home Office concerning infection control a week before the outbreak. Then-chief inspector of borders and immigration David Neal visited the site in October; he wrote that people were sleeping on the dirty floors of the marquees to sleep, that toilets were overflowing with faeces, that there was inadequate medical care access, and that new arrivals were referred to by a wristband number instead of by their name.
On 29 October The Times reported that then home secretary Suella Braverman had received advice at least three weeks prior that migrants were being detained for unlawfully long periods at Manston, that they urgently needed to be rehoused in alternative accommodation, and that the matter could result in a public inquiry. It further reported that Braverman refused to secure new hotels for the asylum seekers, which Braverman disputed. On 30 October, an incendiary device attack on the Western Jet Foil processing centre led to a total of 700 people being moved from that centre to Manston. On 1 November, a group of 11 asylum seekers from Manston were left at London Victoria station without accommodation or warm clothing. Braverman visited the centre on 3 November, arriving by military helicopter, and made a statement that steps were being taken to "immediately" improve the centre's situation. On November 4, the government stated that over 1,200 people had been moved from Manston in the past four days, reducing numbers at the centre to 2,600. Home Office contractors were disciplined the same day after asylum seekers at Manston complained that security staff were attempting to smoke cannabis and also sell the drug to them.
On 19 November, Hussein Haseeb Ahmed, a 31-year-old man from Iraq who had been staying at the processing centre and who had contracted diphtheria, died after being taken to hospital the previous day. He had travelled to the UK as part of a small boat crossing on 12 November. 18,000 people, of a total of 29,000 processed between June and November 2022, were unlawfully detained at Manston for longer than 24 hours. Additionally, Home Office staff had no reliable data on the site between September and November. On 22 November, it was announced that the site had been cleared of people being held there, and all residents were placed in temporary accommodation.
From 25 to 28 November, a delegation of seven people from the Council of Europe’s Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment Committee (CPT) made a rare “rapid reaction” visit to the site. The Kent Coast Independent Monitoring Board had additionally made visits to monitor Manston throughout October and November. 44 charities, including the Refugee Council, Save the Children and the International Rescue Committee, signed a letter to The Guardian calling for a "Windrush"-style independent inquiry on 29 November. On 30 November The Guardian reported that the centre was thought to again be operational.
In June 2023, Management and Training Corporation signed a contract to provide services at the detention centre until July 2024. At the time, the contractor had 211 staff in a variety of roles including security, helping medical teams deliver assessments and operating some residential units.
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Manston arrivals and processing centre
Manston arrivals and processing centre is a centre used for the processing of migrants who have crossed the English Channel, located on the former site of RAF Manston in Manston, Kent, United Kingdom. Opened in February 2022, it was intended to house around 1,000 to 1,600 people for less than 24 hours at a time, though by autumn 2022 it housed over 4,000 people at a time for up to 33 days.
The site is located three miles inland from Ramsgate, and is largely hidden from public view. As of August 2023[update], outsourcers operating at the site included Management and Training Corporation, Mitie and Interforce. It accommodates both adults and children, featuring a family section which includes facilities for parents with babies and toddlers.
The centre opened in January or February 2022 as a direct response to the influx of people arriving across the English Channel in small boats. It was initially designed to hold 1000 people, or 1600 people at maximum capacity, for less than 24 hours at a time. Improved weather for Channel crossings led to increasing arrivals, which then led to conditions in the centre quickly deteriorating by that summer.
In the autumn of 2022, over 4,000 migrants were staying at the centre, with hundreds being detained for up to 33 days longer than the legal 24-hour limit and guards being sourced from private security firms. Many were held in wedding marquees. This influx led to overcrowding and a resultant spread of diseases including diphtheria, of which there were 50 cases, as well as scabies and MRSA. Local officials had raised issues with the Home Office concerning infection control a week before the outbreak. Then-chief inspector of borders and immigration David Neal visited the site in October; he wrote that people were sleeping on the dirty floors of the marquees to sleep, that toilets were overflowing with faeces, that there was inadequate medical care access, and that new arrivals were referred to by a wristband number instead of by their name.
On 29 October The Times reported that then home secretary Suella Braverman had received advice at least three weeks prior that migrants were being detained for unlawfully long periods at Manston, that they urgently needed to be rehoused in alternative accommodation, and that the matter could result in a public inquiry. It further reported that Braverman refused to secure new hotels for the asylum seekers, which Braverman disputed. On 30 October, an incendiary device attack on the Western Jet Foil processing centre led to a total of 700 people being moved from that centre to Manston. On 1 November, a group of 11 asylum seekers from Manston were left at London Victoria station without accommodation or warm clothing. Braverman visited the centre on 3 November, arriving by military helicopter, and made a statement that steps were being taken to "immediately" improve the centre's situation. On November 4, the government stated that over 1,200 people had been moved from Manston in the past four days, reducing numbers at the centre to 2,600. Home Office contractors were disciplined the same day after asylum seekers at Manston complained that security staff were attempting to smoke cannabis and also sell the drug to them.
On 19 November, Hussein Haseeb Ahmed, a 31-year-old man from Iraq who had been staying at the processing centre and who had contracted diphtheria, died after being taken to hospital the previous day. He had travelled to the UK as part of a small boat crossing on 12 November. 18,000 people, of a total of 29,000 processed between June and November 2022, were unlawfully detained at Manston for longer than 24 hours. Additionally, Home Office staff had no reliable data on the site between September and November. On 22 November, it was announced that the site had been cleared of people being held there, and all residents were placed in temporary accommodation.
From 25 to 28 November, a delegation of seven people from the Council of Europe’s Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment Committee (CPT) made a rare “rapid reaction” visit to the site. The Kent Coast Independent Monitoring Board had additionally made visits to monitor Manston throughout October and November. 44 charities, including the Refugee Council, Save the Children and the International Rescue Committee, signed a letter to The Guardian calling for a "Windrush"-style independent inquiry on 29 November. On 30 November The Guardian reported that the centre was thought to again be operational.
In June 2023, Management and Training Corporation signed a contract to provide services at the detention centre until July 2024. At the time, the contractor had 211 staff in a variety of roles including security, helping medical teams deliver assessments and operating some residential units.