A new, one-off scheme could be seen Government Close the Refavor Hotel next year.
Refugee council It is suggested that it will be done by allowing people from some countries to be recognized. Refugees Temporary permission to live under “One-Off Scheme”, analysis by the refugee council has suggested.
The refugee charity has set a time-limit proposal that ministers can take to end the use of hotels for house refugee by March 2026.
This warned the government’s commitment to close them by the end of this Parliament – 2029 – “is” unstable, expensive and risk “to fuel further community division”.
The Epping Forest District Council was given a temporary prohibition by the High Court last week by the High Court, which prevented the shelter seekers from being kept in the Bell Hotel in Essex after weeks of protest.
More councils are now considering legal action to close asylum hotels in their areas, while hotel owner Somani Hotel and House office Trying to challenge the verdict in the appeal court on Thursday.

Arranged Council Chief Executive Officer Envara Solomon said that the High Court’s verdict already proves that the government’s timeline is “no longer viable”.
He said: “A targeted, ‘One-off’ scheme can eliminate the use of hotels by 2026 by focusing on matters of countries with high grant rates for asylum.
“As long as the hotels are open, they will remain flashpoints for distant activity, promote stress and driving communities.
“It is the failure of the government to place people in a system that takes them for months, for public purse.
“Through our frontline work, we see how protests outside the Sharan Hotel can fears those who have already left war in places like Sudan and Afghanistan.”
Under the proposal, Iran, Afghanistan, Irritria, Sudan and Syria seekers – who were already in the refuge in the late June this year – would be allowed to be temporarily in the UK, subject to the security check.
The analysis of the refugee council of the official data released last week found that about 32,917 asylum seekers from these countries were kept by the Home Office by the end of June – the same period more than 32,059 asylums adjusted in UK hotels.

Charity said that the scheme would allow the government to close the hotels completely by focusing on this group, which already have a high grant rate for refugee status or human security, such as 98 percent for Sudani and Syrians, 60 percent for Iranians and 87 percent for irritation.
Meanwhile, some 39 percent of Afghans were adjusted, which was given a position of 96 percent last year after a change in home office country guidance.
An Afghan man, Muhammad – who was given shelter after spending six months in a hotel earlier this year, said through the refugee council that the people who filming the residents outside the hotel negatively feel the refugee “feel disappointing about the system”.
He said: “A friend of mine has been in a hotel for more than two years – he is very talented, but uncertainty is a mental disaster.
“Everyone knows the risks in Afghanistan. People who worked for human rights include rights for women and education, risk, risk of losing their lives.”
The organization said that the scheme will also follow the initiatives taken by the previous orthodox government and the government government after the 1997 general election.
In 2023, the conservatives introduced a questionnaire to collect information for the house office to take a decision without the need for an interview to cut the backlog of asylum claims.
Under labor between 1999 and 2000, about 30,000 grants of extraordinary holidays were given by ministers to deal with the inherited backlog after the election.
The Refugee Council is calling for the scheme to spread in several months to allow those people to live and secure space for income.
It also suggested that the government constructs homes for the Ukraine scheme and allows people to be kept by their community members, while they seek long -term housing.