British health secretary wants migrants back on floating barge
LONDON (AA) – The British health secretary has said that asylum seekers, who were moved from the Bibby Stockholm after traces of Legionella bacteria were found, should be put back on the floating barge.
“It’s important that we both maintain safety standards, but also reflect the pressure on the taxpayer position in terms of that £6 million (some $7.6 million),” Steve Barclay spoke to Sky News.
His remarks came after all asylum seekers were moved from the barge, moored at Portland Port in Dorset in the country’s southwest, after Legionella bacteria were found in the on-board water system.
The report of bacteria came three days after the Home Office said the first group of asylum seekers was housed on the barge after “health and safety checks were completed.”
Asked whether asylum seekers should be put back on the barge despite the controversy over health risks, he stated: “Yes, I do, because it’s costing around £6m a day in terms of the cost of hotels.”
Saying that no migrants had shown any sign of the bacteria, Barclay noted that they should both maintain safety standards, but also reflect the pressure on the taxpayer position.
The first group of asylum-seekers was housed on the three-storey barge on August 7, while some others refused to move on the barge.
The Bibby Stockholm is one of the vessels that was announced by the government to accommodate 5,000 asylum seekers, in a bid to lower the cost of housing migrants in hotels.
The controversial plan aims to house on a floating barge up to 500 men seeking refuge in the UK from disaster, war, crippling poverty aged 18-65. These asylum seekers hail from the Middle East, North Africa, West and South Asia and are primarily Muslims. After braving unimaginable difficulties on the way, they arrive at European borders only to face more hurdles and hostility by authorities seeking to limit migrant inflow from non-European territories.
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak listed tackling small boat crossings as one of his five priorities after over 45,000 migrants arrived in the country by crossing the English Channel last year.