Asylum hotels have become one of the most visible and controversial symbols of the UK’s strained asylum system. What started as a short-term emergency response has quietly evolved into a long-term, expensive housing solution that now sits at the centre of public debate, political pressure, and policy reform. Across towns and cities, asylum hotels dominate headlines, spark protests, and raise difficult questions about cost, fairness, and sustainability. Yet behind the noise lies a deeper issue: how the UK houses people seeking safety, and whether the current approach truly works for anyone involved.
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