Médecins Sans Frontières providing medical care to refugees accommodated by Home Office at Essex airbase

Médecins Sans Frontières providing medical care to refugees accommodated by Home Office at Essex airbase

A medical NGO known​ for emergency relief in war zones is treating asylum seekers housed in a disused airbase in the home secretary’s constituency, the Guardian can ⁤reveal.

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is offering thrice-weekly clinics to‌ people contained ‌by​ the Home⁢ Office⁣ in ​RAF Wethersfield, Essex, which is based in James ⁤Cleverly’s Braintree constituency.

It is the first time that ‌MSF, which is ⁢known for its‌ work in Gaza, South Sudan and Syria, has offered medical relief specifically for people seeking asylum in the‍ UK.

The organisation, which⁢ was founded ⁣in France, says it has done so ⁣because of ‍the⁢ “medical-related harms” that emerge in “large-scale containment sites” such as Wethersfield.

Asylum seekers housed at ex-RAF ‍base ⁢tried to kill themselves, finds ‍studyRead more

The move will cause some discomfort for‌ the home secretary, whose ⁣department has‌ previously ⁤insisted that​ Wethersfield is a safe place for asylum seekers, despite reports of⁤ scabies, tuberculosis, mental health problems ‍and ⁢violence among people living there.

Javid Abdelmoneim, an operational‌ project manager for‍ MSF, said the organisation had set up the clinic in a joint ​project with Doctors Of⁤ The World because​ of the health problems seen at similar sites in Greece.

He said: “The UK government has openly‍ referenced modelling its use ⁢of large-scale ​containment sites⁣ on the Greek‍ approach. We know from ‌our extensive work providing medical ​and humanitarian assistance to people contained‍ in large-scale sites on the Greek islands that ⁣these cause serious health-related harm. We have concerns about similar impacts at Wethersfield.”

Three MSF staff‌ treat‌ people held ‍in Wethersfield in a tent​ that is set up ⁢near the gates of the base. The use ⁤of the former airbase as an asylum centre has been contentious ever since plans‍ were announced‌ in ​March.

It was ⁤set up by the government to reduce the cost of⁢ £8m a day spent on housing refugees⁣ in hotels. But its remote rural location miles away from any amenities has been criticised, not least by Cleverly himself. The Braintree MP⁢ has⁤ said that he wants the centre to close down as soon as possible.

Last month, cases‍ of scabies were found at the site and⁤ people⁤ living ​there described it as feeling “like a prison”. Local campaigners​ said⁣ the recent ‌unrest underlined their argument ‍that the site was not ​suitable.

Last ⁤month, the ​Guardian revealed that people ‌housed in⁤ the UK’s largest mass accommodation site had attempted to kill themselves ‌and set themselves on fire because of conditions “no⁤ different from Libya”.

A report by the ‍Helen ⁣Bamber Foundation ⁤and the Humans for Rights⁤ Network based on 140 case studies, found the men housed on the site were suffering from a range of problems including low mood, loneliness, flashbacks, reduced appetite, weight loss, ⁤feelings of despair and difficulty sleeping, as well as ⁤a worsening‌ in symptoms of post-traumatic ‌stress ‍disorder.

By ‍the end of October 2023, 508 men had been…

2024-01-08 15:28:05
Link from www.theguardian.com

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