Man who threw petrol bombs at Dover migrant centre was 66-year-old …
Manston centre overcrowding 'done deliberately claims Roger Gale
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The man suspected of firebombing a Border Force immigration centre in Dover on Sunday is a 66-year-old from the High Wycombe area in Buckinghamshire who was found dead at a nearby petrol station, Kent Police have confirmed. Western Jet Foil in Dover was attacked, after which people being kept there were moved to the Manston immigration short-term holding facility located at the former Defence Fire Training and Development Centre in Thanet.
Police searched a property in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, today.
Kent Police were called at 11.22am on Sunday to The Viaduct, where two to three incendiary devices had caused a fire.
The Explosive Ordnance Disposal Unit attended the location to ensure there were no further threats and another device was found and confirmed safe within the suspect’s vehicle, police said.
Two people inside the migrant centre reported minor injuries and the site remained open although 700 people were moved to Manston for safety reasons during the initial stage of the investigation, police said.
The attacker was described as a white man wearing a striped top, who drove up to the centre in a white Seat four-wheel drive vehicle, the agency reported.
A local MP later said the individual had taken their own life.
By the afternoon the scene had been cordoned off and forensic teams were working in the area.
The incident came after almost 1,000 migrants arrived in the UK after crossing the Channel on Saturday.
Immigration minister Robert Jenrick said in a tweet on Sunday that he had visited Manston amid growing concerns about its poor conditions.
Suella Braverman is expected to be questioned about the problems at the Manston site in Kent when she appears in the House of Commons later on Monday.
Earlier in the day, Conservative MP Sir Roger Gale described the overcrowding at the facility in his North Thanet constituency as “wholly unacceptable” and suggested it may have been allowed to happen “deliberately”.
It comes as the Channel crossing crisis deepened, amid growing concern over the conditions in which migrants are being held while waiting to be processed once they arrive in the UK, and after one of the sites in Dover was firebombed.
So far this year close to 40,000 people have made the treacherous journey from France, crossing the world’s busiest shipping lanes in dinghies and other small boats, provisional Government figures show.
(More to follow)
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