Migrant dragged away shouting while trying to talk to press at processing centre
This is the shocking moment a migrant shouts ‘help’ through a wire fence at Manston immigration processing centre, before he was dragged out of view.
A photographer was taking pictures at the Kent site when a man inside started shouting at journalists and waving towards the cameras.
He claimed he had been there for 30 days when staff members asked him to quiet down.
The man did not stop and was then captured by photographers being pinned against a fence by four or five staff members before being dragged away from the cameras.
Milder weather means children can be heard playing from inside the compound, a former Ministry of Defence fire training centre.
The site is now back to a safe occupancy level of 1,600 people after reaching a high of 4,000 last week.
One local, who was walking past when the incident happened and wanted to remain anonymous, said he felt for the staff working there as the migrants inside ‘play up’ when they know journalists are outside.
He also commented that he did not have faith in Home Secretary Suella Braverman, deriding her desire to be ‘photographed on the front page of the Telegraph waving away a plane taking migrants to Rwanda’ and adding: ‘That deal just means we have to take people from Rwanda so there’s no benefit to us.’
The incident occurred shortly after a group of MPs from three parliamentary committees visited the site after concerns were raised about overcrowding.
Anum Qaisar, the SNP MP for Airdrie and Shotts who sits on the Commons Women and Equalities Committee, told reporters afterwards: ‘I saw young children in tents, and the reality is that the Home Secretary has a lot to answer for.’
When asked if she believed the conditions at Manston had improved, she added: ‘I don’t trust the Tory government.’
Members of the Commons Home Affairs Committee and the Joint Committee on Human Rights also attended.
A Home Office spokesperson said: ‘The Home Secretary has taken urgent decisions to alleviate issues at Manston and source alternative accommodation.
‘We take the safety and welfare of those in our care extremely seriously and all basic needs are provided for including hot food, fresh clothing, sanitary packs, and medical care where needed.
‘Thanks to our hard-working staff, Manston remains resourced and equipped to process people securely and keep the public safe while we find alternative accommodation as soon as possible.’
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