Lack of access to legal aid and a punitive asylum system continues to push refugees into homelessness, a leading charity has said, leaving volunteers to pick up the pieces.
Faced with a crisis, volunteer groups are buying sleeping bags and tents for refugees, said NACCOM, a network of organisations providing accommodation for asylum seekers and refugees which works to end destitution among those seeking asylum.
It said its members helped a record number of people in 2023-24 and provided over 500,000 nights of accommodation.
The number of people needing help who were sleeping rough doubled in a year. A total of 4,151 people had to be turned away due to a lack of capacity – almost as many as were given accommodation, an 83% increase in a single year.
As Big Issue has reported, there was a sharp rise in refugee homelessness as the Conservative government rushed to clear the asylum backlog, and there remains a chronic lack of access to legal aid for those going through the asylum process.
“No one should have to experience trauma, hardship and injustice simply because of their immigration status, but this is the reality for so many,” said Bridget Young, NACCOM’s director.