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10/27/2025



Africa Between the Lines in the UK’s Asylum Overspending Crisis


The Home Affairs Committee says the Home Office has wasted billions and mismanaged contracts with private accommodation providers.
It failed to reclaim excess profits owed by companies and didn’t fine hotels for poor performance.

The government says it aims to stop using hotels by 2029 and move asylum seekers into cheaper alternatives.

Africa Between the Lines

Africa Between the Lines

A UK parliamentary committee has sharply criticised the Home Office for its handling of asylum accommodation, warning that the use of hotels to house asylum seekers has become unsustainable and extremely costly.

“Billions of pounds are being wasted by the Home Office on asylum hotels,” MPs said. He noted that the expected cost of housing asylum seekers has surged to £15 billion, following a “dramatic increase” in demand.

While Africa is part of the broader migration picture, it is far from the only region involved.

Many people seeking asylum in the UK come from areas affected by war, repression, or political instability, including Eritrea, Sudan, Somalia, Nigeria, Ethiopia, and the DRC. However, the Middle East and South Asia, Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Albania are also popular in the UK asylum system.

For some Africans, the journey to the UK is long and dangerous, often passing through Libya, Tunisia, or Morocco, then across Europe via Italy, Spain, or France, before attempting to reach the UK by small boat.

Linking Back to Africa

The crisis directly links Africa to the “billions of pounds wasted” in the UK’s mismanaged asylum system. Long delays in processing applications, coupled with a shortage of affordable accommodation, have left thousands of people stranded in limbo.

They live in hotels for months or even years while waiting for decisions. Though not fully implemented, the UK government is currently working on swapping hotels for alternative accommodation strategies that will save costs.

So even as the government promises to end hotel use, it still provides accommodation of some kind. The challenge is how to do that affordably, fairly, and humanely.

This has created an enormous financial burden for the government and the taxpayer, but also a humanitarian one. Individuals fleeing conflict and persecution find themselves isolated and uncertain, caught in a system struggling to cope.

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