Ali’s wife had just given birth to a baby girl. His family, homeless after being granted refugee status, was living in a single room in a hostel. In the run-up to the baby’s birth – with Ali, his wife and their son sharing the same bed – they had worried about losing the baby.
After the birth of his daughter, he did not want his wife to return to that room where it would be four in a bed, in a building where police were often called due to fights breaking out. Instead, Ali and his wife wanted her to stay in hospital while he went to the local housing centre to try and find somewhere else.
“I was at the housing centre every day when I just wanted to be with my wife and baby. I never forgot the time the social worker said: ‘If you don’t go to this accommodation that social services will take our child,’” said Ali (as a survivor of torture, Ali’s name has been changed).
“This made us so scared. We took our baby back to the hostel as soon as they threatened this but we felt the safer place for our baby would have been the hospital as the accommodation was not suitable for our newborn baby.”
Read more:
- This housing project claims it could save Labour millions on housing asylum seekers in hotels
- ‘I came here for safety and I’ve come into danger’: The grim reality of life in asylum hotels for women
- Did Labour just abandon its promise for a fairer asylum system?
Big Issue previously told Ali and his family’s story in 2023, after they were caught up in a wave of refugee homelessness, with nowhere to live after being granted protection but evicted from Home Office accommodation at short notice.