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More military bases could be used to house migrants, says defence minister

28 Oct 2025 3 minute read
Protesters gathered at Stradey Park Hotel in Furnace, Llanelli to oppose the housing of asylum seekers in the venue. Image: Bronwen Weatherby

The Government is planning for further military bases to be used to house asylum seekers, a minister said, after it emerged migrants would be moved to the sites of two barracks.

But defence minister Luke Pollard appeared to suggest that the cost of moving migrants into the bases could be higher than housing them in hotels.

The Home Office confirmed on Monday that two barracks in Scotland and southern England would be used to house about 900 men temporarily.

The plans will see men housed at Cameron Barracks in Inverness and Crowborough Training Camp in East Sussex.

“Adequate”

Signalling that further bases were also being considered as accommodation sites, Mr Pollard told BBC Breakfast: “Some bases are small, some bases are larger in terms of numbers, but I think the conversation around the bases that are in the news today is about proving this concept, is about seeing whether this works.

“We believe that these bases can provide adequate accommodation for asylum seekers.”

Mr Pollard was also keen to stress the standard of accommodation, telling the BBC: “This isn’t luxury accommodation by any means, but it’s adequate for what is required, and that will enable us to take the pressure off the asylum hotel estates and enable those to be closed at a faster rate.”

He later added that the Ministry of Defence (MoD) was working with the Home Office “on standing up a number of bases at the moment”.

Mr Pollard continued: “We’ve got to make sure that the facilities are right there, that we’ve got the adequate security arrangements in place, and that we’ve got engagement with the local authorities, the councils in those areas, to make sure that there is adequate provision for what is expected in those locations.”

Asked about whether it would cost more to house migrants at the bases than in hotels, Mr Pollard insisted that “the public want to see those hotels close”.

But he added: “We’re looking at what’s possible and, in some cases, those bases may be a different cost to hotels, but I think we need to reflect the public mood on this asylum hotels need to close.”

Barrack sites will be handed over in their “entirety” to the Home Office, Mr Pollard told LBC.

Migrants are not being housed alongside serving military personnel, he added, as the bases selected are currently out of use.

Both Crowborough and Cameron barracks sites were used to accommodate Afghan families evacuated during the withdrawal from Kabul in 2021 while they were resettled elsewhere, with that work ending earlier this year.

“Failed, chaotic and expensive”

The move is part of Government efforts to end the use of asylum hotels, which a parliamentary committee branded “failed, chaotic and expensive” on Monday.

Industrial sites, temporary facilities and disused accommodation are also being considered as housing for migrants, and officials have been ordered to accelerate work identifying alternatives.

As of June this year, about 32,000 asylum seekers were being housed in hotels, down from a peak of more than 56,000 in 2023 but 2,500 more than at the same point last year.

And expected costs of Home Office accommodation contracts for 2019-2029 have tripled from £4.5 billion to £15.3 billion, following what the Commons Home Affairs Committee called a “dramatic increase” in demand.


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Jeff
Jeff
16 days ago

Racists are mobile. Deal with the backlog and lay the blame at farages door along with the conservatives. Take on farages ilk head on and show him for what he is.

And get the government off twitter and facebook.

Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
16 days ago

Keep fit camps could evolve into ‘The British Foreign Legion’ most other right-wing governments are doing it…

Ten years of risking your neck for ‘citizenship’ then get turfed out on your backside…

‘la perfide Albion’…

Buzby
Buzby
16 days ago

Pop-up villages on government land should’ve been the obvious choice from the moment Nigel’s Brexit boats started arriving. I’m convinced that the Home Office adopted the 4* hotels policy to spite the Brexiteers who gave them all this extra work.

Jeff
Jeff
16 days ago
Reply to  Buzby

This is the thing that bugs me. They are not 4* or any other star hotels. Its a room.. A small box. They in no way mimic hotels.

Buzby
Buzby
16 days ago
Reply to  Jeff

Of course, it’s the service not the building that determines a star rating and none of these folks will be ordering room service or chillaxing in the spa. But a spiteful Home Office knows that former 4* hotels will niggle the Brexiteers far more than funding the armed forces far less to rapidly construct and run temporary accommodation.

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