Keir Starmer warns Cabinet of ANOTHER summer of riots after protests outside three asylum hotels
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Protests broke out around hotels in London, Norfolk and Essex
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Sir Keir Starmer has warned his Cabinet to repair '"social fabric" or risk another summer of anti-immigration riots.
Pressure is mounting on the Government as a trio of protests broke out across the country, in Canary Wharf in London, Epping in Essex and Diss in Norfolk, as Reform UK leader Nigel Farage warned that Britain was close to "civil disobedience on a vast scale."
Speaking at a Cabinet meeting yesterday, deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner said the Government needed to acknowledge "real concerns" about rapid change in order to defuse community tensions.
Sir Keir Starmer said Labour had to improve integration in areas that have experienced high levels of migration, reports The Times.
Meanwhile, Downing Street’s executive director of policy and delivery Liz Lloyd warned that social cohesion was "fraying at the edges."
While Downing Street sources were quick to downplay that the Cabinet comments were in response to unrest in Essex, they stressed Starmer had been concerned since Southport about the unravelling of "unwritten rules that hold a nation together."
Rayner said that "while Britain was a successful multi-ethnic, multi-faith country, the Government had to show it had a plan to address people’s concerns."
It comes as further protests are planned outside the Epping hotel, with concerns that disorder may spiral.
Keir Starmer spoke with his Cabinet regarding another summer of riots
Farage said earlier this week: "I don’t think anybody in London even understands just how close we are to civil disobedience on a vast scale in this country."
Protests broke out at the hotel in Diss, Norfolk when about 60 people arrived shouting "we want our country back."
Concerns were raised after the hotel housing asylum-seeking families in the town planned to change the occupants to single adult males.
South Norfolk Council had claimed the families currently living at the hotel had become part of the local community, and replacing them with single men could reignite tensions and cause unrest similar to that seen in other areas.
Green Party co-leader and Waveney Valley MP Adrian Ramsay
The MP for the area, Green Party co-leader Adrian Ramsay, told the BBC: "Many of these families have been here for two years, becoming part of our community with their children going to local schools.
"I understand that families are being told they must leave next week, yet they have not been given any information about where they will be going next.
"I am shocked and angered that any group of people would be treated like this.
"To uproot them in such a way is wrong."
It comes as the Home Office will share information about asylum hotel locations with food delivery companies to tackle suspected hotspots of illegal working.
A new agreement with Deliveroo, Just Eat and Uber Eats will see information about high-risk areas shared to help them uncover abuse on their platforms and quickly suspend accounts.
Currently delivery riders discovered to be sharing their accounts with asylum seekers have their profiles suspended.
The latest measures hope to crack down further on the practice.