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Police hunt anti-migrant protesters after hotel violence

Police vowed to track down those behind violence at a protest outside the hotel in which Eight police officers were injured and three vehicles were damaged.

Police hunt anti-migrant protesters after hotel violence

Police officers stand at fencing at The Bell Hotel, believed to be housing asylum seekers, in Epping, northeast of London on July 18, 2025, following anti-immigration protests. (Photo by BEN STANSALL/AFP via Getty Images)

POLICE promised to track down suspects behind violence at a protest outside a southeast England hotel believed to house asylum seekers, after officers and vehicles were attacked.

The violence followed several demonstrations in recent days in the town of Epping which flared after police charged an asylum seeker with sex offences.


Eight police officers were injured and three vehicles were damaged, Essex police said.

The unrest, which police blamed on people from "outside of our community", comes a year after anti-immigration riots rocked the UK in the wake of the fatal stabbings of three young girls in the northern town of Southport.

Then, rioters targeted hotels housing asylum seekers in several different English cities, infamously attempting to set fire to one in Rotherham, northeast England.

Essex police on Friday (18) insisted officers would "continue to support those communities that want to peacefully protest" but would not tolerate "acts of violence and vandalism".

"After last night I've got a team of specialist detectives today that are combing through the body-worn video CCTV to identify those who are responsible," said assistant chief constable Stuart Hooper.

"And what I can say is if you're one of those individuals you can expect a knock on the door."

Hooper said the "selfish individuals" behind the violence were mostly "from outside of the area" and had travelled to Epping "intent on causing criminality".

Right-wing agitators, including far-right activist Tommy Robinson, have been sharing posts and videos about the situation on social media.

Footage of Thursday's (17) protests showed masked people pelting police vans and jumping on them, as well as clashing with officers.

The disturbances came after police charged 38-year-old asylum seeker Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu with three counts of sexual assault, one count of inciting a girl to engage in sexual activity and one count of harassment without violence.

The charges stem from allegations he tried to kiss a 14-year-old girl as she ate pizza at a restaurant in Epping, just northest of London, on July 7 and again the following day.

He has pleaded not guilty, and appeared in court for a hearing on Thursday.

An asylum seeker from Ethiopia, he arrived in the UK irregularly after crossing the Channel on a small boat at the end of last month.

In the wake of the incident, local officials have called for the Bell Hotel to no longer house asylum seekers.

(AFP)

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