Four months after 'red doors' scandal broke, security company says it really will stop making asylum seekers’ homes so easy to locate and attack.
Regardless of government orders and promises to Parliament, UK property company Jomast carries on putting asylum tenants at risk.
How do the government and its commercial contractors respond to criticism of standards in asylum housing?
“An unseemly and unsavoury” business? Stuart Monk of Jomast fails to impress.
Why did UK commercial contractors G4S and Jomast paint asylum seekers’ doors red? Why did they ignore complaints for years?
Neglect, contempt and hostility — how the UK government really welcomes refugees.
Barbara is an asylum seeker living in the UK. How the government’s immigration crackdown creates opportunities for humiliation and profit.
Why would the UK government let its commercial contractor get away with housing vulnerable asylum seekers in dangerous slums?
Tools and rhetoric designed to combat terrorism and serious crime are being deployed against asylum seekers and people who work with them.
On a suburban street in Leeds, security company G4S packs 23 women and children into one house with a single bathroom.
Filthy showers, uncleared rubbish, mice infestation. The quality of housing provided to asylum seekers by commercial contractors is poor indeed, but good enough for the Home Office.
In South Yorkshire rail passengers resist the removal of free travel for retired and disabled people.