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Putting up asylum seekers in Hull's Royal Hotel still divides the city

Ed Thomas
UK editor
BBC Anei BBC
Anei was living inside the Royal Hotel as riots took hold outside

Take the train to Hull, walk out of the station, and it takes just seconds to arrive at the Royal Hotel. It once hosted royalty - but for the past five years it's been home to hundreds of asylum seekers in the city.

From being a place of sanctuary, it became the frontline of last summer's riots, when windows of the hotel were smashed and asylum seekers hid inside. Outside the Royal, there was anger and rage.

The use of hotels to house people arriving on smalls boats from represents one of the most divisive issues in Britain today. People have been telling the BBC what the hotel means to them.

Last July, Anei was living inside the Royal Hotel as riots took hold outside. He says he was terrified. "Everyone was scared," he adds. He tells us that he and others had to stay inside the hotel fearing that if they went outside "we die".

Anei is 27 and arrived in the UK on a small boat three years ago. He says his parents died in South Sudan and that he was given a choice to a militia and fight, or be killed. He decided to flee.

He tells us he was beaten up in Hull and abused on the day of the riots. "They don't like the asylum seekers, they hit me in the back and I fell down," he says. He tells us one person shouted "you've come here and taken our jobs".

Why, I ask, does he think some people were angry with him? He says he doesn't know and that nobody has spoken to him about the realities of his life inside the Royal Hotel. He says he has taken no job.

But Anei has now been given the right to remain in the UK, he says he wants to work and pay back the UK for the help he's already received.

The Royal Hotel
The Royal Hotel became the focal point of protests in Hull, last summer

Home Office figures released on Thursday tell one story - that the number of asylum seekers being housed in hotels has fallen. But the number is still higher than when Labour came into power last year.

There were 32,345 asylum seekers living in taxpayer-funded hotels in March 2025, the figures show.

But there's also another story. Despite the repeated promises to end asylum hotel accommodation, it remains a defining issue for many people and in many places.

Not far from the Royal Hotel, we met Gaynor, who is whizzing around on her mobility scooter, wearing large black sunglasses. She's in her 70s now, but says she re the good times inside the Royal like it was yesterday. "The hotel was so beautiful," she says. "We used to go in there for drinks and cocktails."

Gaynor
Gaynor says she used to go to the Royal Hotel for cocktails

Gaynor says it's a shame it has now been taken over and used as accommodation for asylum seekers.

"I do feel sorry for them," she says, "I know their countries are at war, but there's other countries they have to go to before they get to England - I don't think it's fair, I don't think it's fair at all."

It's an issue that's changed the way she votes. "Yes, I voted for Reform," she says. "I don't mind telling you that, something needs to be done."

Gaynor isn't alone in feeling like this, but there are other voices here too. One man who who lives within sight of the hotel, says it is important that asylum seekers are given accommodation while they are processed.

Outside the hotel, at a taxi rank in sight of the station, Shane was keen to chat. He works here a lot and showed us the video he filmed earlier this year. He witnessed an asylum seeker trying to kick out the windows of a room in the hotel, while holding what appeared to be a knife.

In the footage you can hear another taxi driver ask: "Why isn't anyone stopping him":[]}