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A furious bride and groom whose wedding was cancelled by a hotel now booked out to house asylum seekers have hit out at bosses for breaking their contract.
Chris Wise and Carole Haragan, from Kennington, booked their wedding at the site in Ashford for August next year after months searching for the perfect location.
But last week, while they were on holiday, Ms Haragan, 68, received a phone call saying her wedding was cancelled as the hotel is now being used by asylum seekers who have arrived in the county after travelling across the Channel.
Mr Wise, 74, explained: "It was five months ago that we booked it and paid the deposit.
"We were in a state of shock and angry because we thought we had a contract with them and they totally ignored it.
"They gave us our money back as if that was the end of it.
"There are people who are in a worse position than us because their weddings are this year, at least we have got a bit of time.
"The hotel was blaming the government but it's a commercial decision.
"They booked every room in that hotel until the end of December next year; they will get hundreds of thousands of pounds for this."
The couple are now in talks with a new venue but feel more needs to be done to find more suitable locations to house asylum seekers.
He added: "Other councils with the same problems got a temporary injunction preventing it happening until it was assessed whether that hotel was actually suitable.
"Nothing like that has happened in Ashford.
"It shows a total disregard for the people who live in the town.
"The Home Office now has two huge hotels in Ashford full of asylum seekers.
"They have got to go somewhere of course, but this asylum problem is a national problem, not a Kent problem. The rest of the country should be doing their bit."
Earlier this week, Ashford Borough Council released a statement saying it is "extremely angry" with the Home Office for booking out a hotel without liaising with the local authority.
Council leader Gerry Clarkson (Con) says the "situation cannot continue" adding: “We have no control over this decision at all, and are extremely angry at the Home Office on how they have handled this situation," he said.
'The use of hotels to house asylum seekers is unacceptable...'
"They have ignored not only our views, but those of Kent County Council, Kent Police and local health services. They have shown a complete disregard for us and the local community, and this situation cannot continue.
“All Kent and Medway local authority leaders are writing jointly to the Secretary of State for the Home Office to ask her to stop using the county as an easy fix for what is a national, strategic issue.”
In a statement, a Home Office spokesperson said: “The number of people arriving in the UK who require accommodation has reached record levels and has put our asylum system under incredible strain.
“The use of hotels to house asylum seekers is unacceptable – there are currently more than 37,000 asylum seekers in hotels costing the UK taxpayer £5.6million a day.
"The use of hotels is a short-term solution and we are working hard with local authorities to find appropriate accommodation.”