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Asylum seeker sleeping under upturned rowing boat on Dover beach warns others not to come to Britain

An asylum seeker who has resorted to sleeping under a rowing boat on a Kent beach is warning others: “Don’t come here - the system is broken.”

Alaa Eldin, from Syria, is taking shelter under the upturned craft on Dover seafront after being left homeless and penniless.

The 25-year-old is now regularly trying to sneak into the back of lorries at the town’s port in order to get back to the Continent.

Mr Eldin, who crossed the Channel on a rubber dinghy more than two years ago, is desperate to leave Britain after his asylum claim failed - and wants to head to Germany to work.

Speaking to KentOnline at a Dover cafe this morning, he said: “I want to work and get a job as a plasterer. But I have been here for more than two years and I’ve been out on the street for five months.

“I don’t have money. I don’t have anything. I’m tired and I want to leave.

“Because I don’t have a home I have to sleep on the beach and sometimes it’s so cold I have to light a fire.”

The boat which Mr Eldin sleeps under on Dover seafront
The boat which Mr Eldin sleeps under on Dover seafront

Mr Eldin fled his home country of Syria nine years ago because of a civil war there and says his return would mean being conscripted to the army.

He originally moved to Germany, settling in with family members there – but after falling out with them he moved to England.

He got into the country via Dover on a people traffickers’ rubber dinghy in August 2021 and then claimed asylum.

Mr Eldin at first stayed in Leeds and was hoping to settle down in the UK and earn money as a plasterer but asylum seekers are not allowed to work while their claim is being processed.

With the process dragging on and eventually deciding there was no future in this country, he applied to voluntarily leave. He says because of that officials withdrew his asylum case.

Alaa Eldin outside the Sunrise cafe in Dover
Alaa Eldin outside the Sunrise cafe in Dover

He explains this in turn meant he was no longer entitled to any form of state benefit or accommodation.

Mr Eldin says if he could get his asylum seeker status returned he would be willing to stay in Britain, provided he eventually wins his application. However, to get that back he needs a solicitor but can’t get legal aid at present because of a backlog of cases.

He hopes he can get back to Germany where he has other relatives he can join.

Asked what message he now has for the tens of thousands attempting to reach Britain via small boats across the Channel, he said: “Don’t come here any more - the system is broken.

“England has come down. It’s not like before. There is nothing here.”

Noel Beamish of Dover Outreach Centre, which is helping Mr Eldin
Noel Beamish of Dover Outreach Centre, which is helping Mr Eldin

Mr Eldin returned to Dover five months ago in the hope of sailing back to the Continent.

He has made friends locally and they put him up a couple of nights a week but they cannot do it full-time because it would breach their tenancy agreements.

He has also met members of the town’s Dover Outreach Centre.

The homelessness charity is supporting him, such as through legal advice, particularly to get him back into the asylum system.

He uses the charity’s Sunrise community café, in Snargate Street, next to its main centre, for meals. It only charges people what they can afford.

Alaa Eldin at the Dover Outreach Sunrise cafe
Alaa Eldin at the Dover Outreach Sunrise cafe

Noel Beamish, trustees’ chairman of Dover Outreach, told KentOnline: “Alaa is one of many asylum seekers wanting to leave the UK.

“The asylum process takes a considerable amount of time and they are put in accommodation that doesn’t suit them.

“They find things don’t work for them in the UK so they want to go elsewhere in Europe.”

In a statement, a Home Office spokesman said: “It is longstanding government policy that we do not routinely comment on individual cases.

“If an individual does not have the right to be in the UK, we will make every effort to return to their country of origin or a safe third country.”

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