Delegates to Waltham Forest Trades Council were among those counter protesters physically attacked by a large number of far-right racist thugs outside the Bell Hotel in Epping on Thursday 17 July.
The Bell Hotel: the far-right out again
This was during the second protest of the week at The Bell Hotel which is used to house migrants and asylum seekers whilst they are being processed by the authorities. Following the arrest and remanding of one migrant residing at the hotel after very serious allegations against 38-year-old asylum seeker Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu. He was charged with sexual assault – after an incident where he is alleged to have attempted to kiss a 14-year-old girl.
Local people decided to protest and were unfortunately joined by far-right racist thugs determined to stir up racial hatred.
Experienced anti-racist campaigners realised this could well have turned into a race-hatred fest, even degenerating into similar events as those at Southport and elsewhere. They decided to hold peaceful counter protests calling for calm at the Bell Hotel, to let the courts deal with the alleged sex offender, to not blame all migrants for the alleged crime of one, to recognise that difficulties faced by struggling working class people are not being caused by asylum seekers and migrants but rather as a failure of government, and to not fall into the trap of being used for the political ends of the racists of the rabid right.
On Thursday the counter demonstrators at the Bell Hotel were greatly outnumbered by those on the main protest and the majority were not there to attack the counter protesters. However, a significant number were, and unsuccessfully tried to break police lines to carry out attacks.
Counter the arguments
Kevin Parslow, Secretary of Waltham Forest Trades Council said:
Sadly we have seen a rise in protests about migrant support services, many turning to violence by right wing racist thugs. We need to learn the lessons of not so distant European history, and the trade union movement must step up its activities to counter the rise of the right and Reform. We must counter their arguments and stand together on the streets to resist this rise.” said
Being a migrant or asylum seeker isn’t a passport to freebies and preferential treatment as is often described. They more often come from war torn areas pursued by oppressive regimes, exploited by the migrant transport gangs and anyone else on their journey. We have long standing international agreements to support refugees and we must not deny them or tear them up.” He continued.
As well as this, we also need to ensure that working class people have access to decent housing, health care, education, work and a decent standard of living – because if we don’t the voices of the right wing racists pointing out failures to achieve this help them gain ground – and we don’t want that.
A statement following events
Following events at the Bell Hotel in Epping, WFTC committee members agreed the following statement:
We condemn all acts of racism and threats against asylum seekers. We stand in solidarity with victims of sexual harassment and violence.
Savage Tory austerity, now continued by Starmer in government, has been passed on by local councils – in Epping’s case a Tory council, but disgracefully the same is true in Labour councils. Coupled with decades of low pay, poverty and a housing crisis, this has created the basis for despair and division in our communities which dangerous racist far-right groups aim to exploit, aided by the appalling anti-migrant rhetoric of all the main parties including Starmer’s Labour.
We say:
- Oppose all racism and division; defend the right to asylum; workers’ unity against attacks on asylum seekers.
- End all council cuts. Demand full funding from the government for all our communities’ needs.
- Jobs, homes and services for all.
- Build council houses; cap rents.
- Oppose all sexual harassment and violence. Restore funding for women’s services; invest in street lighting and other measures to keep our streets safe
We pledge our assistance to the trade unions and communities of Epping to help build a united campaign for the resources all residents need and against the far right. We’ll work with any anti-austerity councillors who want to fight Tory and Labour cuts.
We call on the TUC to organise a national demonstration against Labour’s austerity and division. We support the anti-Tommy Robinson demo on 13th September called by Stand Up To Racism and will produce our own material to publicise it.
Following the decision of Unite to suspend Angela Rayner and open up a debate about Unite’s relationship with Labour – as a result of the brutal treatment of Birmingham bin workers by the Labour council backed up by the Labour government – WFTC will organise a debate in the autumn on how the trade unions can build a workers’ political voice that can undercut support for Reform and for other far-right groups.
Featured image via the Canary













Only one who could help Epping is Bob Crow. Knowing the working class community in the SE as he would he’d have it sorted. I grew up in the local Communist party in Epping Forest (EF) & don’t know any “right wing” Nazi groups. We’ve fought racism for years in the district so the guy arrested who pretended to be Jamaican hasn’t helped. I will protest when a full reflection of the area is mobilised, some of us were Ska kids involved in anti racism in the 80s.
During the protest yesterday the mainstream media showed an image of someone with a eagle on his tee shirt ( back) supposedly a symbol of the Nazi’s but no one seems to know who he is? Agent provocateurs have been an issue in our history as a protesting left working class, my parents found this on their CND marches in the 60s. Back then my dad was often beaten up in protests when the Communist party and the unions stood up to tyranny.
Also it seems the hotel protest is being hijacked by those with other agendas not simply the safety of children leaving school. We are in a crisis as a working class, we either stand together or fall. I’d ask the Left to support all the working class & provide leadership like Crow could, Bernie Grant was popular here in EF as many came from London to settle here & had ties to family in London. In Epping ordinary families, with ancestry in the East end, are concerned for their children who are dropped off at school & working parents can’t pick them up so that’s the issue in a nutshell. The wider problem is we are being mislead to attack immigrants not those in gov for the situation. Of course no one wanted to be bombed by capitalist wars, those here are a consequence of those wars.
The contempt for anyone with an Essex accent in the mainstream media has been clear over the years, why Bob would help dispel the notion Essex if full of thick grunts. Even in the “Lord of the Rings” films it’s Essex accents for the Orks. This is institutionalised racism from the state where it lambasts the very working class it’s depended on in war.
Those I’ve met from hostels and hotels haven’t been a problem but I’m not a teenage girl – when I was we were much more feisty in Epping Forest as we grew up in the second wave of British feminism. As my dad worked on the railway, now other family do, there’s the RMT as a unifying force in terms of uniting an international working class. Some of Epping will be working on the railway with a multiracial ethos so they will not be racists.
I’m hurt for my class with the state condemnation of white working Brits as being lazy or racist, a people who cannot speak their name. I’d certainly never carry a Union Jack even though our grandfathers fought WWII under one.
Many of us in Epping forest are distressed by photos of women and children suffering in Gaza. Many of us are sending what we can and pressuring all world Embassies for help for the Palestinians. The women protesting yesterday for child safety would help other women with their children if we could get the families here.