Difference between revisions of "Angel Group"

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by Sheffield No Borders 30.09.05 with thanks to Owen Bowcott and David Palliser of The Guardian newspaper
 
by Sheffield No Borders 30.09.05 with thanks to Owen Bowcott and David Palliser of The Guardian newspaper
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==Notes==
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Revision as of 13:30, 30 January 2008

The Angel Group[1]: Contracted by Glasgow City Council in 2006 along with the YMCA to provide housing for 20% of Asylum Seekers and Refugees in Scotland.

History

Angel Group: in Sheffield[2]

The UK government’s decision in 1999 to “disperse” asylum seekers around the country was a big business opportunity for the Angel Group. Along with a handful of other private companies, the Angel Group was contracted by the Home Office’s National Asylum Support Service (NASS) to provide housing for asylum seekers. This is what the Angel Group specialize in: they claim to provide “high quality accommodation and support services to vulnerable people”. By the end of 2003 it was a multi-million pound property industry with a director, Julia Davey, who is the 17th richest businesswoman in the UK.

However, internal company records, statements by former employees and the testimony of asylum seekers housed by Angel Group reveal that the company’s success is built on some dubious methods. Before the Angel Group was contracted by NASS it had already established its credentials as a ruthless profiteering organization. In April 2003 Ms Daley bought an old nurses’ home in Newcastle and called it Angel Heights. Its first occupants were Iraqi and Iranian asylum seekers who soon rioted over poor conditions. In its first 2 years Angel Heights generated a profit of £700,000 and Ms Daley awarded herself a dividend of £300,000.

With a five-year contract from NASS that amounted to £20m a year, the Angel Group started acquiring and renting properties across Yorkshire and the north-east. It was handling up to 800 properties at a time, all of which were paid for by NASS whether they were occupied or not. In the event, according to former employees, between 30% and 50% were not used.

At its busiest, the Angel Group was providing more than 3,600 bed spaces to NASS. The fee paid for each bed space was £102 a week. Angel Group properties in Sheffield, particularly Burngreave and Firth Park have been overcrowded, sometimes with 2 adults sharing a room with only a curtain separating them. An investigation by the Leeds Today newspaper uncovered “squalid conditions” and sometimes no gas or electricity in houses let by the Angel Group. A report by the National Audit Office in 2004 of asylum seeker housing provided by private companies (including the Angel Group) showed that 33% of 4,535 properties inspected had "significant" defects and 7% needed immediate action.

The Angel Group in Sheffield hit new depths in July 2004. An Iraqi Kurdish resident of one of its properties in Burngreave, Naseh Ghafor went on hunger strike to protest that his forced deportation to Iraq would lead to his death there. He was in the fourth week of his hunger strike when Angel Group representatives announced that they wanted him out of the house. His few clothes and vital official papers of his were taken without his knowledge by Angel Group employees in an attempt to force him out. At this stage Naseh could barely move his head, least of all move house.


The Angel Group is currently the subject of a Home Office investigation which began in August 2005. It has a Sheffield office under the name of “Angel Home Loans” at 57 Owler Lane, Firth Park. You can call its manager, Mr Bruce Cable on 261 7777. For some reason Mr Cable rarely leaves his office without a bodyguard.

by Sheffield No Borders 30.09.05 with thanks to Owen Bowcott and David Palliser of The Guardian newspaper

Notes