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Ukrainians hosted in UK struggle to find own housing

AFP . London
30 Nov 2022 00:04:15 | Update: 30 Nov 2022 00:04:15
Ukrainians hosted in UK struggle to find own housing
Lack of housing, sponsors and a cost-of-living crisis are making it difficult for Ukrainians to live in the UK – Courtesy Photo

Viktoriya arrived in the UK in March after fleeing war-torn east Ukraine with her two sons and their cat and dog.

A month later, the British hosts who sponsored them asked the family to move out, saying they needed the space for an elderly relative.

Viktoriya, who asked only to use her first name, said she and her family were then moved to a caravan park in Devon, southwest England.

Her story is extreme but as the war rumbles on, it is a growing issue as the government asked hosts only to commit to six months.

At least 2,175 Ukrainian households living in England have required local authorities to intervene to prevent homelessness, data shows.

“They put us in temporary accommodation in Ilfracombe,” said Viktoriya, 37, a cook from Sloviansk.

She described it as a cold, damp “caravan” with a kitchen, bathroom and two bedrooms but no heating.

“Everything was covered in mould, even the cupboard. I constantly sprayed it with chlorine solution but it just came back,” she told AFP.

The family was supposed to move out within six weeks but Viktoriya said they were told they were not a priority and there were no sponsors.

Costs

Viktoriya said she decided to bring her family to England because her 15-year-old son speaks English and “dreamt” of coming here. But problems arose when their sponsors gave the family a month’s notice. Speaking little English, Viktoriya had not yet found a job and had to ask the local council for help.

Their new accommodation was two hours away on public transport, meaning her children had to change schools.

One couple she knows spent three days living in an airport after their sponsors refused to take them, before being moved to a hotel with no cooking facilities. The UK scheme offers Ukrainians the opportunity to live, work and study for up to three years with access to state benefits.

More than 146,000 have fled to the UK under the scheme, which relies on good will from ordinary people like Amanda Rodriguez Medina.

Medina, 57, has hosted Nataliia Parkhomenko, 31, and her two sons since May -- beyond the six-month minimum -- at her house in Basildon, southeast England.

Amanda says they are “half friends, half mother-daughter”. They go to the gym together and share gardening, DIY and cleaning. “I’m happy to be here. I’m lucky to find a really nice woman,” says Nataliia, an accountant from Melitopol in southern Ukraine.

Amanda stresses she is “happy to continue” hosting Nataliia’s family until they can rent independently.

“At the moment, it is impossible anyway, because it’s hard for her to get a full-time job because of the children”.

Nevertheless she admits feeling “shock” at the red tape and having to apply for welfare payments and school places herself.

Nataliia’s monthly sponsorship payments of £350 ($422) took four months to arrive. In the meantime, the UK plunged into a cost-of-living crisis.

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