Hospital nurses are being forced out of hotel rooms to make way for asylum seekers, it emerged last night.

The Home Office has given foreign nurses studying for UK qualifications - to help ease NHS staffing pressures - less than a month to move out of their accommodation.

The move threatens to deepen the staffing crisis at the trust affected, with a senior executive warning it will put its hospitals in a 'very vulnerable' position.

It comes as Home Secretary Suella Braverman yesterday signed a £63million deal with France in the latest attempt to tackle the Channel migrant crisis.

T

he settlement will see the British taxpayer foot the bill for anti-people trafficking measures on the French coast, including officers from the UK Border Force being deployed alongside gendarmes for the first time as well as in French control centres.

The number of gendarmes on beach patrols will increase by 40 per cent over the next five months and the British cash will pay for 파라오카지노 도메인 more helicopters, drones and CCTV to spot migrants and facilitate interception.

Writing in the Mail, Mrs Braverman today warns the surge of migrants is putting 'intolerable pressure' on UK accommodation and public services.

And in a stark illustration of the Home Secretary's warning, officials scouring the country for places to put up thousands of migrants have block-booked two hotels in York used for foreign nurses while they prepare for exams.

Hospital nurses are being forced out of hotel rooms to make way for asylum seekers, it emerged last night.

Pictured: Migrants arrive in Dover last week

It comes as Home Secretary Suella Braverman yesterday signed a £63million deal with France in the latest attempt to tackle the Channel migrant crisis.

Pictured: Ms Braverman signs historic deal with French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin

York and Scarborough Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust has been forced to recruit from abroad due to a critical shortage of British nurses, and pays for their accommodation while they take the exams.
There are currently 82 foreign nurses in one York hotel and 17 more due next month.