Take Action: Health Workers Demand No More Evictions and Housing for All

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Note: Names of all signatories will be displayed on this page. 

Manchester health workers stand in solidarity with community members facing eviction

We stand in solidarity with all people surviving homelessness and housing insecurity. We write now to express our full solidarity with the demands shared on May 14th 2026 by a community of refugees and migrants who have been homeless for months and some over a year, who are now at risk of eviction. They demanded that court proceedings be stopped, and that the community be allowed to stay in the building with no threat of eviction, until everyone is permanently housed in a safe and dignified way.  Sadly, a high court writ was issued and bailiffs were booked to evict community members from the space that they have turned into a shelter.

We understand that thanks to community mobilising efforts, a 40-day extension has recently been granted and that the squat will be evicted on or after the 10th of August. When this happens more than 40 people will be forced to sleep rough. Their health and wellbeing will only suffer as a consequence.

People forced into homelessness face multiple health-related challenges. Stigma, neglect, barriers to mental health support, limited access to primary care alongside lack of basic hygiene and washing facilities such as toilets and showers, and limited access to water, nutritious food, and cooking facilities. It’s harder to find work, access education, and meet-up with friends and family. The survival of homeless people is criminalised forcing them into a constant state of hyper vigilance and this policing causes serious harm to health. Housing security is a basic need of utmost importance which should be seen as a primary mental health intervention. Adequate housing is recognised as a human right and is fundamental to psychological and physical well-being and health.

Asylum seekers, refugees, and people with precarious immigration status face additional challenges, namely language barriers that make navigating a new health system even more difficult. Homelessness, displacement, evictions and continual movement of primary living space, causing uncertainty, lack of control, passivity, and feelings of meaninglessness and powerlessness experienced by refugees  are directly linked to psychosocial distress and suffering. 

On top of that, rising racist and fascist attacks on our streets are seriously damaging the physical and mental health of all those being targeted by the far-right, namely racialised people and Muslim communities. Lack of shelter means these community members have no respite from this racist violence and limited spaces to protect themselves in. People living in encampments in Manchester have experienced violence and racism from members of the public, including harassment by far right streamers, as well as people kicking their tents and urinating in their living space. 

Alongside our support for the demands of housing for all by this community in Manchester, we understand that tackling health inequalities also requires us to hold the systems that produce harm to  account. Without wholesale systemic change of health and housing systems, which in themselves require global revolution, the health community will always be limited in how they can tackle health inequalities.

However, as health workers, we can and will continue to provide clinical housing advocacy and care for our patients, as they continue to be harmed by lack of social homes, damp and mould, the cost of living, border regimes, policing and the ever worsening climate emergency.

Housing is the foundation of health, and stopping this eviction is an urgent public health priority. As local leaders, you have the opportunity to protect the health and wellbeing of this community. Meeting the community’s demand to remain in the building without threat of eviction until everyone is permanently housed in a safe and dignified way is an urgent public health priority. We urge you to act now to prevent further avoidable harm and ensure that everyone in this community has access to the safe, secure and dignified housing they need to live healthy lives. 

Signed:

  • Linnea Freear, Principal Clinical scientist, The Christie NHS Foundation Trust
  • James Cavet, Consultant haematologist, The Christie NHS FT
  • Michael Wake, Clinical scientist , The Christie, NHS foundation trust