Dan Jarvis says government to appeal against Epping asylum hotel rulingAnti-immigration demonstrators have been met with anti-racism campaigners in Portsmouth as a weekend of planned protests begins.Police enforced a gap between the two groups as the anti-immigrant group chanted “Send them home” while the counter group chanted: “Refugees are welcome here” on Friday afternoon.There has been a surge in protests against the use of such hotels since demonstration at The Bell Hotel in Epping earlier this summer.Following the release of new migration figures on Thursday, more have been planned over the weekend.Stand Up to Racism has co-ordinated counter-protests at almost every site, including seven on Friday. It comes as a security minister confirmed the government will take steps to challenge the High Court’s decision to prevent people seeking asylum from being housed in a hotel in Epping.Dan Jarvis said that the Home Office will appeal against the High Court’s refusal to allow it to intervene in the case of The Bell Hotel.If granted permission to intervene, it will open the way for a wider appeal against a temporary injunction handed down in the case.Asylum seekers feel ‘hunted’ amid scenes of hate on UK streetsAsylum seekers in hotels feel “hunted” by protests, campaigners said as one Afghan man told of being seen as “an enemy” by the British public after fleeing to the UK for a safer life.Demonstrations in recent weeks have left some of those seeking asylum feeling “afraid to go outside”, according to Asylum Matters, which works with asylum seekers and refugees.Many feel “hunted” amid scenes of “hate and intimidation on Britain’s streets”, the Freedom from Torture charity said.A 26-year-old Afghan man who has been living in a hotel in Yorkshire for almost two years, said he is scared of what might happen to him here.“I feel like nobody likes me, the people of this city don’t want us, but I don’t have any other option. It’s really hit my confidence,” he said.“Before I used to talk very socially with everyone. Now I’m scared, what if they abuse you, what if they record you? It’s hard. I can’t explain – but this year it has totally changed. People see us as an enemy.”( More