Migrant who assaulted four people at asylum hotel ‘wants to go back to Syria’

File photo dated 13/8/25 of court artist sketch by Elizabeth Cook of Mohammed Sharwarq (centre) appearing at Chelmsford Magistrates' Court. Sharwarq has today been sentenced to 16 weeks in jail after pleading guilty at an earlier hearing to two counts of common assault and four of assault by beating. Issue date: Tuesday September 30, 2025. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Elizabeth Cook/PA Wire
Court artist sketch of Mohammed Sharwarq (centre) appearing at Chelmsford Magistrates’ Court (Picture: Elizabeth Cook/PA)

A migrant who attacked four people at the asylum hotel where he was being housed has been jailed for 16 weeks.

Mohammed Sharwarq, 32, has since signed paperwork to return to his home country of Syria ‘despite the atrocities still going on there’, Chelmsford Magistrates’ Court was told.

He pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing to two counts of common assault and four of assault by beating.

Sharwarq was a resident at the Bell Hotel in Epping, Essex, at the time of the offences between July 25 and August 12 this year.

Terence Newman, prosecuting, said there were four male victims, with two of them fellow residents of the Bell Hotel and two of them staff.

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Sharwarq assaulted another resident of the Bell Hotel on several occasions, culminating in a punch that caused a ‘small cut to his jawline’ on August 12.

He said that on that day Sharwarq ‘continues to be aggressive, he’s causing issues for several residents and staff members at the hotel’.

Sharwarq punched a cleaner at the hotel to the arm, causing no injury, and threw a banana at him, hitting him on the back of the head.

The prosecutor said the defendant slapped another hotel resident to the back and then approached a hotel chef, ‘grabs him and tries to slap him to the face’.

‘The defendant then picks up a chair,’ Mr Newman said. ‘He’s then restrained and police attend.’

Police officers stand outside the The Bell Hotel, believed to be housing asylum seekers, in Epping, northeast of London, on August 8, 2025, as protests are expected from far right groups. (Photo by HENRY NICHOLLS / AFP) (Photo by HENRY NICHOLLS/AFP via Getty Images)
Police officers stand outside the The Bell Hotel (Picture: AFP via Getty)
NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 06: Demonstrators gather during an anti-immigration protest outside the New Bridge Hotel in Newcastle on September 06, 2025 in Newcastle upon Tyne, England. Far right protests have been taking place across the country over the summer weeks outside hotels housing migrants, following an accusation of sexual assault against an asylum seeker staying at the Bell Hotel in Epping. (Photo by Ian Forsyth/Getty Images)
Far right protests have been taking place across the country over the summer weeks outside hotels housing migrants (Picture: Getty)

Paul Baker, mitigating for Sharwarq, said the defendant was born in Syria and had worked as an engineer specialising in electronics and cars.

‘In 2011, a war broke out in Syria,’ he said.

‘There were a lot of deaths and atrocities committed, and he and his family made the decision to flee.’

Mr Baker said he travelled first to Turkey, then Germany, then lastly to the UK.

He said Sharwarq ‘came into the UK by boat’ and was initially placed in a hotel in Gloucestershire, then placed in the Bell Hotel, where he had been for around a month before the incidents.

Mr Baker said he had spoken to the defendant about the offences.

‘I suspect he’s had some kind of breakdown as a result of the stress he’s been under for the last 13 to 14 years and the death of his mother was the final straw,’ he said.

Mr Baker said Sharwarq had ‘indicated a desire to return back to Syria despite the atrocities still going on there’.

EPPING, UNITED KINGDOM - AUGUST 31: Demonstrators march towards The Civic Offices in a protest against housing of asylum seekers at The Bell Hotel in Epping, United Kingdom on August 31, 2025. On Friday, the Court of Appeal has overturned a temporary injunction, revoking a ban on housing asylum seekers at The Bell Hotel in Epping near London, with the case due for trial in October. (Photo by Wiktor Szymanowicz/Anadolu via Getty Images)
Demonstrators march towards The Civic Offices in a protest against housing of asylum seekers at The Bell Hotel in Epping (Picture: Anadolu via Getty Images)

District judge Lynette Woodrow said the offences were committed while Sharwarq was on police bail for an alleged affray at another asylum hotel.

She said he was shown CCTV footage of what happened and asked why he did it. She said: ‘You said “I was bored and mood and morale not well”.’

The judge said she had been told Sharwarq had ‘signed documentation to facilitate your voluntary resettlement to Syria’.

She described the incidents as a ‘series of escalating assaults against the same person’, and on August 12 ‘a number of assaults on different people’.

The judge sentenced Sharwarq to 16 weeks in prison.

She also ordered that he pay £300 compensation to the man he assaulted on multiple occasions, £200 each to the two staff, with no compensation for the fourth victim.

Sharwarq must also pay £85 prosecution costs and a £154 victim surcharge.

He bowed his head to the judge then sought to clarify, with the help of an interpreter, how long he would spend in prison before he was led to the cells.

Multiple demonstrations have been held outside The Bell Hotel after asylum seeker Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu sexually assaulted a woman and 14-year-old girl in the town.

The 38-year-old Ethiopian national, who arrived in the UK on a small boat days before the incidents in July, was jailed for 12 months at Chelmsford Magistrates’ Court last week.

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