After the Glasgow hotel attack, a week of shock, anger and compassion
Grassroots groups have rallied to help traumatised former residents of the Park Inn
When Gabriel Vest ran into Asda on Sunday evening with 300 to spend on underwear and socks, staff at Glasgow's southside branch were initially bemused. He explained he was buying emergency supplies for around 90 asylum seekers evacuated from the Park Inn hotel last Friday after Badreddin Abedlla Adam, from Sudan, stabbed six people before being shot dead by police. Then they just wanted to help. I didn't even have to queue."
Vest, who ordinarily works with Bikes for Refugees, was bulk-buying for Maslow's, a nearby community shop that supplies second-hand clothing for newly arrived migrants, and that day was hurriedly putting together packages for residents who had had to leave their belongings behind the police cordon. I got a message from another volunteer who was at the hotel, to say there was one man who was still in his underwear because that was how he'd left his room when the fire alarm had gone off. He was left like that for two days. It was grim."
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