UK presses ahead with plan for first migrant deportation flight to
Rwanda
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[June 14, 2022]
By Andrew MacAskill and Matthew Childs
LONDON/DOVER (Reuters) -Britain's first
scheduled flight taking asylum seekers to Rwanda was set to depart on
Tuesday, with the government warning that anyone who avoided it through
last-minute legal challenges would be put on a later plane despite an
outcry from critics.
With just hours to go before the flight was due to depart from London,
lawyers for human rights groups and campaigners took their case to the
Supreme Court, only for the judge to reject it.
However, several individuals have successfully argued that they should
not be deported to Rwanda on health or human rights grounds, meaning the
numbers due to depart have dwindled from an original 37 to just 7. Other
legal challenges were ongoing.
Britain has struck a 120-million-pound ($148 million) deal with Rwanda
to send some migrants, who had arrived illegally by crossing the Channel
in small boats from Europe, to live in the landlocked African country.
The plan has horrified political opponents, charities and religious
leaders who say it is inhumane. The United Nations' refugee chief called
it "catastrophic", the entire leadership of the Church of England
denounced it as immoral and shameful and media reports have said Prince
Charles has privately described the plan as "appalling".
The government says the deportation strategy is needed to stem the flow
of migrants risking their lives in Channel crossings and smash
people-smuggling networks.
Judges in several courts have said there was a public interest in the
Home Office being able to pursue the policy.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the legal bids were undermining the
government's attempts to support safe and legal routes to come to
Britain.
"We are not going to be in any way deterred or abashed by some of the
criticism that has been directed upon this policy, some of it from
slightly unexpected quarters, we are going to get on and deliver," he
told his cabinet ministers.
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Protestors demonstrate outside the Home Office against the British
Governments plans to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda, in London,
Britain, June 13, 2022. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls
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According to government figures, more than 28,500 people were
detected arriving in Britain on small boats last year. Dozens more,
including women and young children, arrived on Tuesday, a Reuters
witness in the Channel port of Dover said.
More than 130 people have been given deportation notices, with 37
originally scheduled to be removed on Tuesday. Charities have said
this included people fleeing Afghanistan and Syria as well as Iran
and Iraq.
In one legal case on Tuesday a lawyer argued that his client, an
Iranian national, had mental health problems and would be at risk of
committing suicide if deported to Rwanda. A lawyer for the
government said this claim was not supported by a doctor who had
assessed him. The judge rejected his appeal.
"There will be people on this flight and if they're not on this
flight, they will be on the next flight because we are determined to
break the model of the appalling people traffickers," Foreign
Secretary Liz Truss told Sky News. "The really important thing is
that we establish the principle."
Human rights groups say the policy will put migrants at risk. The
UNHCR has said Rwanda, whose own human rights record is under
scrutiny, does not have the capacity to process the claims, and
there is a risk some migrants could be returned to countries from
which they had fled.
A full hearing to determine the legality of the policy as a whole is
due in July.
(Writing by Kate Holton and Kylie MacLellan; Additional reporting by
Alistair Smout, Michael Holden, Kylie MacLellan and Paul Sandle;
Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore, Alison Williams and Jason Neely)
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