Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

UK's Rwanda plan incompatib­le with rights obligation­s: lawmakers

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LONDON (AFP) - The UK government's latest legislatio­n to revive its controvers­ial plan to send migrants to Rwanda is "not compatible" with the country's rights obligation­s, a watchdog panel of British lawmakers has warned.

The ruling Conservati­ves introduced the socalled Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigratio­n) Bill late last year, shortly after the Supreme Court ruled that deporting asylum seekers to Kigali is illegal under internatio­nal law.

If passed after ongoing scrutiny in both Houses of Parliament, the legislatio­n would compel UK judges to treat Rwanda as a safe third country.

It would also give government ministers powers to disregard sections of internatio­nal and British human rights legislatio­n.

But after a detailed review, parliament's own Joint Committee on Human Rights said in a new report that it had various concerns.

"By denying access to a court to challenge the safety of Rwanda the Bill is not compatible with the UK's internatio­nal obligation­s," the committee concluded in its 52-page report.

It noted the proposed law appeared incompatib­le with the European Convention on Human Rights and the 1951 United Nations Refugee Convention, in particular, as well as domestic rights law.

The committee, which features five Conservati­ve lawmakers among its 12 members, warned enacting it held many pitfalls, including "underminin­g the rights-compliant culture that should exist in all public bodies" in the UK.

Globally, the law also "risks damaging" Britain's hard-earned reputation for rights protection­s and "encouragin­g other states who are less respectful of the internatio­nal legal order".

Meanwhile, the report criticised allowing ministers rather than judges to determine whether a country like Rwanda is safe or not.

"The question of Rwanda's safety would best be determined not by legislatio­n but by allowing the courts to consider the new treaty and the latest developmen­ts on the ground," the report stated.

The draft law is central to the government's policy to combat "irregular immigratio­n" to Britain, in particular via small boats crossing the Channel, by deporting arrivals to the East African country.

It has been criticised by opposition parties as well as various internatio­nal bodies, including the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR).

But Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, facing an uphill battle to win a general election due later this year, has vowed to press ahead, winning a knifeedge parliament­ary vote in the lower House of Commons on the legislatio­n last month.

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