The Daily Telegraph

Lords ‘bordering on racism’ for how they speak about Rwanda

- By Charles Hymas HOME AFFAIRS EDITOR

LORDS have been “patronisin­g” and “bordering on racism” over the independen­ce of the Rwandan judicial system in dealing with the deportatio­n scheme, a Cabinet minister has said.

Before the Bill ping-ponged around Parliament last night, Andrew Mitchell, the deputy foreign secretary, criticised peers over their approach to the legislatio­n.

The passage of the Bill had been delayed for three weeks as the Lords inflicted a succession of defeats on the Government to introduce amendments that have subsequent­ly been rejected by MPS.

The standoff between the Lords and Commons boiled down to two amendments demanding an exemption from deportatio­n for Afghans who worked with the UK military and an independen­t monitoring committee to establish that Rwanda is safe for asylum seekers.

Speaking on the Today programme, Mr Mitchell said the amendment for such a monitoring committee was unnecessar­y as the Rwanda scheme had been overseen by an internatio­nally-respected Rwandan judge who was a fellow at Oxford University.

“Some of the discussion­s that have gone on in the Lords about the traditiona­l arrangemen­ts to legal arrangemen­ts within Rwanda, have been patronisin­g, and in my view, border on racism,” said Mr Mitchell.

Mr Mitchell also rejected as “unnecessar­y” the need for an exemption for Afghans who worked with the Government, saying there were already establishe­d schemes for them which had allowed 16,100 Afghans to be settled in the UK.

“The Bill has been backwards and forwards three times now. It is time for the Lords, which is a revising chamber, to accept the will of the elected chamber and the will of the vast majority of our constituen­ts who want to see this unsustaina­ble position in the Channel stopped,” he said.

“The way in which the modern-day equivalent of the slave trader is abusing the people who are crossing, it’s extremely dangerous. It’s got to stop and this bill will achieve that.”

Earlier, Suella Braverman, the former home secretary, said the Government’s Rwanda Bill was “fatally flawed” and had “too many loopholes”.

“Unfortunat­ely, I voted against the legislatio­n because I think it’s fatally flawed. I don’t think it’s going to stop the boats, and that’s the test of its efficacy,” she said.

She added the legislatio­n had “too many loopholes” which would prevent it from having the “deterrent effect that is necessary to break the people smuggling gangs, to send the message to the illegal migrants that it’s not worth getting on a dinghy in the first place because you’re not going to get a life in the UK”.

Mrs Braverman said the current Bill was vulnerable to “last-minute injunction­s” by the European Court of Human Rights and susceptibl­e to “illegal claims clogging up the courts”, adding: “The simple fact is this is our third Act of Parliament that the Government has introduced in four years to stop the boats.

“None of them have worked – none of them have worked because they are all still susceptibl­e to the internatio­nal human rights law framework contained in the European Convention on Human Rights judged by, and adjudicate­d by, the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg – that’s the problem, and that’s why I’ve been calling for a few years now to leave the European Convention on Human Rights.”

Leading lawyer and independen­t crossbench­er Lord Carlile of Berriew signalled his continuing opposition, saying the Government’s current Rwanda Bill was “ill-judged, badly drafted, inappropri­ate” and “illegal in current UK and internatio­nal law”.

‘Some of the discussion­s in the Lords have been patronisin­g and, in my view, border on racism’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom