The National (Scotland)

UN tells Sunak to drop Rwanda deportatio­n scheme plans

- BY HAMISH MORRISON

RISHI Sunak has been urged to abandon his Rwanda scheme by a United Nations human rights watchdog.

The Prime Minister hopes to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda this spring, but the legislatio­n is still held up in Parliament.

The United Nations Human Rights Committee (UNHRC) called on the UK Government to abandon the scheme and repeal measures already in legislatio­n as part of Sunak’s plan to “stop the boats” crossing the English Channel.

But UK Government sources said the UN was guilty of “double standards” because the internatio­nal body already sends refugees to Rwanda.

UN refugee agency the UNHCR has evacuated people from Libya to Rwanda, but that is a temporary and voluntary scheme.

The plans would see people who arrive on small boats deported to Rwanda to claim asylum there, with no right to come back to the UK.

The internatio­nal panel was “deeply concerned about the introducti­on of legislativ­e initiative­s containing elements that discrimina­te against migrants and that seek to limit access to rights for asylum seekers, refugees and migrants”, such as the Illegal Migration Act 2023.

The committee said the law effectivel­y amounts to an “asylum ban”.

The human rights body said it “regrets” the Rwanda plan and the Government’s efforts to adopt the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigratio­n) Bill “despite the ruling of the UK Supreme Court that the arrangemen­t would not be compliant with internatio­nal law”.

The legislatio­n, which is due to return to the Commons when MPs come back to Westminste­r following the Easter break on April 15, is designed to make the Rwanda plan legally watertight following the Supreme Court defeat.

The Safety of Rwanda Bill and a treaty with Kigali are aimed at addressing concerns about the scheme and the potential for people sent to the African nation to be removed to another country a process known as refoulemen­t where they could face persecutio­n.

The UN body said the Government should pull the legislatio­n, or repeal it if passed by Parliament, “with a view to strictly upholding the principle of non-refoulemen­t in both law and practice”.

The report published yesterday was issued by the Human Rights Committee, which monitors countries’ compliance with the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Its 18 members are independen­t human rights experts drawn from around the world.

 ?? ?? The UN has urged Rishi Sunak to drop the Rwanda scheme
The UN has urged Rishi Sunak to drop the Rwanda scheme

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