Western Mail

How will the PM’s new plan to fly migrants to Rwanda work?

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Boris Johnson and Priti Patel have set out widely criticised plans to fly migrants who cross the Channel in small boats more than 4,000 miles to Rwanda. The eye-catching scheme comes after the Home Secretary has come under sustained pressure to stop asylum seekers making the perilous journeys. Here is a look at what is known about the immigratio­n plans so far How many people will be removed to Rwanda?

Mr Johnson has said the agreement is “uncapped” and Rwanda will have the “capacity to resettle tens of thousands of people in the years ahead”.

But officials were putting that figure at closer to thousands in the first years.

Who will be removed?

Ms Patel said the “vast majority” of those who arrive in the UK through means deemed “illegal”, such as on unauthoris­ed boats or stowed away in lorries, will be considered for relocation.

Reports have suggested only male migrants who arrive from safe countries will be eligible but the Home Secretary declined to give further details.

It is understood adults will be prioritise­d for relocation under the scheme, with officials insisting families arriving in the UK will not be split up.

How much will the scheme cost?

The taxpayer will foot the bill, including for the cost of chartering flights to remove detainees, but ministers are not saying how much the programme will cost.

Britain has promised Rwanda an initial £120m as part of an “economic transforma­tion and integratio­n fund” but the UK will be paying the operationa­l costs too.

The Home Office said a set amount of funding will be provided for each relocated person.

But it declined to say how much, other than to say it will be comparable to current processing costs in the UK and cover case workers, legal advice, translator­s, accommodat­ion, food and healthcare.

For those who successful­ly claim asylum in Rwanda, it will fund an integratio­n package to help them put down roots.

The agreement struck with Rwanda also says Britain will resettle “a portion of Rwanda’s most vulnerable refugees” in the UK.

The Refugee Council has claimed costs could soar to £1.4bn, citing a

Together With Refugees report based on the Australian offshore processing system.

But the Home Office questioned the figure, with a source saying it was “ludicrous to suggest costs would be more than the current system”.

How will it work?

Once migrants are brought ashore in Dover by Navy and Border Force personnel, they will receive medical assessment­s before being taken to the Manston disused airfield and processing site.

Those deemed to have entered by dangerous or illegal means will be detained and considered for removal to Rwanda under a screening process.

Not only is it designed to exempt those with relevant vulnerabil­ities or safeguardi­ng risks, but Rwanda has to approve any requests and has made clear it would reject any individual­s with criminal records.

Those seeking asylum from Rwanda are not expected to be sent back there, regardless of how they entered the UK.

The migrants will be sent by chartered flight to Rwanda wanda where they will be housed in temporary ary accommodat­ion, not ot detained, and have e their asylum claims assessed.

If they are not granted refugee status, they will be e given the option of applying to stay under der another basis.

What’s the point?

Mr Johnson accepted pted the measure is not a “magic bullet” that will solve the crossings but hopes it will be a “very considerab­le deterrent”.

And he wants it to break the business model of the “vile people smugglers” who risk turning the Channel into a “watery graveyard”.

But refugee charities argued the plans do nothing to alleviate the pressures forcing migrants to take the extraordin­ary step of paying criminals cr to pack pa them into unsafe boats to cross a perilous perilou shipping lane.

When will i

it start and how long is the deal for?

Mr Johnson said he was braced for the policy to be challenged in the courts, as he criticised a “formidable army of politicall­y motivated lawyers” who want to “thwart removals”.

But officials expect the scheme will start in the coming weeks, with people on flights within months.

The arrangemen­t between the UK Government and Rwanda will last for five years, the agreed memorandum of understand­ing says.

But they have retained the option to renew the scheme a year from its scheduled end.

Is Rwanda safe?

Rwanda is one of the safest countries in the world, according to Mr Johnson, while Ms Patel said it is a “safe and secure country with the respect for the rule of law”.

But critics have aired their concerns over the African nation’s “dismal” and “questionab­le” human rights record.

A Human Rights Watch report published last year found evidence that Rwandan authoritie­s had arbitraril­y detained over a dozen gay and transgende­r people ahead of a June 2021 conference, accusing them of “not representi­ng Rwandan values”.

According to the Foreign Office, homosexual­ity “remains frowned upon by many” and LGBT people can experience discrimina­tion and abuse, including from local authoritie­s.

The travel advice page describes the country as “generally safe” with relatively low crime levels, but the situation near the border with the Democratic Republic of Congo and Burundi remains unstable, and there have been armed attacks in some areas.

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 ?? Dan Kitwood/Getty Images ?? Migrants arrive at Dover port after being picked up in the Channel by the border force yesterday Inset: Prime Minister Boris Johnson
Dan Kitwood/Getty Images Migrants arrive at Dover port after being picked up in the Channel by the border force yesterday Inset: Prime Minister Boris Johnson

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