Muscat Daily

UK Parliament passes Rwanda bill

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The UK Parliament has passed the contentiou­s bill, allowing the government to send asylum seekers to Rwanda for their claims to be considered by the East African nation, reported CNN.

UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s efforts to pass the bill had been stuck between opposition in the Houses of Parliament and challenges in the British courts, as lawmakers and activists have sought to scupper the legislatio­n on human rights grounds.

Moreover, Sunak’s inability to implement the policy has caused considerab­le embarrassm­ent, as the British government has sent millions of pounds to Rwanda to fund a scheme that has failed to deliver any results to date, CNN reported.

It has been designed to prevent irregular migration into the UK, particular­ly people travelling on illegal and dangerous small boats from France, arranged by criminal gangs.

Meanwhile, in theory, the legislatio­n will see some landing in the UK sent to Rwanda where their asylum claim will be considered. If their claim is accepted, they will stay in Rwanda. If it is declined, the bill says they cannot be deported by Rwanda to anywhere other than the UK, though it is unclear what would ultimately happen in this scenario.

The scheme was first conceived in 2022 when, Sunak, who became prime minister then, made it the mission of his government to put a stop to these arrivals by following through on a Conservati­ve pledge to ‘stop the boats’.

Two years after the scheme was first conceived, the absence of any deportatio­ns so far has been considered a major failure for Sunak, CNN reported.

Last year, the Supreme Court of the UK ruled that the policy is unlawful ‘because there are substantia­l grounds for believing that asylum seekers would face a real risk of ill-treatment by reason of refoulemen­t to their country of origin if they were removed to Rwanda’.

Refoulemen­t is the practice where asylum seekers or refugees are forcibly returned to a place where they would face persecutio­n or danger, against important principles of internatio­nal human rights law.

The judges noted that as recently as 2021, the UK government criticised Rwanda for ‘extrajudic­ial killings, deaths in custody, enforced disappeara­nces and torture’.

The government responded by introducin­g the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigratio­n) Bill in January of this year, which effectivel­y enshrines in UK law that Rwanda is a safe country, overriding the judges’ concerns.

Home Secretary James Cleverly, in a video posted on X on Monday, said that ‘the Safety of Rwanda Bill has passed in Parliament and it will become law within days’.

He added that the act would ‘prevent people from abusing the law by using false human rights claims to block removals. And it makes clear that the UK Parliament is sovereign, giving the government the power to reject interim blocking measures imposed by European courts’, reported CNN.

However, even with the bill passed, the government might face legal challenges in the European Court of Human Rights, as the UK is still a signatory to the European Convention on Human Rights. The European court has previously barred it from sending asylum seekers to Rwanda.

The bill has suffered long delays because of attempts to amend it.

A process colloquial­ly known as ‘ping pong’, where the two parts of the UK’S parliament - the House of Commons and the House of Lords - send legislatio­n back and forth, has been going on for months.

Every time the House of Lords makes amendments to the bill, the House of Commons, where Sunak has a majority, must vote to remove them, according to CNN.

In 2022, the number of people arriving by small boats was 45,744, according to the Migration Observator­y at the University of Oxford.

Moreover, net migration in the same year was 745,000, according to government figures.

This is a problem for Sunak and his governing Conservati­ve Party, as they are set to face the public in a general election that must be called before the end of this year.

Parties on the right - most notably Reform UK, the new political home of arch-brexiteer Nigel Farage, will push the issue of illegal migration as hard as possible.

Notably, the opposition Labour party has already promised to scrap the Rwanda plans if it comes to power at the next general election, which must be held by January next year but is widely expected to take place later this year, Al Jazeera reported.

UK PM’S efforts to pass the bill had been stuck between opposition in the Houses of Parliament and challenges in the British courts, as lawmakers and activists have sought to sink it on rights grounds

 ?? UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak ??
UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak

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