Sunday People

My life will be at risk if I am sent to Rwanda again

Refugee tells of his Africa ordeal

- By Laura Connor feedback@people.co.uk

We have been treated like cattle, not

humans

KIDANE was 18 when he fled his home country of Eritrea to seek asylum in Israel.

But, in a cruel scheme which experts say inspired the UK’S deportatio­n plan, he was flown to Rwanda with the promise of a new life.

Kidane – not his real name – crossed Africa and Europe to get here but could now be sent back to Rwanda.

Speaking from his asylum centre in Cardiff, Kidane, 29, said: “To be deported to Rwanda would be a huge threat to my life. I’d do the whole journey again and I might not survive it again. We’ve been treated like cattle, not humans. The UK wants to get rid of all refugees and asylum seekers.”

Kidane is one of more than 60,000 Eritrean and Sudanese refugees who fled dictatorsh­ip and war in their homelands to start a new life in Israel.

In 2016, after months in a desert prison camp, he was told he would be deported back to Eritrea or imprisoned indefinite­ly unless he went to Rwanda. He was flown to Rwandan capital Kigali via Turkey with a $3,500 settlement grant.

Israeli officials said he could apply for asylum in Rwanda, where he could get a job and be protected.

He says: “When we arrived in Kigali, we had our permits and visas taken away before being sent to a hotel surrounded by security.

“We stayed there for three weeks not knowing what was happening, when immigratio­n officers arrived to take us over the border to Uganda. We had to pay them $150 for the trip and a further $150 to get to Kampala.

“The Israeli government knew what they were doing and used this as a way to get rid of us – and that is exactly what the UK government is doing.”

From Uganda, Kidane fled to South Sudan, where militiamen attacked his convoy, killing four of his friends. He was then held in a South Sudanese jail, where he narrowly avoided being shot as civil war raged around him.

Kidane decided to bribe his way out after seeing those who couldn’t pay being killed, beaten and raped. From Libya, he went by boat to Italy, spent four years in Germany, then paid smugglers to take him in a dinghy from Calais to the UK to try to reach his brother – his only family in Europe.

Kidane said our Rwanda policy will not deter migrants like him “who are so full of hopelessne­ss”.

Professor Galia Sabar, of Tel Aviv University, who worked with Eritrean refugees like Kidane, called it “cruel, dangerous and truly racist”. “It is based on ignorance,” she said. “You cannot justify it. This policy is like sending this man to his death. I see no difference between Israel’s policy and the UK’S.”

Israel axed its scheme after sending 4,000 Eritrean and Sudanese asylum seekers to Rwanda and Uganda between 2013 and 2018. Martin Plaut, of the Institute of Commonweal­th

Studies, said: “The way Israeli refugees were treated by Rwanda indicates it is a completely unsuitable place to send refugees. The authoritie­s simply trade people across the border. The UK’S scheme will mean they have to do the whole journey again, through smugglers, human traffickin­g, incarcerat­ion and potentiall­y a death sentence. It’s a ruthless, vicious cycle.”

Shadow Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said: “The disturbing stories show why Israel abandoned this policy. We have said from the beginning the Rwanda deal is unworkable, unethical and extortiona­tely expensive. This is more evidence why the Government should concentrat­e on stopping the criminal gangs who operate in the Channel instead.”

The Home Office said: “Rwanda is a fundamenta­lly safe and secure country with a track record of supporting asylum seekers, a thorough assessment is undertaken to ensure no one would be transferre­d there if it was not safe.”

an American short story about Walter Mitty – a dull man who has vivid daydreams that he is a war hero.

The group was told about a volunteer who claimed he served in the Paras but was actually thrown out of recruit training for refusing to obey orders.

He was ordered to leave the country by the Ukrainian authoritie­s when he panicked and risked the lives of other volunteers while on patrol. The Walter

Mitty Hunters Club wrote on its website: “Sent packing by the Ukraine armed forces after he started to panic a tad too much after he made claims of being a veteran with loads of combat experience.

“The truth was evident in the little knowledge he had in basic soldiering skills.”

Another man also claimed to have served for 22 years in the British Army, including as an SAS officer.

The fraudster said he had served in Kosovo, Iraq, Afghanista­n, the Falklands and the Middle East – as well as completing spying missions in Russia and China.

Meanwhile, the Ukrainian army retreated from frontline city Sievierodo­netsk yesterday. But some troops were still holed up in the huge Azot chemical factory at the edge of the city with 500 civilians.

G7 leaders from the UK, US, Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan were due to meet in the Bavarian Alps today to discuss the Ukraine war.

The coalition backing Kyiv has shown signs of fracturing amid arguments the country should cede land to Russia to speed up a peace pact. But Prime Minister Boris Johnson said last night: “The UK will back Ukraine because we know their security is our security, their freedom is our freedom.”

feedback@people.co.uk

The truth was evident in the little knowledge he had

in soldiering

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‘DISTURBING’: Yvette Cooper
■ ‘DISTURBING’: Yvette Cooper
 ?? ?? RISK: Real troops are put in danger
RISK: Real troops are put in danger

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