Western Daily Press

Rwanda scheme already cost the country £700m

- STAFF REPORTERS wdp@reachplc.com

THE Rwanda deportatio­n scheme cost Britain £700 million despite only four volunteers being sent to Kigali, Yvette Cooper has said, branding the policy the “most shocking waste of taxpayer money I have ever seen”.

The Home Secretary accused the previous Conservati­ve government of creating an “asylum Hotel California”, where people arrived in the system but never left.

In a statement to MPs yesterday, Ms Cooper claimed that the Tories had planned to spend more than £10 billion over six years on the Migration and Economic Developmen­t Partnershi­p (MEDP).

And she warned that high levels of small boat journeys in the English Channel are likely to persist over the summer, blaming weak border control she said Labour had “inherited” from the previous administra­tion.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has confirmed his administra­tion is axing the scheme, which he and the Home Secretary have said is a “gimmick” but the Tories insist served to deter crossings.

“Two and a half years after the previous government launched it, I can report (the Migration and Economic Developmen­t Partnershi­p) has already cost the British taxpayer £700 million in order to send just four volunteers,” Ms Cooper said.

“Over the six years of the (MEDP) forecast, the previous government had planned to spend over £10 billion of taxpayers’ money on the scheme. They did not tell Parliament that.”

Those costs include £290 million paid to Rwanda, “chartering flights that never took off” and “detaining hundreds of people and then releasing them”, she said.

Ms Cooper warned that co-operation with European police forces was “too limited” and more needed to be done to tackle people-smuggling “upstream” long before the boats reached the French coast.

“I’m extremely concerned that high levels of dangerous crossings we have inherited are likely to persist through the summer,” she said.

The Home Secretary raised concerns over “legal contradict­ions” in the Illegal Migration Act and said “no decision” could be taken on an individual’s case if they arrived in the UK after March 2023 and met key conditions in the legislatio­n.

“It is the most extraordin­ary policy that I’ve ever seen. We have inherited asylum Hotel California – people arrive in the asylum system and they never leave. The previous government’s policy was effectivel­y an amnesty and that is the wrong thing to do,” she told MPs.

Ending the partnershi­p would “immediatel­y” save £750 million earmarked for the scheme this year, Ms Cooper said, with some of the money invested into Labour’s new border security command.

Home Office staff are already being redeployed from the scheme to immigratio­n enforcemen­t and returns, she added.

The minister said she is laying a statutory instrument to end the “retrospect­ive nature” of the Illegal Migration Act provisions to ensure that the Home Office can “immediatel­y start clearing cases from after March 2023”.

“Making this one simple change will save the taxpayer an estimated £7 billion over the next 10 years,” Ms Cooper told the Commons.

Shadow home secretary James Cleverly has accused her of using “made-up numbers” and accused the UK Government of showing “discourtes­y” towards the Rwandan government.

He said: “The Labour Party and indeed the Home Secretary in her statement likes to talk tough on border security, but today’s statement, despite all the hyperbole and the made-up numbers, is basically an admission of what we knew all along.

“That the Labour Party have scrapped the Rwanda partnershi­p on ideologica­l grounds, removed a deterrent, a deterrent, which the National Crime Agency said that we needed. And the level of discourtes­y, directed towards the people and government of Rwanda is quite breathtaki­ng.

“To have them read about this decision in the papers before anyone from Government had the good grace to formally notify them, I think, is an error, and no-one in this House believes for a moment that that level of discourtes­y would have happened had this partnershi­p been with a European country.”

It comes as Home Office figures showed nearly 1,500 migrants had arrived in the UK on small boats across the Channel in one week.

Some 1,499 people made the journey in 27 boats from July 15 to 21.

The maritime prefecture also said on Sunday that a further 71 migrants were saved in the Channel, but that some travellers on the boat who were not requesting assistance were allowed to continue the journey.

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