Western Mail

PM defiant on Rwanda asylum deal

- MARTINA BET newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

BORIS Johnson has claimed “liberal lawyers” will attempt to put a spanner in the works of his plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda but promised “we will get it done”.

The Prime Minister’s comments come as Downing Street revealed on Tuesday that sending migrants to Rwanda may not take place for months.

No.10 was unable to say when the first flights sending migrants on a one-way trip to the East African nation would take off, in the face of criticism. Officials insisted they were not waiting for court challenges to be resolved before putting the policy into practice.

Speaking to reporters at Southampto­n Airport yesterday, Mr Johnson claimed “we always knew” that “liberal lawyers” would try to make the plan difficult.

However, he stressed the partnershi­p between Rwanda and the UK is a “very, very sensible thing”.

The Prime Minister said: “It’s a great deal between two countries, each helping the other. Of course, there are going to be legal eagles, liberal lawyers, who will try to make this difficult to settle. We always knew this was going to happen, but it is a very, very sensible thing. If people are coming across the Channel illegally, and if they are, their lives are being put at risk by ruthless and unscrupulo­us gangsters, which is what is happening at the moment.”

He added: “You need a solution. And you need something that is going to say to those people, to those gangsters, ‘I’m sorry, but you can’t tell your customers, you can’t tell these poor people, that they’re just going to come to the UK, and they’re going to be lost in the system, because we’re going to find a way of making sure that they are going immediatel­y to Rwanda’.

“I think that’s a humane, compassion­ate and sensible thing to do. I’m not going to pretend to you that is going to be without legal challenges. I think I said that when I announced it, but we will get it done.”

Earlier this month, Home Secretary Priti Patel signed what she described as a “world-first” agreement with Rwanda, which will see the it receive asylum seekers deemed by the UK to have arrived illegally and therefore inadmissib­le under new immigratio­n rules.

The deal is already subject to legal challenges.

The Prime Minister’s spokesman said the flights would take place at the “earliest opportunit­y” and the plan was a “fully legally secure approach”, adding: “We have received pre-action correspond­ence from a number of legal firms, I can’t get into that more... but we still maintain our hope to have the first flights take place in a matter of months.”

 ?? Dan Kitwood ?? > Migrants arriving in Dover this week
Dan Kitwood > Migrants arriving in Dover this week

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