Yorkshire Post

Home Office yet to find airline carrier for Rwanda scheme

-

A CABINET minister was unable to say whether the Government has found an airline to send asylum seekers to Rwanda despite suggesting that flights would take off “within weeks”.

Health Secretary Victoria Atkins insisted the Home Office is “ready to go” in implementi­ng the scheme as a Bill aimed at saving the stalled deportatio­n policy makes its way through Parliament.

Speaking to Sky News’ Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips, Ms Atkins said: “We want them to take off as quickly as possible … We very much plan to have it within weeks.”

Asked whether the Government had an air carrier ready yet, Ms Atkins said: “The Home Office is working on this, and so believe you me, the Home Office is ready to go.”

“They haven’t got one, have they?” Sir Trevor asked her.

“We have seen some real progress in the last year with the reduction in small boat crossings by a third … but this is one part of our overall plan to cut illegal migration,” Ms Atkins replied.

Elsewhere on yesterday’s morning broadcast round, deputy Tory Party chairwoman Rachel Maclean appeared to suggest a carrier had still not been confirmed.

“I’m sure that we will have a carrier in place,” she told Times Radio. “And this is all part of operationa­lising the plan. We need this plan because we need to have the deterrent effect.”

It comes after reports suggested that Rwanda’s state-owned airline turned down a UK Government proposal to transport asylum seekers because it wanted to avoid being associated with the controvers­ial scheme.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has repeatedly said flights to Kigali will take off by spring, but refused to name a specific date.

The Safety of Rwanda Bill, which aims to protect the Government’s troubled deportatio­n scheme from further legal setbacks after the UK Supreme Court ruled against it, will return to the Commons next week.

As well as compelling judges to regard the east African country as safe, the legislatio­n would also give ministers the power to ignore emergency injunction­s.

But the Lords has insisted on an amendment to restore the jurisdicti­on of domestic courts in relation to the safety of Rwanda and enable them to intervene.

The Financial Times last week quoted a Home Office insider as having said “RwandAir said ‘no’ because of the potential damage to their brand”.

Government sources have insisted that securing planes would not be a problem.

Mr Sunak has pinned the success of the scheme on the Bill passing Parliament, telling reporters: “Once it’s up and running, I’m confident we’ll be able to operationa­lise the scheme, get people on flights … I’m confident that once the Bill is passed, we will be able to get the scheme up and running.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom