Flight grounded as European judges thwart plan to
send UK asylum seekers to Rwanda
Plane left on runway as European Court of Human Rights
intervenes.
BY ANDREW
MCDONALD
June 15,
2022 1:28 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/uk-rwanda-flight-grounded-european-court-uk-asylum-seekers/
Boris
Johnson’s controversial plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda suffered a bitter
blow Tuesday night after the first planned flight was grounded on the runway
following a late intervention by European judges.
The
Kigali-bound flight had originally been scheduled to take off with 130 asylum
seekers on board Tuesday night, though numbers had dwindled rapidly as the date
approached due to multiple lawsuits aimed at the U.K. government.
In farcical
scenes, the flight ultimately failed to leave the runway at all, with
individuals still being pulled from the plane one by one throughout Tuesday
evening following an 11th-hour intervention by the European Court of Human
Rights. Eventually, every asylum seeker on board was granted a reprieve, and
the empty plane returned to its hangar.
U.K. Home
Secretary Priti Patel said she was “disappointed” the flight had failed to
depart and described the European body’s decision to intervene as “very
surprising.”
“We will
not be deterred,” Patel added. “Our legal team are reviewing every decision
made and preparation for the next flight begins now.”
The flight
was part of controversial U.K. government plans aimed at deterring asylum
seekers from making the dangerous crossing over the English Channel in small
boats.
Under the
agreement signed with the Kigali government, the U.K. will send some
undocumented migrants — judged by the prime minister to be “anyone who enters
the U.K. illegally” — to Rwanda, where they will be given temporary
accommodation and given the choice to either apply for asylum in the east
African country or return to their origin country.
If accepted
for asylum, they will be allowed to remain in Rwanda for five years, after
which they can apply again. There is no path to return to the U.K. legally.
The plans
have divided public opinion within the U.K. and faced intense opposition on
ethical, financial and practical grounds — most notably from the Church of
England leadership and Prince Charles.
Human
rights lawyers and protesters have been fighting legal battles for weeks to
prevent the first scheduled flight from taking off. Their efforts had appeared
to be in vain following a series of legal defeats, however, with the U.K.’s
Supreme Court ruling Tuesday that the flight could go ahead.
But the
last-minute intervention from the European judges proved key in reversing that
decision.
In a
statement several hours before the plane’s departure time, the ECHR said it had
granted an “urgent interim measure” to one of the asylum seekers to remove him
from the flight. The remaining six passengers were subsequently taken off the
plane following similar injunctions.
The
dramatic intervention is likely to provide further ammunition to Johnson’s
highly-politicized attacks on European judges. Earlier Tuesday, he had already
hinted he would consider taking the U.K. out of the European Convention on
Human Rights as a result of the current standoff.
Johnson
told broadcasters that “it may very well be necessary to change some laws” when
pressed on whether Britain would consider withdrawing from the human rights
body.
“The legal
world is very good at picking up ways of trying to stop the government from
upholding what we think is a sensible law,” Johnson said.


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