asylum
Rwanda asylum flight cancelled after 11th-hour
ECHR intervention
First flight to Rwanda grounded after lawyers make
successful emergency application
Diane
Taylor, Rajeev Syal and Emine Sinmaz in Kigali
Tue 14 Jun
2022 23.36 BST
Boris
Johnson’s plan to send an inaugural flight of asylum seekers to Rwanda has been
abandoned after a dramatic 11th-hour ruling by the European court of human
rights.
Up to seven
people who had come to the UK seeking refuge had been expected to be removed to
the east African country an hour and a half before the flight was due to take
off.
But a
ruling by the ECHR on one of the seven cases allowed lawyers for the other six
to make successful last-minute applications.
The
decision is a significant and embarrassing blow for Boris Johnson and his home
secretary, Priti Patel, who had promised to start sending thousands of asylum
seekers 4,000 miles to the east African country in May.
It comes
hours after the prime minister threatened to take the UK out of the ECHR and
accused lawyers of aiding criminals exploiting refugees in the Channel.
The
legality of the Rwanda policy will be tested in a full court hearing next
month.
Responding
to the decision, Patel said she was “disappointed” by the legal challenge, made
pointed criticisms of the ECHR ruling and said that the policy will continue.
“We will
not be deterred from doing the right thing and delivering our plans to control
our nation’s borders,” she said. “Our legal team are reviewing every decision
made on this flight and preparation for the next flight begins now.”
Yvette
Cooper, the shadow home secretary, said that the government must take
responsibility for the failed flight, and indicated that the government does
not mind clashing with lawyers and the European courts.
“Ministers
are pursuing a policy they know isn’t workable and that won’t tackle criminal
gangs,” she wrote on Twitter last night. “But they still paid Rwanda £120m and
hired a jet that hasn’t taken off because they just want a row and someone else
to blame.”
The Rwandan
government said on Wednesday it was still committed to taking in asylum seekers
sent by the UK. “We are not deterred by these developments. Rwanda remains
fully committed to making this partnership work,” government spokeswoman
Yolande Makolo told AFP.
“The
current situation of people making dangerous journeys cannot continue as it is
causing untold suffering to so many. Rwanda stands ready to receive the
migrants when they do arrive and offer them safety and opportunity in our
country.”
The flight,
which cost an estimated £500,000, had already been paid for from the public
purse, a government source confirmed. The UK government has paid £120m as a
downpayment on the Rwanda deal. The government has declined to say how much it
has paid in legal costs, and has not said how much it expects to pay for future
flights, accommodation and living costs for everyone sent to Rwanda.
The ECHR
examined the case of a 54-year-old Iraqi asylum seeker who crossed the Channel
in a boat.
He claimed
asylum in the UK last month citing danger to his life in Iraq. Five days later,
he was served with a notice of intent indicating that the Home Office was
considering deeming his asylum claim inadmissible and relocating him to Rwanda.
A doctor at
the detention centre issued a report saying that he may have been a victim of
torture, it is understood. He was then served with removal directions to Rwanda
for 14 June 2022. A letter from the court said that the asylum seeker should
not be removed on Tuesday evening.
The ECHR
said it took particular account of evidence that asylum seekers transferred
from the UK to Rwanda will not have access to fair and efficient procedures for
the determination.
The
decision also cited the ruling by Mr Justice Swift, who on Friday dismissed a
request for an urgent injunction temporarily halting the flight.
A statement
from the ECHR said an urgent interim measure was granted in the case of KN, “an
asylum seeker facing imminent removal to Rwanda”, v the UK.
“The
European Court has indicated to the UK government that the applicant should not
be removed to Rwanda until three weeks after the delivery of the final domestic
decision in his ongoing judicial review proceedings,” it said.
Earlier,
the prime minister hinted again that the UK could leave the European convention
on human rights to make it easier to remove illegal migrants from the UK.
Asked
whether it was time for the UK to withdraw from the ECHR after the government’s
difficulty in implementing its Rwanda policy, the prime minister said: “Will it
be necessary to change some laws to help us as we go along? It may very well
be.”
In April,
at the launch of the Rwanda policy, Johnson had said that thousands of asylum
seekers would be sent away, and that the first flight would leave in May.
The scheme
has been beset with “teething problems”, Johnson has admitted. The number of
asylum seekers expected to be sent to Rwanda fell from 130 at the start of last
week, to 31 on Friday, to just seven on Tuesday.
Most
successfully lodged appeals claiming that sending those seeking sanctuary in
the UK to an east African state with a poor human rights record breaches their
human rights or that they have been victims of modern slavery.
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At a
Cabinet meeting on Tuesday, Johnson also implied that lawyers representing
asylum seekers are aiding human traffickers who charge thousands for journeys
in dangerous boats across the Channel.
“They are,
I’m afraid, undermining everything that we’re trying to do to support safe and
legal routes for people to come to the UK and to oppose the illegal and
dangerous routes,” he said.
He said
what the “criminal gangs are doing and what … those who effectively are
abetting the work of the criminal gangs are doing, is undermining people’s
confidence in the safe and legal system, undermining people’s general
acceptance of immigration”.
Campaigners
for refugee rights welcomed the decision and warned that the policy is still
being pursued.
Enver
Solomon, CEO of Refugee Council, said the government should have a grown-up
conversation with France and the EU about dealing with refugees, particularly
in the Channel.
“Those
threatened with removal are people who have escaped war, persecution, torture,
and violence – many of whom have only been prevented from flying due to
individual legal interventions declaring it a clear breach of their human
rights to do so. The Refugee Council has also had to directly intervene to stop
young people being removed to Rwanda because they were falsely assessed as
adults.
“Government
claims that this deal would act as a deterrent to end the model of
people-traffickers, have already been disproven with the numbers of people
travelling across the channel almost doubling on the same time last year. We
always knew these measures would do little to stop desperate people making
dangerous journeys to the UK, because they do absolutely nothing to address the
reasons people come.”
Mark
Serwotka, general secretary of the Public and Commercial Services union, said:
“We’re pleased the courts have ruled to stop this flight. It’s time for the
government to stop this inhumane policy which is the basest of gesture politics
and start to engage seriously with sorting out the asylum system so those who
come to our country seeking refuge are treated fairly and according to the
law.”
Hope
Hostel, Kigali, where asylum seekers deported from the UK will be taken on
their arrival in Rwanda.
Makolo, the
Rwandan government spokesperson, told a press conference in Kigali on Tuesday
that there were “misconceptions” about what Rwanda was like and “some of this
is perpetuated by the media”.
“When the
first flights land here in Kigali the new arrivals will be welcomed and looked
after and supported to make new lives here. We will provide support with their
asylum applications, including legal support, translation services and we will
provide decent accommodation.”
Downing
Street justified the estimated £500,000 expense of the flight, saying that
immigration costs the UK taxpayer £1.5bn every year already, with almost £5m a
day on accommodating asylum seekers in hotels.
On Monday,
138 people reached the UK in three boats, while more than 200 arrived on
Tuesday, with more than 10,000 migrants recorded as making the journey so far
this year.

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