Failed
Rwanda deportation scheme cost £700m, says Yvette Cooper
Home
secretary describes Tory policy that Labour has axed as ‘the biggest waste of
taxpayer money I have ever seen’
Eleni Courea
Political correspondent
Mon 22 Jul
2024 18.17 BST
The
Conservative government spent £700m of taxpayers’ money on the failed Rwanda
deportation scheme, which has proved to be a “costly con”, the home secretary
has said.
Yvette
Cooper described the policy, which was introduced two-and-a-half years ago and
sought to send UK asylum seekers to Rwanda for processing, as “the biggest
waste of taxpayer money I have ever seen”.
She told the
Commons that over the course of six years ministers had intended to spend £10bn
on the policy, but they never divulged this figure to parliament.
The home
secretary said she had formally notified the Rwandan government that the
partnership was over and thanked them for working with the UK “in good faith”.
“The failure
of this policy lies with the previous UK government, it has been a costly con
and the taxpayer has had to pay the price,” she said.
Under the
Conservatives, the Home Office refused to set out the full cost of the scheme,
though an official letter last year stated it had reached £290m. In a report
last spring the National Audit Office estimated that the cost of the policy had
surpassed £500m.
Ultimately,
just four people travelled to Rwanda voluntarily under the scheme, Cooper told
the Commons. “We had often warned that it would frankly be cheaper to put them
up in the Paris Ritz – frankly now it turns out it would actually be cheaper to
buy the Paris Ritz,” she said.
Cooper said
the £700m cost included £290m payments to Rwanda, chartering flights that never
took off, detaining people and then releasing them, and paying more than 1,000
civil servants to work on the policy.
Labour
confirmed it was scrapping the scheme immediately after it won the election on
4 July. Cooper has announced the formation of a border security command
bringing together police, intelligence agencies and immigration enforcement to
try to stop people smugglers.
Under the
government’s plans, new offences will be created to allow enforcement agencies
to treat people smugglers like terrorists and to penalise social media
companies that fail to remove advertisements for small boat crossings.
In her
statement in the Commons, Cooper blasted the Conservative government’s
“unworkable” Illegal Migration Act, which was introduced in March 2023 and cost
the taxpayer billions by putting asylum seekers who arrived in the UK in a
state of limbo.
She said
“legal contradictions” in the act created a situation akin to “Hotel California
– people arrive in the asylum system and they never leave”, because no
decisions could be taken on the cases of asylum seekers who arrived after March
2023 and met certain conditions.
The home
secretary said she had been “shocked to discover that the Home Office has
effectively stopped making the majority of asylum decisions” and said it was
“effectively an amnesty and that is the wrong thing to do”.
She warned
that the cost of the “indefinitely rising” asylum backlog in hotel and
accommodation support bills was “astronomical”, telling MPs: “The potential
costs of asylum support over the next four years, if we continue down this
track, could be an eye-watering £30bn to £40bn – that is double the annual
police budget for England and Wales.”
She said
that Labour had inherited a situation in which criminal gangs were “operating
with impunity” and that high levels of small boat crossings across the Channel
were “likely to persist through the summer”.
James
Cleverly, the shadow home secretary, accused Cooper of “hyperbole and made-up
numbers” and said Labour had “scrapped the Rwanda partnership on ideological
grounds”.
“The reality
is everybody knows, including the people smugglers, that the small boat problem
is going to get worse, indeed has already got worse under Labour because they
have no deterrent,” the shadow home secretary told MPs.
Kit
Malthouse, a Conservative MP, challenged Cooper on whether she would resign if
the number of small boat crossings was higher next summer than this one.
Richard
Foord, the Liberal Democrat defence spokesperson, called for the creation of a
resettlement scheme to create a safe and legal route and disincentivise asylum
seekers from travelling to the UK before they have made an application.
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