Thursday June 16, 2022
Judges have thrown out last-gasp attempts by campaigners to
stop the United Kingdom sending its first flight of asylum seekers to Rwanda on
Tuesday, a plan the United Nations’ refugee chief described as “catastrophic”.
Charities and a trade union had launched an appeal against
the government’s plan to send asylum seekers to the East African nation after
the High Court on Friday ruled the first planned flight could take place.
Judge Rabinder Singh said on Monday the Court of Appeal
could not interfere with the High Court judge’s “clear and detailed” judgement,
and refused permission for further appeal.
The government is promising to push ahead with the chartered
flight on Tuesday from an undisclosed airport. The authorities have not
provided details of those selected for deportation.
Amid legal challenges, the number of people scheduled to
leave on the plane, which charities said originally included people fleeing
Afghanistan and Syria as well as Iran and Iraq, had now fallen to less than a
dozen.
A second legal challenge at the High Court was also later
rejected, with judge Jonathan Swift saying everyone on the flight had been
given access to a lawyer to challenge their deportation.
Human rights group say the policy is inhumane and will put
asylum seekers at risk.
The UNHCR has said Rwanda, whose own human rights record is
under scrutiny, does not have the capacity to process the claims, and there is
a risk some migrants could be returned to countries from which they had fled.
“We believe that this is all wrong … for so many different
reasons,” UN High Commissioner For Refugees Filippo Grandi told reporters. “The
precedent that this creates is catastrophic for a concept that needs to be
shared like asylum.”A High Court judge refused on Friday to grant a temporary
injunction to block the flight, and on Monday three justices on the Court of
Appeal upheld that decision.
Initially, some 37 individuals were scheduled to be removed
on the first flight, but the charity Care4Calais said that number has dwindled
to just eight. Three more individuals will have their cases heard at the High
Court on Tuesday morning.
Dismantling the
business model
Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Home Secretary Priti Patel
insist the policy is needed to stop a flood of all-too-often deadly migrant
crossings of the Channel from France.
Under the agreement with Kigali, anyone landing in the UK
illegally is liable to be given a one-way ticket for processing and
resettlement in Rwanda.
The government says that will dismantle the business model
of gangsters who charge would-be migrants thousands of dollars to undertake the
perilous crossing for a new life in the UK.
Genuine asylum claimants should be content to stay in
France, it says.
And contradicting the UNHCR, it insists that Rwanda is a
safe destination with the capacity to absorb possibly tens of thousands of
UK-bound claimants in future.
For now, the deportations will proceed “on a gradual basis”,
Doris Uwicyeza, chief technical adviser to Rwanda’s justice ministry, told LBC
radio.
Uwicyeza pushed back at criticism over the human rights
record of President Paul Kagame’s government – which is set this month to host
a Commonwealth summit attended by Prince Charles and Johnson.
Rwanda’s genocide of the 1990s made it particularly
attentive to “protecting anybody from hate speech and discrimination”,
including gay people, she said. But British critics of the new policy are
unconvinced.
They include Charles, according to The Times newspaper on
Saturday, prompting unnamed cabinet ministers to tell Queen Elizabeth II’s heir
to stay out of politics in the Sunday Times.
SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES