UK announces plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda, draws criticism

UK announces plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda, draws criticism

Opposition parties describe plan as 'evil', 'inhumane' with rights groups calling decision 'nasty and cruel'

By Muhammad Mussa

LONDON (AA) - The British government on Thursday announced a new and controversial relocation plan that would see asylum seekers attempting to enter the UK being sent to Rwanda for resettlement.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson unveiled the new approach, claiming to have created a “world-leading asylum offer” that would protect the UK’s borders, put an end to illegal people smuggling and take back control of legal immigration.

“We cannot sustain a parallel illegal system. Our compassion may be infinite, but our capacity to help people is not. The British people voted several times to control our borders, not to close them, but to control them,” Johnson said.

“It is a plan that will ensure the UK has a world-leading asylum offer, providing generous protection to those directly fleeing the worst of humanity, by settling thousands of people every year through safe and legal routes,” he added.

Details of the plans have not yet been released but it is understood that the approach to sending asylum seekers to Rwanda will mainly involve single male adults. Home Secretary Priti Patel has flown to the Rwandan capital Kigali to sign an immigration deal with the government of President Paul Kagame.


- Rwanda plan provokes backlash

The government’s new immigration plan has sparked outrage amongst opposition parties, human rights groups, and refugee charities that have denounced the strategy as "cruel" and "inhumane" and one that would cost taxpayers millions per year in a time of rising bills and decreasing living standards.

The government has been criticized for being irresponsible and out of touch, ignoring the fact that the lives of the asylum seekers being sent to Rwanda could be put in danger owing to the Rwandan government’s poor human rights record. It is not yet known whether the camps the asylum seekers would be settled in will be run by the British government or not.

“Sending people to another country – let alone one with such a dismal human rights record – for asylum ‘processing’ is the very height of irresponsibility and shows how far removed from humanity and reality the government now is on asylum issues,” Steve Valdez-Symonds, Amnesty International UK’s refugee and migrant rights director, said.

“The government is already wrecking our asylum system at huge cost to the taxpayer while causing terrible anxiety to the people stuck in the backlogs it has created. But this shockingly ill-conceived idea will go far further in inflicting suffering while wasting huge amounts of public money,” Valdez-Symonds added.

Charity Refugee Action described the strategy as a “grubby cash-for-people plan” that defeats the original purpose and intentions of why people seek asylum in the UK which is primarily to escape war and persecution. By sending them to Rwanda, however, the government risks further endangering their lives.

Politicians have also expressed anger at the plan and have accused the government of using it to distract the population from the recent Partygate scandal that has seen the prime minister, his wife, and Chancellor Rishi Sunak fined for attending illegal parties during the nationwide lockdown.

“A despicable policy on its own terms. But add the fact that it’s being set out today to distract from #partygate and you see the utter moral bankruptcy of this Tory government laid bare. Shameful,” First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon said on Twitter.

“Desperate & truly shameful announcement from Govt tonight as an attempt to distract from Boris Johnson’s lawbreaking. Unworkable, unethical & extortionate,” Shadow Home Secretary of the Labour Party Yvette Cooper said.

Politicians within the Conservative Party have also accused the prime minister of using the plan as a “massive distraction” to the growing crisis surrounding the Partygate scandal and the punishments given to Johnson and Sunak.

"He's trying to make an announcement today on migration, and all of this is a massive distraction. It's not going away. It is a crisis. It requires crisis management. There needs to be a plan. Otherwise, we're in drift mode, with potentially more resignations and more letters of concern. That isn't where we want to go – it will then dominate the political agenda,” Tory MP Tobias Ellwood said in an interview with the BBC.

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