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Rwanda flight detentions to begin within weeks, UK says

06:45 am on 29 April 2024

A grounded Rwanda deportation flight at Boscombe Down Air Base, on June 14, 2022 near Amesbury, in Wiltshire. The European Court of Human Rights intervened to stop the flight. Photo: Getty Images / Dan Kitwood

Migrants are to start being detained within weeks in preparation for the first flights taking off to Rwanda, the British Home Office has said.

It comes after the Guardian reported people would start to be transferred to detention centres on Monday.

In response, the Home Office said the government was "entering the final phase" of operationalising the policy.

Glasgow-based human rights lawyer Aamer Anwar said he had been told detentions would begin on Monday.

He said he expected to "see an explosion of the spirit of Kenmure Street across the UK" in the coming days - a reference to protests on a street in Glasgow in 2021 where hundreds of people blocked an immigration van to prevent asylum seekers being removed.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has said the first flight should take off in 10 to 12 weeks.

A Home Office spokesperson said at some stage preparations would "inevitably" include detaining people.

"It would be inappropriate to comment further on operational activity," the spokesperson added.

According to the Guardian, officials plan to hold up asylum seekers who turn up for routine meetings at immigration service offices and will also pick people up nationwide in a major two-week exercise. These people would then be transferred to detention centres.

These details have not been confirmed by the BBC.

The policy, which would see some asylum seekers sent to Rwanda, seeks to deter people from crossing the Channel in small boats.

Some 359 migrants were detected making the dangerous crossing on Saturday, according to Home Office figures.

In response to the report in the Guardian, Sonya Sceats, chief executive of charity Freedom from Torture, told the BBC: "Make no mistake, this latest attack on refugees by this government will further traumatise people who have fled from torture chambers seeking safety and a chance to rebuild their lives in the UK.

"We know from our clinical services that even survivors of torture who are completely safe from harm tend to live in a semi-permanent state of hypervigilance to threats, because of their history of being rounded up, detained, and abused in authoritarian states. So news of this crackdown is sure to trigger mental health collapse in many men, women and children in the care of our therapists."

The Safety of Rwanda Act, which aims to avoid further legal challenges to the policy by declaring Rwanda a safe country, was approved by MPs and peers last week and passed into law on Thursday.

However, the plan could still be held up by court challenges.

Meanwhile, Sunak has said claims the Rwanda plan is causing an increase in migrants to Ireland show it is already having a deterrent effect.

Rishi Sunak says Ireland's recent experience proves the worth of his government's plans. Photo: IAN FORSYTH

Last week, Irish Deputy Prime Minister Micheál Martin said there had been an increase in the number of people crossing the border from Northern Ireland into the Republic, partly because people were "fearful" of staying in the UK as they could be sent to Rwanda.

In an interview with Sky News' Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips, Sunak was asked about the comments and challenged over whether the UK was simply exporting the problem.

The prime minister said: "My focus is on the United Kingdom and securing our borders.

"But what that comment illustrates is a couple of things.

"One, that illegal migration is a global challenge, which is why you're seeing multiple countries talk about doing third country partnerships, looking at novel ways to solve this problem, and I believe will follow where the UK has led.

"But what it also shows, I think, is that the deterrent is, according to your comment, already having an impact because people are worried about coming here and that demonstrates exactly what I'm saying.

"If people come to our country illegally, but know that they won't be able to stay, they're much less likely to come, and that's why the Rwanda scheme is so important."

The Taoiseach (Irish prime minister) Simon Harris has said Ireland will "not provide a loophole for anybody else's migration challenges".

He has asked Justice Minister Helen McEntee to bring legislation to cabinet this week to enable asylum seekers to be sent back to the UK.

But a UK government source said on Sunday it "won't accept any asylum returns from the EU via Ireland until the EU accepts that we can send them back to France".

They said the government was "fully focused on operationalising our Rwanda scheme and will continue working with the French to stop the boats from crossing the Channel".

On Friday Downing Street had said it was "too early to jump to specific conclusions" about the impact of the policy on migrant behaviour.

More than 7000 people have arrived by small boats so far this year.

Labour's shadow immigration minister Stephen Kinnock said: "More people have arrived by small boats so far this year than ever before and more people are having to be rescued.

"What will it take for Rishi Sunak to wake up and realise that his plan is not working?"

-BBC