Berliner Boersenzeitung - Last-gasp challenge fails against UK's Rwanda asylum plan

EUR -
AED 3.868036
AFN 70.556841
ALL 97.357796
AMD 407.519973
ANG 1.897801
AOA 961.472489
ARS 1056.134523
AUD 1.631513
AWG 1.898198
AZN 1.779426
BAM 1.955933
BBD 2.126045
BDT 125.828557
BGN 1.951034
BHD 0.396857
BIF 3051.332951
BMD 1.053092
BND 1.417083
BOB 7.275633
BRL 6.097292
BSD 1.052972
BTN 88.873344
BWP 14.453846
BYN 3.445934
BYR 20640.595629
BZD 2.122485
CAD 1.480994
CDF 3018.160267
CHF 0.937677
CLF 0.037233
CLP 1027.375369
CNY 7.613956
CNH 7.638814
COP 4719.69334
CRC 537.836575
CUC 1.053092
CUP 27.906928
CVE 110.466774
CZK 25.286828
DJF 187.155704
DKK 7.458937
DOP 63.659602
DZD 140.713598
EGP 52.231872
ERN 15.796374
ETB 128.398185
FJD 2.395827
FKP 0.831223
GBP 0.831432
GEL 2.869651
GGP 0.831223
GHS 16.901937
GIP 0.831223
GMD 74.769391
GNF 9089.233891
GTQ 8.131862
GYD 220.290797
HKD 8.194764
HNL 26.411802
HRK 7.511975
HTG 138.358095
HUF 406.351196
IDR 16824.454893
ILS 3.944639
IMP 0.831223
INR 88.95786
IQD 1380.07656
IRR 44340.422562
ISK 145.674005
JEP 0.831223
JMD 166.691336
JOD 0.746746
JPY 164.795164
KES 136.376484
KGS 90.96237
KHR 4266.074143
KMF 491.266288
KPW 947.782053
KRW 1481.762471
KWD 0.323741
KYD 0.877443
KZT 522.0355
LAK 23110.095591
LBP 94357.008444
LKR 307.63092
LRD 193.874795
LSL 19.165476
LTL 3.109505
LVL 0.637004
LYD 5.138882
MAD 10.501957
MDL 19.073935
MGA 4907.406734
MKD 61.329706
MMK 3420.400483
MNT 3578.405247
MOP 8.441014
MRU 42.086842
MUR 49.695316
MVR 16.280487
MWK 1827.114148
MXN 21.541189
MYR 4.719428
MZN 67.239706
NAD 19.168622
NGN 1769.151713
NIO 38.711687
NOK 11.736063
NPR 142.203072
NZD 1.800618
OMR 0.405462
PAB 1.052992
PEN 4.006483
PGK 4.151551
PHP 62.05865
PKR 292.863531
PLN 4.322352
PYG 8223.559229
QAR 3.834043
RON 4.974905
RSD 116.507784
RUB 104.828879
RWF 1440.629328
SAR 3.955445
SBD 8.828472
SCR 15.52783
SDG 633.436063
SEK 11.584334
SGD 1.41773
SHP 0.831223
SLE 23.904752
SLL 22082.809581
SOS 601.843757
SRD 37.233631
STD 21796.87022
SVC 9.213627
SYP 2645.924123
SZL 19.171866
THB 36.847972
TJS 11.22435
TMT 3.685821
TND 3.319338
TOP 2.466445
TRY 36.265627
TTD 7.149486
TWD 34.311302
TZS 2801.224154
UAH 43.408252
UGX 3864.262783
USD 1.053092
UYU 44.733042
UZS 13479.572796
VES 47.863154
VND 26748.526988
VUV 125.025153
WST 2.939801
XAF 655.989151
XAG 0.034647
XAU 0.00041
XCD 2.846033
XDR 0.793246
XOF 653.440561
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.115098
ZAR 19.253853
ZMK 9479.091368
ZMW 28.877512
ZWL 339.09507
  • BCC

    -2.2000

    140.35

    -1.57%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.21

    -0.23%

  • NGG

    0.2500

    62.37

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    -0.0050

    24.725

    -0.02%

  • RIO

    -0.1900

    60.43

    -0.31%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    24.55

    -0.24%

  • BCE

    -0.3700

    26.84

    -1.38%

  • SCS

    -0.1000

    13.27

    -0.75%

  • RBGPF

    -0.9400

    59.25

    -1.59%

  • BTI

    0.0700

    35.49

    +0.2%

  • GSK

    -0.7200

    34.39

    -2.09%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3200

    6.79

    -4.71%

  • RELX

    -0.1700

    45.95

    -0.37%

  • AZN

    -0.2500

    65.04

    -0.38%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    8.68

    -0.81%

  • BP

    0.4800

    29.05

    +1.65%

Last-gasp challenge fails against UK's Rwanda asylum plan
Last-gasp challenge fails against UK's Rwanda asylum plan / Photo: Sameer Al-DOUMY - AFP

Last-gasp challenge fails against UK's Rwanda asylum plan

UK campaigners on Monday failed in a last-gasp bid to stop the government's first flight of asylum seekers to Rwanda, as protests mounted against the policy.

Text size:

Three judges at the Court of Appeal in London rejected a challenge to a High Court ruling last Friday that the deportations could go ahead.

Judges Rabinder Singh, Ingrid Simler and Jeremy Stuart-Smith dismissed claims the lower court judge should have waited to make a decision until a full hearing on the legality of the policy next month.

"He weighed all the factors and reached a conclusion which he was reasonably entitled to reach on the material before him," Singh said.

"This court cannot therefore interfere with that conclusion."

The government has vowed to push ahead with the removal of the migrants on a chartered flight on Tuesday from an undisclosed airport.

Thirty-one migrants had been due to be sent but one of the claimants, the NGO Care4Calais, tweeted that 21 of them had now had their tickets cancelled.

Other claimants include the Public and Commercial Services union, whose members will have to implement the removals and immigration support group Detention Action.

PCS chief Mark Serwotka said on Sunday it would be "an appalling situation" if Tuesday's removals were subsequently found to be illegal at the full hearing.

Home Secretary Priti Patel should wait for the July hearing if she "had any respect, not just for the desperate people who come to this country, but for the workers she employs", Serwotka told Sky News.

"We're absolutely confident that in July, in line with what the UNHCR (UN Refugee Agency) said very graphically in court, we believe these proposals will be found to be unlawful."

Protesters gathered outside the Royal Courts of Justice on Monday and further demonstrations were expected outside the Home Office.

In Geneva, UN refugee chief Filippo Grandi called the UK government policy "all wrong" and said it should not be "exporting its responsibility to another country".

- 'Hate speech and discrimination' -

Patel and Prime Minister Boris Johnson insist the policy is needed to stop a flood of all-too-often deadly migrant crossings of the Channel from France.

"It's very important that the criminal gangs who are putting people's lives at risk in the Channel understand that their business model is going to be broken," Johnson told LBC radio on Monday.

"They're selling people falsely, luring them into something that is extremely risky and criminal."

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 the plan will target gangsters who charge would-be migrants thousands of dollars to undertake the perilous crossing for a new life in Britain.

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 1994 genocide made it particularly attentive to "protecting anybody from hate speech and discrimination", including gay people, she said.

Rwanda's High Commissioner to Britain, Johnston Busingye, wrote in the Daily Telegraph that Rwanda would be a "safe haven" for migrants.

But British critics are unconvinced.

 

The reported comment prompted unnamed cabinet ministers to tell Queen Elizabeth II's heir to stay out of politics.

International NGO Human Rights Watch issued a public letter warning that "to this day, serious human rights abuses continue to occur in Rwanda, including repression of free speech, arbitrary detention, ill-treatment, and torture".

(S.G.Stein--BBZ)