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UK defends plan to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda, as Londoners protest immigration bill

Suella Braverman (right) visited the estate in Rwanda where the centre for the resettled migrants is being built. (Reuters: Stringer)

The UK government's interior minister has defended a controversial plan to deport asylum seekers arriving in the country to Rwanda during a visit on Saturday when she inspected the centres where they will be held.

The agreement between the UK and Rwanda "will lead the way in finding a solution which is both humanitarian and compassionate and also fair and balanced," Suella Braverman said.

"Many countries around the world are grappling with unprecedented numbers of illegal migrants," she said.

Ms Braverman was speaking after a visit to the Bwiza estate where the centre for the resettled migrants is being built and declared herself "incredibly impressed" with what she had seen.

She spoke to journalists at a news conference attended by Rwanda's Foreign Minister Vincent Biruta, who also defended the agreement signed between the two countries.

"This will not only help dismantle criminal human-smuggling networks but also save lives," he said.

The UK's Conservative government has made tackling illegal immigration a priority, and it was a key promise as the country left the European Union.

It is seeking to outlaw asylum claims by asylum seekers who arrive illegally and transfer them to "safe" third countries, such as Rwanda, in a bid to stop thousands of migrants from crossing the Channel on small boats.

Human rights groups accuse Rwanda of cracking down on free speech and opposition.  (Reuters: Stringer)

'Safe passage, not Rwanda'

More than 45,000 migrants arrived on the shores of south-east England on small boats in 2022 — a 60-per cent annual increase on a perilous route that has been used by more people every year since 2018.

The UK government, which is trailing in opinion polls, has been striving for years to tackle the crossings.

Protesters demonstrate against the government's immigration bill outside Downing Street in London. (Reuters: Henry Nicholls)

It had hoped the threat of a one-way ticket to Rwanda, where migrants would remain if accepted for asylum, would deter the cross-Channel journeys.

But that plan, announced by the then-prime minister Boris Johnson last year, was blocked at the last minute by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), which is separate to the EU.

The government scheme is still mired in appeals in the High Court in London. To date, no deportation flights to Rwanda have taken place.

Human rights groups accuse Rwanda and President Paul Kagame of cracking down on free speech and opposition.

In the UK on Saturday, thousands of people took to the streets of cities including London, Glasgow and Cardiff to demonstrate against the plan.

Protesters in the UK capital carried signs reading "no human being is illegal" and "Safe passage, not Rwanda".

Some British media including the BBC and The Guardian newspaper were not invited to cover the interior minister's visit to Rwanda.

AFP

UK introduces sweeping new laws to stop small boat arrivals
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