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UK to pay failed asylum seekers to move to Rwanda under new scheme


The government is already trying to implement a separate scheme under which people deemed to have arrived illegally in the UK would be deported to Rwanda.
That plan had been blocked by the courts, which raised concerns about Rwanda’s safety.
In order to overcome those objections, the government is currently trying to pass its Safety of Rwanda Bill, which would deem the East African country to be a safe place.

The BBC has been told that, unlike that scheme, this new arrangement would be voluntary and therefore not dependent on the bill being approved by Parliament.

A Home Office spokesman said: “In the last year, 19,000 people were removed voluntarily from the UK and this is an important part of our efforts to tackle illegal migration.

“We are exploring voluntary relocations for those who have no right to be here to Rwanda, who stand ready to accept people who wish to rebuild their lives and cannot stay in the UK.”
Failed asylum seekers who choose to be relocated would be allowed to legally work in the country, unlike in the UK. They would also get additional support upon arrival in Rwanda.

The scheme will also be opened up to other people with no right to remain in the UK, and foreign criminals.
There is no date for when the first people would be relocated under the scheme, and no set figure on the number of people who may choose to take part in it.

Responding to the scheme, Labour’s shadow immigration minister Stephen Kinnock said: “Even government ministers are finally recognising that their Rwanda scheme has no chance of succeeding, so they’re resorting to paying people to go there instead.”

He said Rwanda had “very limited capacity” for accepting people and that the government should “make clear how many people they expect to send on this basis, and what the cost will be.

Source BBC News



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