UK

Sunak ‘confident’ that he can get Rwanda scheme up and running

Rishi Sunak said the plan to send asylum seekers on a one-way trip to Rwanda was a ‘reasonable thing’ to do.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has insisted that the delay on getting his Rwanda Bill through parliament will not impact the plan for flights to depart this spring
Rishi Sunak visits Cumbria Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has insisted that the delay on getting his Rwanda Bill through parliament will not impact the plan for flights to depart this spring (Danny Lawson/PA)

Rishi Sunak said he was confident the Government would be able to get the Rwanda scheme “up and running” despite reports of problems with securing planes and the sell-off of accommodation earmarked for asylum seekers.

The Prime Minister wants the first flights carrying asylum seekers on a one-way trip to the African nation to take off this spring.

But properties in Kigali earmarked for the UK’s stalled deportation scheme have instead reportedly been sold to local buyers and there are still questions about which operator will fly the asylum seekers there.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak met Rwanda’s Paul Kagame on Tuesday
President of Rwanda Paul Kagame UK visit Prime Minister Rishi Sunak met Rwanda’s Paul Kagame on Tuesday (Stefan Rousseau/PA)

Mr Sunak, who met Rwanda’s president Paul Kagame in Downing Street on Tuesday, said the Kigali government was “absolutely committed to delivering on our partnership and I’m confident they’ve got all the preparations in place to do so”.

The Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Bill will be back in the Commons on April 15 as the Government seeks to overturn changes made in the Lords.

The Government could have tried to speed the legislation through before Parliament’s Easter recess but officials have insisted the delay will not impact on the ability to meet Mr Sunak’s spring goal for the first flights.

POLITICS Rwanda
POLITICS Rwanda

The Prime Minister told reporters on Wednesday: “I’m committed to stopping the boats, we need to have a deterrent so that if people come here illegally, they can’t stay, they’ll be removed.

“That’s why Rwanda is so important. That’s why I’m determined to see it through.

“First of all, we need to get it through parliament where the Labour Party has been blocking it for a long time.

“Once it’s up and running, I’m confident we’ll be able to operationalise the scheme, get people on flights, because that’s how we’ll set up a deterrent and ultimately end the unfairness of people jumping the queue, coming here illegally putting pressure on local services, and risking their own lives.

“None of that’s right. None of it’s fair. None of it’s compassionate either, to do nothing, and our plan is the right one.”

He added: “I’m confident that once the Bill is passed, we will be able to get the scheme up and running.”

Some 70% of the 163 affordable homes on the Bwiza Riverside Estate in Kigali have now been purchased, meaning there is only space for a few dozen asylum seekers, the Times reported.

Meanwhile, the Financial Times said Rwanda’s state-owned airline turned down a UK government proposal to transport asylum seekers.

“RwandAir said ‘no’ because of the potential damage to their brand,” a Home Office insider told the newspaper.

But Government sources insisted to the PA news agency that securing planes to carry asylum seekers would not be a problem when the time came to put the Rwanda plan into action.

Mr Sunak did not rule out making leaving the European Convention on Human Rights, which has been one of the legal obstacles the Rwanda plan has faced, part of the Tory manifesto for the general election.

He told LBC Radio: “I’m not going to get into the manifesto. But I can be very clear – and I have been repeatedly – I am determined to see this policy through, because I think it’s really important for the country, for the security of our borders, for fairness.”

He added: “I won’t let a foreign court block our ability to put people on planes and send them to Rwanda.

“We are a reasonable people trying to do a reasonable thing.”

The new Bill is aimed at making the Rwanda scheme legally watertight after the UK Supreme Court – rather than the European Court of Human Rights – ruled against it.