( 3 Minutes Read)
The Rwanda policy seeks to curb the number of migrants arriving illegally in the UK. The law would send some asylum-seekers on a one-way trip to the East African nation to have their claims processed there
Two deputy chairs of the ruling British Conservative party resigned after voting in favor of hardline amendments opposed by the Prime Minister. Rishi Sunak insisted the bill goes as far as the government can because Rwanda will pull out of it if the UK breaks international law.
The Rwanda policy seeks to curb the number of migrants arriving illegally to the UK. The law would send some asylum-seekers on a one-way trip to the East African nation to have their claims processed there.
The contested and expensive policy that the British leader has made central to his attempt to win an election this year. To do that he needs to unite his fractious party, which trails far behind the Labour opposition in opinion polls.
However, the liberal and authoritarian wings of the Conservatives are at loggerheads over the Rwanda plan. Moderates worry the policy is too extreme, while many on the party’s powerful right wing think it doesn’t go far enough. Those concerns were underscored by the United Nations refugee agency, which said Monday that the Rwanda plan “is not compatible with international refugee law.”
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Britain’s main opposition parties oppose the bill. Scottish National Party lawmaker Alison Thewliss called it an “irredeemably awful” piece of legislation that “will fail to reach its objectives because it fails to engage with reality” or understand the forces that drive people to flee their homelands.
The Rwanda policy is key to Sunak’s pledge to “stop the boats” bringing unauthorized migrants to the UK across the English Channel from France. In the year ending June 2023, there were 52,530 irregular migrants detected entering the UK, up 17% from the year ending June 2022. 85% of these arrived via small boats.