Dec 20, 2022 14:10 UTC
  • UK High Court approves controversial Rwanda deportation policy, raising concern among rights groups

UK High Court has ruled in favor of the British government’s controversial policy to fly asylum seekers to Rwanda, ignoring the criticisms by human right groups who depict the plan as inhumane.

According to Press TV, holding the court’s session on Monday, High Court Judge Clive Lewis said in his ruling that the deportation policy, introduced under Boris Johnson, was “consistent with the refugee convention”.

“The court has concluded that it is lawful for the government to make arrangements for relocating asylum seekers to Rwanda and for their asylum claims to be determined in Rwanda rather than in the United Kingdom,” Judge Lewis said.

However, he stressed that the Home Office should consider immigrants’ “particular circumstances” before deporting them to the central African country.

He also discussed that the circumstances of the first group of refugees who were set to be transported to Rwanda, were not “properly considered,” signaling further legal battles ahead.

A court hearing in the case is set for next month, and appeals are likely.

The development came after several asylum seekers, aid groups and a border officials’ union filed lawsuits to stop the Conservative government from implementing the inhumane policy.

Ever Solomon, head of the charity Refugee Council, blasted the high court’s ruling, and depicted the plan as a “cruel policy”.

“Treating people who are in search of safety like human cargo and shipping them off to another country is a cruel policy that will cause great human suffering,” he said.

Welsh Refugee Council slammed Monday’s ruling as “truly horrific” and said that the UK government created a “dark day” for human rights.

“A dark day for human rights in the UK. Our clients live in constant fear of being deported to a country with questionable history human rights,” the charity said on Twitter.

ME

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