The United Kingdom’s “Conservative” government announced a new deal with the war-torn nation of Rwanda this week. A deal which could see a pathetically small number of migrant asylum seekers currently in Britain sent to the African nation instead. In November of this year, the UK Supreme Court unanimously ruled the government’s original agreement with Rwanda to relocate migrants was unlawful.
Addressing the court’s concern that those seeking asylum could be returned to their home countries by the Rwandan government, the new agreement will create a joint tribunal of both UK and Rwandan judges to review deportations from the African nation.
“We feel very strongly that this treaty addresses all the issues raised by their lordships in the Supreme Court and we have worked very closely with our Rwandan partners to ensure that it does so,” said Home Secretary James Cleverly at the signing of the new agreement in Rwanda on Tuesday. Addressing concerns the government would agree to send the Rwandan government additional financial support, he added: “Let me make it clear. The Rwandan government has not asked for and we have not provided any funding linked to the signing of this treaty.”
Rwanda received £140million from the United Kingdom as part of the original deal under former Prime Minister Boris Johnson. Billed as an “economic transformation and integration fund,” the money was in reality a pay-off to the Rwandan government to close the deal and the costs the country would incur taking in the migrants. No migrants were ever relocated to Rwanda under the original agreement before the UK courts ruled in unlawful.
Critics of the original Rwanda Policy argued it was more of a gimmick than an actual solution. Estimates for the number of migrants that would be sent to Rwanda range from 200 to a few thousand.