Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The National (Scotland)
The National (Scotland)
National
Hamish Morrison

Keir Starmer pledges to scrap Rwanda deportation plan if elected

KEIR Starmer has pledged to scrap the Tories’ Rwanda deportation even if it is approved by the courts.

The Labour leader said the “hugely expensive” scheme was “wrong” and would be reversed if the party wins the next General Election.

The Supreme Court will on Monday begin hearing the Government’s appeal against the ruling that the policy is unlawful as ministers struggle to achieve Rishi Sunak’s pledge to “stop the boats”.

The policy is in limbo and so far has not seen any asylum seekers deported to the African country.

In a BBC interview in Liverpool ahead of the Labour conference, Starmer was asked if he would terminate the plans even if the judges approve it and small boat crossings then decline.

“Yes. I think it’s the wrong policy, it’s hugely expensive,” he told the Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme.

“It’s a tiny number of individuals who would go to Rwanda and the real problem is at source.

“You’re putting this to me on the basis that it’s working, we’ve been told by the Government time and again that even saying they’ve got a Rwanda scheme will reduce the numbers – that hasn’t happened.”

Instead, Starmer said he would work with other countries to “smash the criminal gangs who are running this vile trade” of people smuggling.

“As a pragmatist I want a pragmatic plan that is actually going to fix this problem, not rhetoric which has got this Government absolutely nowhere,” he added.

Senior Conservatives seized on the comments, with party chairman Greg Hands arguing Starmer “failed to give another option” to the Rwanda policy.

Immigration minister Robert Jenrick said: “Proof, if it were needed, that Labour don’t even want to stop the boats.

“They are ideologically opposed to border controls. Their solution is to force British communities to tolerate this flagrant criminality.”

A government source told the PA news agency: “[Starmer is] just another human rights lawyer from north London who puts party interests before the British people.”

The UK has already paid Rwanda £140 million under its asylum partnership announced in April last year – but not a single removal flight has taken off for the capital of Kigali yet.

In June, Court of Appeal judges overturned an earlier High Court ruling which found Rwanda could be considered a “safe third country”, disrupting the key plan in the Prime Minister’s boats strategy.

Home Office figures have suggested the Government could spend £169,000 on every asylum seeker forcibly removed to third countries, such as Rwanda.

And they indicated that nearly two in five people would need to be deterred from crossing the Channel in small boats for the policies set out in the Illegal Migration Bill to break even.

Research from the Refugee Council, which opposes the policy, has suggested that three-quarters of people who crossed the Channel in small boats this year would be recognised as refugees if their application had been processed.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.