London cancels last-minute deportation of asylum seekers to Rwanda following the intervention of the European Court of Human Rights. However, the British government wants to stick to its plans.
The first flight scheduled to be deported from Great Britain to Rwanda with asylum seekers from various countries was stopped by a court shortly before departure on Tuesday evening.
The British media quoted government sources as saying that the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg had thwarted the British government’s plans by intervening. By plane, London wanted to announce the controversial Rwanda agreement, which seeks to prevent other people from preventing the Conservative government from entering the United Kingdom.
Rare intervention from Strasbourg
In particular, the European Court of Human Rights has called on Great Britain not to deport an Iraqi asylum seeker to Rwanda for the time being: the person must be deported immediately after three weeks. The final result of the current British operations.
Strasbourg demanded that the final decision on the Iraq case be reported to the European Court of Human Rights. Temporary measures are restrictive and are imposed only in the event of an immediate and immediate risk of irreparable damage.
The passenger list has shrunk to zero
British courts basically gave the plane the green light. However, many personal cases were successful, which is why the number of passengers scheduled for Tuesday evening became smaller and smaller than in the previous days. The decision was taken from Strasbourg shortly before the scheduled departure date and the flight was canceled as the number of people leaving the country dropped to zero.
Criticizes the London intervention
Despite failing in court, the British government wants to stick to its plans. “We will not be deterred from doing the right thing and protecting the borders of our nation,” Home Secretary Priti Patel said in the first statement. They are already preparing for the next flight.
“I was disappointed that last-minute lawsuits and lawsuits prevented today’s flight from taking off,” Patel added. It is very surprising that the European Court of Human Rights has intervened after the British courts had earlier given a different verdict.
Not returning to the UK
Britain has signed an agreement with Rwanda in an effort to prevent illegal immigration. Those who have entered Britain illegally, regardless of their country or country of origin, should be brought into the country and given the opportunity to apply for asylum there. Even if they are recognized as refugees there, they should never return to Great Britain.
The United Nations sees this as a violation of international law and a dangerous precedent. The European Court of Human Rights, located in Strasbourg, France, is part of the Council of Europe. Independent organizations from the European Union are working together to protect human rights in the 46 member states.
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