U.K cancels first flight to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda
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Britain has canceled its first deportation
flight to Rwanda after a last-minute intervention by the European Court of
Human Rights, which decided there was "a real risk of irreversible harm''
to the asylum-seekers involved.
The flight had been scheduled to leave
Tuesday evening, but lawyers for the asylum-seekers launched a flurry of
case-by-case appeals seeking to block the deportation of everyone on the
government's list.
Foreign Secretary Liz Truss had said earlier
in the day that the plane would take off no matter how many people were on
board. But after the appeals, no one remained.
The decision to scrap the Tuesday flight caps
three days of frantic court challenges as immigration rights advocates and
labor unions sought to stop the deportations. The leaders of the Church of
England joined the opposition, calling the government's policy
"immoral."
Earlier in the day, British Prime Minister
Boris Johnson had emphatically defended the plan. "We are going to get on
and deliver" the plan, Johnson declared, arguing that the move was a
legitimate way to protect lives and thwart the criminal gangs that smuggle
migrants across the English Channel in small boats.
The prime minister announced an agreement
with Rwanda in April in which people who entered Britain illegally would be
deported to the East African country. In exchange for accepting them, Rwanda
would receive millions of pounds (dollars) in development aid. The deportees
would be allowed to apply for asylum in Rwanda, not Britain.
Opponents have argued that it is illegal and
inhumane to send people thousands of miles to a country they don't want to live
in. Britain in recent years has seen an illegal influx of migrants from such
places as Syria, Afghanistan, Iran, Sudan, Iraq and Yemen.
Activists have denounced the policy as an
attack on the rights of refugees that most countries have recognized since the
end of World War II.
Politicians in Denmark and Austria are
considering similar proposals. Australia has operated an asylum-processing
center in the Pacific Island nation of Nauru since 2012.


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