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Suella Braverman declines to give start date for controversial Rwanda flights

02 Apr 2023 3 minute read
Home Secretary Suella Braverman appearing on the BBC 1 current affairs programme, Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg. Photo Jeff Overs/BBC

Suella Braverman has declined to say when flights to Rwanda could take off, as she appeared to downplay suggestions that the stalled policy of deporting asylum seekers could begin this summer.

The Home Secretary also insisted that ministers were looking at “all sorts of land and sites and vessels” to house asylum seekers in the UK, but refused to say whether the Government was close to signing a deal on a procuring a barge.

Touring broadcast studios on Sunday, Ms Braverman faced questions about the Government’s record on illegal migration.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Ms Braverman have said that “stopping the boats” across the Channel is a crucial priority, but campaigners have condemned much of the Government’s response, with the controversial Illegal Migration Bill described as an effective “asylum ban”.

Ministers sparked further controversy earlier this week after unveiling plans to house asylum seekers in disused military bases to accommodate their “essential living needs and nothing more”, with ferries and barges also being explored as options.

Ms Braverman on Sunday could not say when flights to Rwanda would take off, telling Sky News’s Sophy Ridge On Sunday programme instead: “We are making very steady progress.

“I am not going to give a deadline as to when flights will take off.”

The Government’s plan to forcibly remove migrants to the African nation is currently grounded by the courts. It was deemed lawful by the High Court, but legal challenges continue.

“Floating accommodation”

Later on the BBC, Ms Braverman declined to confirm a Sun On Sunday report that ministers are close to signing a contract with Portland Port Authority over “floating accommodation for asylum seekers”.

She told the Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme that ministers were looking at “all sorts of land and sites and vessels” for migrant accommodation.

She said: “We’re talking to a lot of operators. A lot of owners of lots of different kinds of property around the country. We’ve announced sites earlier this week.

“Those are sites where we have a level of confidence we’re able to be public about those sites.

“We’re aiming to roll out these sites very quickly and start making them fit for accommodation purposes and relocate people onto those sites for asylum purposes.

“But we’re looking at all options. We’re looking at all sorts of land and sites and vessels and we’re in negotiations with a high number of operators around the country.”

Safety

The Home Secretary also insisted that Rwanda is a “safe” country to send asylums seekers, insisting that High Court judges had sided with the Government over United Nations concerns about the safety of asylum seekers there.

“Rwanda is a safe country. It is appropriate for our purposes to work in partnership,” she said.

Ms Braverman also refused to repeat her previous hope that net migration could fall to tens of thousands.

“The clear answer I can give you is that I support our manifesto commitment to get overall migration numbers down, including legal migration,” she told the BBC.

The Liberal Democrats said that Ms Braverman’s comments showed that the Rwanda plan was “on hold”.

“Suella Braverman’s admission that her botched Rwanda scheme is on hold shows just how unworkable it is, home affairs spokesperson Alistair Carmichael said.


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Steve A Duggan
Steve A Duggan
1 year ago

What’s her problem with immigrants, especially as she is a product of one herself? The Conservatives are obsessed with them and they think the rest of us are too. Well watching Question Time over the last few week has shown that the majority of people are not so as fixated – what they want is help with the cost of living crisis above all else. If any Conservative politician is reading this – tell your boss to get over this obsession and start focusing on helping the population that already lives here!

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