A Supreme Court judgment will rule whether the government's plans to remove asylum seekers to Rwanda was lawful on Wednesday. While the deal, brokered by the now sacked home secretary Suella Braverman, is key to the government's 'stop the boats' policy, no asylum seekers have been sent to the East African nation due to ongoing legal battles.
A Supreme Court judgment will rule whether the government's plans to remove asylum seekers to Rwanda was lawful on Wednesday. While the deal, brokered by the now sacked home secretary Suella Braverman, is key to the government's 'stop the boats' policy, no asylum seekers have been sent to the East African nation due to ongoing legal battles.
In a previous hearing, Court of Appeal judges Sir Geoffrey Vos and Lord Justice Underhill concluded there were “deficiencies” in the Rwandan asylum system and ruled the policy was unlawful. Today the Supreme Court will decide whether that decision was correct, following a Home Office appeal. Here is how events leading up to the ruling on Wednesday have unfolded since the Rwanda plan was unveiled:Following a drastic increase in the number of people crossing the Channel, then-Prime minister Boris Johnson announces a plan to deport migrants arriving in small boats to Rwanda for their claims to be processed. He says this would act as a “very considerable deterrent
Supreme Court Legality UK Plan Remove Asylum Seekers Rwanda
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Supreme Court to rule on government's plan to send asylum seekers to RwandaFormer home secretary Suella Braverman launches scathing attack on Prime Minister Rishi Sunak ahead of the Supreme Court ruling on the government's plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda.
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Supreme Court to Rule on Government's Plan to Send Migrants to RwandaThe Supreme Court will rule on the government's plan to send migrants to Rwanda on Wednesday, in what will be a huge moment for Rishi Sunak's administration. Migrants crossing the English Channel on small, often dangerous boats, is an important issue for the government for both electoral and moral reasons.
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Government's Rwanda Plan Faces Uncertain Future as Court Decision LoomsThe government's flagship immigration policy, known as the Rwanda plan, is hanging in the balance this morning as ministers wait for the judgement of the highest court in the land. But what is the scheme? Why is it so controversial? And how has it ended up in the judicial system?
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Latest UK politics news as David Cameron becomes Foreign Secretary and Suella Braverman is sackedMs Braverman has been removed as Home Secretary before the Supreme Court ruling on the Government’s Rwanda policy on Wednesday
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Supreme Court Adopts First Code of Ethics Amid CriticismThe Supreme Court is adopting its first code of ethics, in the face of sustained criticism over undisclosed trips and gifts from wealthy benefactors to some justices
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Rishi Sunak's bold Cameron gambit won't save the Tories at general election, pollsters sayThe new Home Secretary’s first challenge will be the fate of the Rwanda scheme, with Supreme Court judges due to rule on its legality this week. James Cleverly has been tasked with rebuilding what one insider has described as a “demoralised and rudderless” Home Office – as the fate of the flagship Rwanda policy hangs in the balance.
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