15 Jun 2022

Rwanda asylum flight from UK cancelled after legal action

10:35 am on 15 June 2022

The first flight scheduled to take asylum seekers from the UK to Rwanda will not depart as planned on Tuesday after a last-minute legal battle, the Home Office has told the BBC.

WILTSHIRE, UK - JUNE 14: A Spanish-registered "Privilege Style" civilian aircraft Boeing 767 is seen parked up at the British MoD Boscombe Down, which is the home of a military aircraft testing site, on the southeastern outskirts of the town of Amesbury, Wiltshire, England on Tuesday, June 14, 2022. The aircraft stands ready on a Ministry of Defence runway to take the first migrants to the east African country tonight. Vudi Xhymshiti / Anadolu Agency (Photo by Vudi Xhymshiti / ANADOLU AGENCY / Anadolu Agency via AFP)

The Boeing 767 that was due to take the asylum seekers to Rwanda on the runway at Boscombe Down, a Ministry of Defence base in Wiltshire. Photo: AFP

Up to seven people had been expected to be removed to the east African country but the flight was cancelled after the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) stepped in.

It followed a UK court saying the flight could go ahead, and came after a series of legal challenges in Britain failed.

The flight had been due to take off at 10.30am (UK time) from a military airport in Wiltshire but after a series of linked judgments in Strasbourg and London all passengers were removed from it.

In a statement hours before the flight's planned departure, the ECtHR said it had granted an "urgent interim measure" in the case of an Iraqi man, known only as "KN".

It said such requests were only granted on an "exceptional basis, when the applicants would otherwise face a real risk of irreversible harm".

That decision contradicted a ruling by judges in London, who had found no immediate risk to those being sent to Rwanda.

A UK High Court judge ruled last Friday that there should be a full review of the Rwanda removals policy - but that the Home Secretary Priti Patel would be acting lawfully if in the meantime she sent some asylum seekers to Rwanda.

Should the policy be found to be unlawful some people could be returned to the UK from Rwanda.

Earlier, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he would not be deterred from the policy and said the government had always known it would be a "long process" with lots of legal challenges.

A video grab from footage broadcast by the UK Parliament's Parliamentary Recording Unit (PRU) shows Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson (R) sits next to Britain's Home Secretary Priti Patel (L) on the front bench during Prime Minister's Question time (PMQs) in the House of Commons in London on March 4, 2020. (Photo by various sources / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT " AFP PHOTO / PRU " - NO USE FOR ENTERTAINMENT, SATIRICAL, MARKETING OR ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS

Home Secretary Priti Patel and the UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson are intent on bringing in the Rwanda policy. Photo: AFP / UK Parliamentary Recording Unit

-BBC

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