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regular-article-logo Thursday, 19 December 2024

Britain’s new Prime Minister Keir Starmer to scrap plan of flying migrants to Rwanda

The previous Conservative government first announced the plan in 2022 to send migrants who arrived in UK without permission to the East African nation, saying it would put an end to asylum seekers arriving on small boats

Reuters London Published 07.07.24, 06:49 AM
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer File image

Britain’s new Prime Minister Keir Starmer said on Saturday he would scrap a controversial plan to fly thousands of asylum seekers from Britain to Rwanda in his first major policy announcement since winning a landslide election victory.

The previous Conservative government first announced the plan in 2022 to send migrants who arrived in UK without permission to the East African nation, saying it would put an end to asylum seekers arriving on small boats. But no one was sent to Rwanda under the plan because of years of legal challenges. At his first press conference since becoming Prime Minister, Starmer said the Rwanda policy would be scrapped because only about 1 per cent of asylum seekers would have been removed and it would have failed to act as a deterrent.

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“The Rwanda scheme was dead and buried before it started. It’s never been a deterrent,” Starmer said. “I’m not prepared to continue with gimmicks that don’t act as a deterrent.”

Starmer won one of the largest majorities in modern British history on Friday, making him the most powerful British leader since former Prime Minister Tony Blair, but he faces a number of challenges, including improving struggling public services and reviving a weak economy.

At the press conference in Downing Street, Starmer answered about a dozen questions and was repeatedly asked about how and when he would start delivering on his promises to fix the nation’s problems, but he gave few specifics about what he planned.

Asked if he was willing to take tough decisions and raise taxes if necessary, Starmer said his government would identify problems and act in areas such as tackling an overstretched prisons system and reducing the long waiting times to use the state-run health service.

“We’re going to have to take the tough decisions and take them early, and we will. We will do that with a raw honesty,” he said.

“But that is not a sort of prelude to saying there’s some tax decision that we didn’t speak about before."

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