Rwanda, small boats and the Tory dilemma

Rwanda, small boats and the Tory dilemma


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The Right in Britain is up in arms at the Supreme Court’s ruling that Rwanda is not a safe country to send asylum seekers to. Predictably Boris Johnson sees a silver lining. Get Parliament


to declare that Rwanda is safe. Abracadabra. Just like that as the late Tommy Cooper would say. Rishi Sunak, the Prime Minister, seems taken with the idea that an Act of Parliament in


Britain will make a small country in Africa safer.


It’s not really a laughing matter. The flow of asylum seekers and refugees around the globe is a huge problem. It is especially one for the tide of humanity trying to find shelter and


somewhere they can call home from war, prejudice and instability.


It’s also an acute political problem for the liberal West. The sight of refugees (and some economic migrants) in small boats trying to cross the Channel or the Aegean or the Mediterranean


(and all-too-often dying in the attempt) has turbo-charged the wave of populism that has washed over Europe. It is a gift to the far-Right.


Politicians like Victor Orban in Hungary, Giorgia Meloni in Italy and Johnson in the UK feed off these tragic odysseys, which they characterise as invasions. Their stock-in-trade is wedge


politics. Immigration, or the fear of immigration, played a big part in Brexit.


The irony, of course, is that Brexit is actually what started the small boats crisis. Before Brexit all EU countries had what is known as a return agreement with each other. Under this


immigrants could be returned to the first safe country they had entered. When the UK left the EU this arrangement fell away, opening the door to people smuggling gangs. There were no small


boats in 2017 (the year after Britain voted to leave the EU) or before. In 2022 over 45,000 people crossed the channel in dinghies.)


Sir Keir Starmer will try and resurrect this return agreement if he gains power. He will find it hard going.


As it is, the Supreme Court ruling leaves the Government’s policy in pieces. This judgement by Britain’s senior justices is about as damning and as comprehensive as can be.


Rwanda, in other words, is not a safe place. Sending asylum seekers there would expose them to a regime with a poor human rights record, inadequate protection and a high risk of being sent


back to the country from which they had fled.


This is hardly surprising. Paul Kagame, in effect Rwanda’s President-for-life, has a blemished human rights record. He has been a spy, a warlord and, following the Rwandan genocide,


Vice-President and now President. He’s bright and has transformed Rwanda from a Third World backwater to a prospective middle-income country — or so he claims. Kagame is a PR agency’s dream


and Rwanda the darling of the development community.


But there is a darker side to Kagame the strongman. Opposition is largely suppressed. This includes multiple reports of extra-judicial killings. His political opponents claim the country’s


economic figures are massaged and that it is much poorer than the official statistics suggest.


Which perhaps explains why the British Government proposed to fork out £140m for Rwanda to host a few thousand refugees.


Stopping the small boats is one of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s five pledges to turn things around. There’s very little, if anything, he can do to rescue it before the general election. It


was a flagship policy and it’s holed below the waterline.


Sunak has responded by saying that Britain is working on a “new treaty” with Rwanda to address the concerns voiced by the Supreme Court. But how can it? A treaty, which admittedly has


greater force than an agreement, is still a voluntary agreement between two sides. If asylum seekers sent to Rwanda are treated in a way that breaks undertakings in such a treaty, how can


Britain possibly enforce these?


Supporters of the sacked Home Secretary Suella Braverman, who pinned her colours to this particular mast with gusto, will cry betrayal. Judges are (again) being branded enemies of the people


by, among others, the Daily Mail.


This may not play as well as the Mail thinks. People want to believe in something. Disillusioned to the back teeth by politicians, voters seem to retain a high respect for an independent


judiciary. They see these constitutional elders as a fixed point in a turbulent world. A recent YouGov poll carried out for University College London’s Constitution Unit suggests that


popular support for a strong judiciary playing an effective role in governing Britain remains high.


In any case, there’s no way flights with asylum seekers on board bound for Kigale will now take off before the next election. The Right will call this a defeat that sinks any hope of a Tory


recovery in the so-called Red Wall working class seats of the Midlands and the North.


Letters of no confidence in the Prime Minister are trickling into the Chief Whip’s office. Just days after sacking his Home Secretary in an attempt to appear strong, Sunak looks even weaker.


Lee Anderson, the Tory party’s deputy chairman, suggests that the ruling be ignored. Well, he would. Right-wing MPs are meeting to plan (plot might be a better word) a way forward. The


slogan “take back control” is a dead duck. The civil war in the Tory party just got hotter.


Withdrawing from the European Convention of Human Rights (EHCR), a tactic favoured by the Right, would simply make matters worse. For a start, it would undermine the Northern Ireland peace


agreement (in which the EHCR is enshrined), provoking another row with Europe.


It also runs contrary to Sunak’s reset attempt to present the Tories as a slightly more centrist and responsible administration. Neither James Cleverly, the new Home Secretary, nor David


Cameron, the former Prime Minister and his successor as Foreign Secretary, would approve of leaving the EHCR.


Would-be immigrants trying to get to Britain, whether in small boats or in the back of lorries, is a real problem. It requires a patient, coordinated international approach which, granted,


is hard work. But if the Tories are serious about tackling this problem, they need to start dealing with the world as it is and not as they would like to imagine it.


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