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The UK-Rwanda plan was agreed in April 2022, and was intended to send people seeking asylum or claiming refugee status in the UK processed and settled in Africa - but no one has yet made the trip.
The British government's controversial plan to send asylum-seekers to Rwanda could cost nearly $630 million, according to a report from the National Audit Office.
Britain’s government said Sunday that it could start deporting asylum-seekers to Rwanda in the next few months — but only if U.K. courts rule that the controversial policy is legal. The Home ...
British Home Secretary Suella Braverman arrived in Rwanda on Saturday to discuss a controversial agreement which will see the UK deport asylum seekers deemed to have arrived illegally to the ...
British Home Secretary Suella Braverman arrived in Rwanda on Saturday to ... Later, she visited a housing estate ... The trip comes 11 months after the UK government outlined its plan to ...
The primary legal challenge will likely be to the Rwanda Safety Act. The UK government’s assertion that Rwanda is a safe country doesn’t make it a fact, and measures to safeguard migrants ...
Five UK Supreme Court judges are expected to rule on a UK government appeal against a lower court judgement that its Rwanda policy for migrants is unlawful.. The ruling is the latest instalment in ...
The Rwandan government will discuss housing those removed from America in facilities built by the UK as part of a possible deportation deal. According to the Telegraph, when asked if British ...
The Home Secretary has been given a tour of potential migrant housing in Rwanda as 209 people were confirmed to have made the journey across the Channel on Friday.
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