Body & Soul2 mins ago
Rwanda A Deterrent?
Travel writer Mark Palmer writing in the Spectator says;
'The Supreme Court's ruling that sending migrants to a formerhostel in Kigali is illegal strikes another hammer blow to the government, not least because Rwanda gets to keep the £,140 million that set up the proposed deal in the first place. Never mind what happens now — and this story is far from over.
If I were a migrant about to take a small boat to Britain, the prospect of ending up here, where it's easier tostart a business than almost anywhere else in the world, would hardly be a deterrent. The facts are these: Rwanda was a broken country after the 1994 genocide. It had been one of the bloodiest of bloody killing fields, with up to one million people dead and a further two million displaced within 100 days —while the world watched in horror butdid nothing. And yet, approaching the 30th inglorious anniversary of that human tragedy, Rwanda is the country many neighbouring African nations look to as some sort of beacon.
It has one of the fastest-growing economiesin Africa; there is little crime; 92 per cent of the population has medical insurance (at around $8 a year) and the 2022 Corruption Perceptions Index ranked it the fourth least corrupt country on the African continent behind the Seychelles, Botswana and Cabo Verde...'
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Why would it be a deterrent? For one thing the chances of being one of the handful who might be sent there are slim. Plainly deterrence though cannot be based on the unpleasantness of the destination, because the government has emphasised in its presentations to the Supreme Court what a good place it is
I can't remember the exact date, perhaps 2006, but I was living in France and there was major upset and fear because the French suddenly said that foreigners would have to take out complete private Health Insurance and would not be permitted to join their 'NI' system. This applied to those, like me and every Brit I knew, who had all been paying properly into the URSSAF for years & were paying tax as well.
I could write a book about the panic (a friend of mine killed himself in despair) the meetings, the appeals. Eventually an amendment was made to the effect that if you could prove that you had been paying into the system for 5 years, you could stay in it....phew! Those who had a couple of years to go had to go for private insurance for those years & would then be accepted.
We could introduce a similar system, I suppose. It certainly stopped a lot of 'chancers' going to France from the UK.
^^^ Oops - I should have made it clear that this applied to ex-pats who were under official retirement age and not in French paid employment. This swept in quite a few chambres d' hotes owners as well as those who had been invalided out of, say teaching, with an early pension. My friend had been a police sergeant - had to retire before 65 anyway andas it happened had a bad nervous breakdown so was invalided out.
“Imagine that you are planning to cross the channel in a small boat, and you knew that 1 in 1,000 might end up in Rwanda – would that thought make you decide to stay in France?”
Of course it wouldn’t, Hymie. But that’s how the scheme is sold – as a deterrent. It’s farcical. Rwanda is to process the asylum claims of those sent there (if any ever are) and if the applicants are unsuccessful, they can only be returned to the UK – nowhere else. As well as that, the UK is to take asylum seekers from Rwanda that they cannot deal with – principally those with complex health or mental problems. Sounds like a good deal to me.
“You're plucking figures out of the air, Hymie.”
The air is not quite so thin as you might think, naomi. The scheme, as I understand it, has capacity for 500 people. Last year over 60,000 arrived by small boat. OK, it’s not one in 1,000, but its less than one in 100 – even if the scheme was running smoothly and not hampered by legal challenges.
“If the ultimate destination for those coming from France in boats was guaranteed to be a remote, cold, uninhabited Scottish Island pounded by the North Atlantic,…”
You have to be real, naomi. Can you really see the courts agreeing to that? These people moan because they have to sleep two to a room and with insufficient WiFi.
“why does france let thousands just wander into the country, then roam around ending up in calais or neat it,…”
One word – Schengen.
“…how come france is not rounding them up and deporting them,…”
Where to?
“….seems odd to have people just wandering around whom you know nothing about,”
It’s not odd. It’s bloody outrageous. And the same is happening here.
I actually understand in fact why people like Braverman and Jenrick are cross about this. With the obvious difference that I don't think it was a goer from the start. NJ is right: it is now a farce. If it ever was a deterrent it isn't now. Sunak ploughs in with it regardless one suspects in the faint hope that should a plane ever take off for Kigali, it will perhaps save the election.
The trick was to realise that there was precious little the government could do (except to process the asylum seekers expeditiously) and keep quiet about the numbers arriving; even pointing out what a good thing it is having all these extra skilled people in the country, working and paying tax.
But instead, the government shouted from the rooftops how terrible the immigration figures were, and made up a three word slogan – only then to realise there was BA they could do about it.
The Tories only have themselves to blame for whipping up hysteria on this issue, that they never had a credible plan to fix.
Actually, logically, what is wrong with using a couple of islands? We have lots scattered around the UK. It would not take forever to erect decent shelters with sanitation and supply them with energy, medical services and food etc.. People have been living with far less on these islands for hundreds of years.
It would still a lot of fears amongst local populations and simplify the immigration process.
I can hear the howls of outrage now, but why not? Really, why not? The immigrants would be safe, housed, cared for and processed more simply.