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England Expects That Every Man, And Woman Will Do Their Duty.
As does Scotland, Wales, and N Ireland.
What time are you going to the polling booth?
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No best answer has yet been selected by sandyRoe. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The ECHR doesn't confer any additional rights that a sovereign independent nation can't confer on it's own citizens. It can, and does, however, inflict ridiculous restrictions, probably due to poor interpretation by the court, which proves it is no longer fit for purpose, and any responsible nation would want to replace.
Like me, the UK government knows that Rwanda is not a safe place to which to send refugees.
Here are a few points that were presented to the UK Supreme Court by the UN Refugee Agency (the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, or UNHCR) in relation to Rwanda being a safe country to send refugees to.
· Rwanda’s procedures and institutions for processing asylum claims, such as a lack of legal representation, a risk that lawyers and judges do not act independently of the government in politically sensitive cases, and there being at the time no example of an appeal being brought against an asylum decision, despite a right of appeal existing since 2018.
· The high rejection rate of asylum claims brought by individuals from certain countries. Citizens of Afghanistan, Syria, and Yemen all had a 0% success rate in claims processed by Rwanda from 2020 to 2022. By contrast, in the UK in the same period, the success rates were 74% for Afghans, 98% for Syrians, and 40% for Yemenis.
· Rwanda’s practice of removing refugees to countries of origin where they could be at risk of persecution, including since the Rwanda agreement was signed – a violation of the principle of non-refoulement. In its evidence to the Supreme Court, UNHCR reported six recent cases of asylum claimants whose expulsion from Rwanda resulted in refoulement or would have without UNHCR’s intervention.
· The Rwandan government’s apparent misunderstanding of the Refugee Convention, in particular the principle of non-refoulement. In its decision, the Supreme Court noted that the Rwandan government appeared to believe that asylum claimants can be expelled if they applied for asylum only after failing to satisfy immigration requirements (according to the Supreme Court, they cannot); and that the expulsion of asylum seekers who use forged documents does not constitute refoulement (for the Supreme Court, it does).
· The Israel-Rwanda arrangement (described below) was said by the Supreme Court to raise questions about the Rwandan government’s commitment to non-refoulement. UNHCR presented evidence that asylum seekers who arrived in Rwanda under the agreement were routinely moved clandestinely to Uganda – a serious breach of their rights under the Refugee Convention, to which Rwanda is a signatory.
So despite knowing that Rwanda is not a safe place, the UK government passed a law stating Rwanda is a safe place.
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