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UK deportation flights to Rwanda will take off in 10-12 weeks

UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has promised that deportation flights of asylum seekers to Rwanda will begin in “10 to 12 weeks”, as the plan entered its final stage in parliament.
“We are ready, plans are in place and these flights will go, come what may,” Sunak told a Downing Street news conference on Monday, hours before parliament is set to approve the contentious proposal.
Sunak says it is essential to deter record numbers of asylum seekers crossing the Channel to England from France in small boats and has made it a key pillar of his Conservative party’s pitch to voters.
“Enough is enough. No more prevarication. No more delay,” Sunak told reporters, adding that he envisaged “multiple” flights a month over the summer months.
The UK is due to go to the polls in a general election later this year.
The Tories, who promised tighter immigration after the UK left the European Union, are expected to be trounced by the main opposition Labour party, after 14 years in power.
But the party’s flagship scheme has been mired in difficulties and legal challenges since it was first proposed by Boris Johnson in May 2022 when he was prime minister.
So far no migrants have been sent to Rwanda.
The legislation is Sunak’s answer to a Supreme Court ruling last year that sending migrants to Rwanda was illegal under international law.
The new bill would compel judges to regard the East African nation as a safe third country and gives ministers the power to disregard sections of international and British human rights law.

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