UK wins court clash with Rwanda over failed migrant deportation deal
The tribunal said written diplomatic exchanges showed Britain owed no further payments, and it rejected Rwanda’s claim for more than £100 million.
- The UK will not have to pay Rwanda millions of pounds after winning a case at The Hague's Permanent Court of Arbitration in the Netherlands.
- Emmanuel Ugirashebuja, Rwanda's minister of justice and attorney general, demanded about £100 million due in 2024 and 2025, plus £6 million in compensation and interest for alleged breach of the agreement.
- Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer declared the policy "dead and buried," while lawyers for Britain argued it was "entirely logical" the plan would end when Labour took office after the 2024 general election.
- Ugirashebuja told the court Rwanda incurred "significant costs" preparing for the partnership and claimed the UK "did not do Rwanda a courtesy of informing it in advance" before cancelling the deal.
- Before the election, the Conservative government had already spent £700 million on its flagship immigration policy, under which migrants arriving in the UK by boat from France would be sent to Kigali.
76 Articles
76 Articles
International court unanimously rules in favor of UK in Rwanda asylum dispute
The Permanent Court of Arbitration, in its findings published on Monday, rejected the Republic of Rwanda’s claim for financial compensation from the UK for breach of its obligations under the Asylum Partnership Agreement. The Asylum Partnership Agreement (the Agreement) entered into force in April 2024. The treaty between Rwanda and the UK aimed to “create a mechanism” for the option of relocation of illegal migrants from the UK, who wished to m…
Rwanda does not receive compensation from the United Kingdom as a result of the rejected refugee agreement.
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