Kigali – British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Thursday defended his controversial deal to expel migrants to Rwanda, telling critics to “keep an open mind.”
On the first day of a trip to Kigali which is hosting a Commonwealth summit this week he also heaped praise on Rwandan President Paul Kagame and the achievements of his tiny African country, despite widespread concerns about its human rights record.
The London-Kigali scheme, which involves Britain deporting asylum seekers thousands of miles away to Rwanda, has provoked a storm of outrage.
But Johnson told reporters: “The critics need to keep an open mind about the policy.”
“What the critics of the policy need to understand, and I have seen loads and loads of criticism, is that Rwanda has undergone an absolute transformation in the last couple of decades,” said the British leader.
ALSO READ | Rwanda scrubs up for Commonwealth leaders, but not all celebrating
He held talks with Kagame about the deal and other issues, including the war in Ukraine, his office said.
⚡️The British Prime Minister visited an exhibition of broken Russian equipment. Boris Johnson also had a warm conversation with the Kyiv residents. pic.twitter.com/B7lqBCUUTl
— Flash (@Flash43191300) June 18, 2022
Rights groups, church leaders and the United Nations have strongly denounced the migrant arrangement, which has threatened to overshadow this week’s Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM).
One of the harshest opponents is reportedly the British heir to the throne Prince Charles, who has been quoted by the British media as saying it was “appalling”.
Johnson said he would speak about the merits of the deal when he meets Charles, who is also in Rwanda as Queen Elizabeth II’s representative at the Commonwealth summit, on Friday.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said he is ready to defend a controversial scheme to send asylum seekers to Rwanda to Prince Charles, as he visits the East African country for a meeting of Commonwealth leaders. pic.twitter.com/7jKUNUIb1z
— Reuters Africa (@ReutersAfrica) June 24, 2022
‘Outdated stereotype’
The British leader said it was vital to resolve the problem of “illegal cross-Channel trafficking of people whose lives are being put at risk by the gangs”.
A first flight of a small group of asylum seekers had been due to take off from the UK last week but it was halted following a last-minute injunction by the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg.
And Britain which left the EU last year said on Wednesday it will introduce legislation allowing it to ignore decisions by the ECHR, which is not part of the bloc.
Johnson accused critics of the deportation policy of basing their concerns on “a perception, perhaps a stereotype, of Rwanda that is now outdated.”
Can you show me the statistics which show all asylum seekers don’t stay in the EU, but travel to the UK? #BullShit pic.twitter.com/vnP13BSLU9
— Liberal centrist, Member of the Globalist Elite ❄️ (@DutchCloggs) June 24, 2022
The country of almost 13 million people has been indelibly marked by the 1994 genocide but now lays claim to being one of the most politically stable and economically developed countries in the region.
ALSO READ | Campaigners urge Commonwealth to press Rwanda on human rights
But in an open letter to Commonwealth leaders ahead of the summit, 23 rights groups and civil society organisations said there was a “climate of fear” in Rwanda.
“Commentators, journalists, opposition activists, and others speaking out on current affairs and criticising public policies continue to face abusive prosecutions, enforced disappearances or have at times died under suspicious circumstances,” the letter said.
It accused the 54-nation Commonwealth made up of mainly former British colonies of turning a blind eye to Rwanda’s rights record, saying it risked its credibility and integrity by holding the summit in Kigali.
#KigaliSummit #Commonwealth pic.twitter.com/Y7b0Xs6xRr
— David sharangabo (@DSharangabo) June 24, 2022
The two-day summit opening Friday is expected to see a tussle for the leadership of the body, which represents some 2.5 billion people or a quarter of humanity, and renewed talk about its future role and relevance.
Johnson told a business forum that Britain aimed to forge trade deals across the Commonwealth where, he said, total GDP is forecast to rise by nearly 50 per cent to $19.5 trillion over the next five years.
ALSO READ | UK’s Johnson holds talks with Rwanda leader on migrant deal
He also announced that Britain will on July 6 launch a new preferential trade system for 65 developing countries, including Rwanda and 17 other Commonwealth members, that would get rid of “pointless tariffs”.
Meanwhile, Johnson welcomed Rwanda’s “moral stance” on the war in Ukraine, his Downing Street office said in a statement after his meeting with Kagame.
The two men discussed ways to address the fallout from Russia’s invasion, including the sharp rise in food prices which has hit African countries hard.
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Source: AFP
Picture: Instagram/@borisjohnsonuk
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