Listen "Hotel Rwanda"
Episode Synopsis
The Nationality and Borders Act 2022 hit the statute books yesterday. The Home Office says that the Act “puts into law that those who arrive illegally in the UK – who could have claimed asylum in another safe country – can be considered as ‘inadmissible’ to the UK asylum system”, and so removed to Rwanda under plans announced just before Easter.
In fact, as Jon Featonby tells me on the latest episode of the podcast, inadmissibility provisions authorising removal to Rwanda are already part of the Immigration Rules:
345C. When an application is treated as inadmissible, the Secretary of State will attempt to remove the applicant to the safe third country in which they were previously present or to which they have a connection, or to any other safe third country which may agree to their entry.
Putting these rules in the new Act does make it harder to challenge the Rwanda scheme in court. But Sonia Lenegan says lawyers are nothing daunted, with two crowdfunded legal challenges already in the works. I understand that a third is underway in Northern Ireland.
Given the legal and logistical challenges, will refugees really end up on planes to Rwanda? And if they do, will it deter others from seeking asylum in the UK?
More episodes of the podcast Free Movement
Immigration roundup: December 2025
09/01/2026
Immigration roundup: November 2025
04/12/2025
Immigration roundup: October 2025
12/11/2025
Immigration roundup: September 2025
06/10/2025
Immigration roundup: August 2025
03/09/2025
Immigration roundup: July 2025
06/08/2025
Immigration roundup: June 2025
04/07/2025
Immigration roundup: May 2025
06/06/2025
Immigration roundup: April 2025
09/05/2025
Immigration roundup: March 2025
08/04/2025
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