News1 min ago
Rwanda A Deterrent?
Travel writer Mark Palmer writing in the Spectator says;
'The Supreme Court's ruling that sending migrants to a formerhostel in Kigali is illegal strikes another hammer blow to the government, not least because Rwanda gets to keep the £,140 million that set up the proposed deal in the first place. Never mind what happens now — and this story is far from over.
If I were a migrant about to take a small boat to Britain, the prospect of ending up here, where it's easier tostart a business than almost anywhere else in the world, would hardly be a deterrent. The facts are these: Rwanda was a broken country after the 1994 genocide. It had been one of the bloodiest of bloody killing fields, with up to one million people dead and a further two million displaced within 100 days —while the world watched in horror butdid nothing. And yet, approaching the 30th inglorious anniversary of that human tragedy, Rwanda is the country many neighbouring African nations look to as some sort of beacon.
It has one of the fastest-growing economiesin Africa; there is little crime; 92 per cent of the population has medical insurance (at around $8 a year) and the 2022 Corruption Perceptions Index ranked it the fourth least corrupt country on the African continent behind the Seychelles, Botswana and Cabo Verde...'
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No best answer has yet been selected by Khandro. 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.Well that idea of sending them to a Scottish island had me in stitches. I mean these people have made their way to France from god knows where, and then had the halls to cross the channel on a bottle top. I really don't think dumping them on a remote place up in Scotland will make it to difficult for them to find their way back to other areas of the UK. Even Boris wouldn't have come up with this idea. :0)
You're not thinking this through, nicebloke. We're talking about deterrents. If the ultimate destination for those coming from France in boats was guaranteed to be a remote, cold, uninhabited Scottish Island pounded by the North Atlantic, the boats would stop coming. It wouldn't take many boatloads for the message to get across.
Obviously you need all who are caught to be in the queue to Rwanda. And locked in a camp until their turn comes.
Of course it's probably easier to simply take them them straight back across the Channel and dumped on the beaches there. Let them save up a few more years before paying criminals for another failed attempt.