United Kingdom A
YouGov poll, reported on 14 April 2022, found that 42% of those questioned disagreed with the plan, while 35% were in support. Results differed depending on what political party members of the public supported. The majority of
Conservative supporters and
Brexiteers agreed with the scheme, whereas the majority of
Remainers,
Liberal Democrat supporters and
Labour supporters were opposed. Labour voters in the
Red Wall and Wales were most likely to agree with the policy out of the party's supporters. People in Scotland and London, as well as young people nationwide, opposed the scheme the most. In contrast, the elderly gave it the most support. By 13 June 2022, a YouGov poll reported that 44% of those questioned supported the plan, and that 40% were opposed to it. A further poll by YouGov on 30 June 2023 indicated 42% in support and 39% opposed. Demonstrations were held outside the
Home Office the day the policy was announced and charities warned of
Rwanda's human rights violations. The Rwanda deportation flight was to have been carried out by
Privilege Style, a Spanish-based charter operator that had previously conducted deportation flights for the Home Office. Seven airline operators have been identified as providing contract services for such flights the previous year. Privilege Style later announced that it would not be making the requested deportation flights due to a campaign by pressure group
Freedom from Torture. As summarised by the
Evening Standard on 15 April 2022, the
Daily Mirror and
The Guardian called the plan "inhumane", while
The i called it "cruel", and the
Daily Mail called its critics "
left-wing lawyers and naysayers".
Home Office under-secretary,
Matthew Rycroft was reported on 17 April 2022 to have expressed doubt over whether the plan would deter migrants or provide value for money while Home Secretary
Priti Patel said that the prospect of being sent to Rwanda would disrupt the people-smuggling trade. In the following year, other Home Office officials expressed similar doubts about the plan's feasibility. Archbishop of Canterbury
Justin Welby said during an Easter Sunday sermon that the scheme raised "serious ethical questions" and did not stand "the judgement of God". On 10 June 2022,
The Times reported that
Prince Charles had privately described the plan as "appalling" and feared that it would overshadow the
Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting in Rwanda on 23 June, where the Prince represented the Queen. On 15 June 2022, in an exchange in the
House of Commons,
Labour's
Yvette Cooper criticised the scheme saying that in the past Rwanda had shot asylum seekers because they protested about food shortages, and had sent asylum seekers back to Syria and Afghanistan. She said Patel was failing to get a better agreement with France to prevent people crossing the Channel because relevant relationships with France broke down. Speaking to
GB News, the former home secretary
Amber Rudd described the plan as being "brutal" and "impractical", saying that the UK government should try and improve
relations with France to help deal with
migrants crossing the English Channel to try and enter the UK. The
Leader of the Opposition and Labour Party
Keir Starmer claimed Boris Johnson was using the scheme as a "desperate announcement to distract from his own lawbreaking"; Johnson had been fined the day prior due to his involvement in the
Partygate scandal. His party also criticised it as an "unworkable, unethical and extortionate policy that would cost the UK taxpayer billions of pounds during a
cost of living crisis". Liberal Democrat leader
Ed Davey echoed similar concerns to Starmer. He also criticised the cost of the scheme, expressing his desire for it to be spent towards the cost of living crisis instead. The
Scottish National Party responded negatively to the policy, with then-Scottish first minister
Nicola Sturgeon calling it "despicable", SNP
Commons leader
Ian Blackford calling it "evil" and Scottish health secretary
Humza Yousaf using it as evidence of
institutional racism in the British government. In April 2024, while the UK aimed to implement its Rwanda asylum policy amidst discussions on reducing net migration, Irish
Taoiseach Simon Harris sought legislation to return asylum seekers back to the UK amid a surge in arrivals from the UK via the
Irish border. However, then-
Tánaiste Micheál Martin argued that the cause of the surge was that migrants, fearful of the UK's new policy, were turning to Ireland to avoid being sent to Rwanda.
Rwanda outside
10 Downing Street in May 2023. Rwandan President
Paul Kagame has defended the asylum plan, dismissing allegations that "the U.K. gave Rwanda money to dump people here," further stating that it was "just a problem that needs to be solved and Rwanda is ready to help". He favourably compared the plan to his 2018 proposal to give asylum to
Libyan refugees.
Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza, leader of the opposition in Rwanda, criticised the policy as dealing with British issues where Rwanda's problems should be dealt with first. She also claimed that Rwanda was not prepared for the new immigrants: "If our people don't have enough to eat, if our kids or Rwanda's kids don't have the possibility of going to school because of the poverty, how will the Rwandan government give education to the kids of refugees?" Bishop
Laurent Mbanda, the head of the
Anglican Church of Rwanda, supported the plans. He said that the nation's people empathised with refugees due to their own experiences from the 1990s
Rwandan genocide.
Vincent Biruta, foreign secretary of Rwanda, supported the policy shortly after its announcement. In a joint news conference with the British home secretary
Priti Patel on 14 April 2022, Biruta said that Rwanda will provide the refugees with "a dignified life with shelter, with skills for them to be able to socially and economically integrate into our society, or to have those skills for them to be able to integrate into their country of origin when they decide to go back to their countries". On 4 December 2023 he signed a treaty with British home secretary
James Cleverly in an attempt to address the concerns of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom.
International The
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) is "firmly opposed" to the policy, believing it to be unlawful, prejudiced and impractical. Its assistant high commissioner
Gillian Triggs said the United Kingdom was "attempting to shift its burden to a developing country" and that the policy "would not comply with the UK's international legal responsibilities". Triggs has called for more options for legal immigration to be introduced to the United Kingdom. == Similar plans ==