The ruling Conservative party in Britain was in disarray yesterday after its immigration minister quit over legislation regarding sending migrants to Rwanda as hardliners turned the screw on Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.
After Robert Jenrick announced his resignation, citing “strong disagreements with the direction” of the government’s immigration policy, the UK leader’s position became increasingly precarious.
The shocking resignation followed a threat from Rwanda that, should the UK disregard international law, it will withdraw from a convention allowing it to receive migrants.
Former hardline interior minister Suella Braverman also issued Sunak an ultimatum to get tougher on immigration or face certain wipeout in the next general election, in a torrid day for the British PM.
Jenrick resigned after Sunak’s administration published emergency legislation designed to ensure Rwanda is considered a safe country, after UK Supreme Court judges last month deemed that it was not.
Africa Today News, New York reports that in his resignation letter to the prime minister, Jenrick wrote that the proposed laws were ‘a triumph of hope over experience’.
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‘The stakes for the country are too high for us not to pursue the stronger protections required to end the merry-go-round of legal challenges which risk paralysing the scheme and negating its intended deterrent,’ he wrote.
That was seen as a reference to Sunak’s refusal to take Britain out of the European Convention on Human Rights.
The bill proposes giving ministers powers to disregard sections of the UK Human Rights Act and ECHR when considering deportation cases.
But some right-wing Tories, including Braverman, want Sunak to leave the ECHR altogether.
Braverman, sacked last month after a series of outspoken comments, told parliament earlier that the government needed to go further to tackle ‘mass, uncontrolled, illegal immigration’.
Among her demands was to block ‘all routes’ of legal challenge to deportations to get deportation flights to Rwanda by the time of the poll, which is expected next year.
She has become the cheerleader of the vocal Tory right wing and is thought to be positioning herself as a future leader if Sunak is forced to quit after the nationwide vote.
The Tories lag well behind the main opposition Labour party in opinion polls ahead of an election that must be held by January 2025.
Braverman, a former attorney general, has called for tougher measures before, and criticised the UN convention on refugees and European human rights legislation for blocking the government’s plans.
Her latest comments are red meat to fellow firebrands who see having total control over Britain’s borders as the final piece in the Brexit jigsaw.
In Kigali, Foreign Minister Vincent Biruta, who signed a new bilateral treaty on migrants with Braverman’s successor James Cleverly on Tuesday, said any breach of global conventions could see Rwanda withdraw from the deal.