Rishi Sunak’s controversial and callous plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda has already been expensive before a flight has even taken off.
The new draft legislation for the Rwanda policy has caused Tory infighting that has threatened to bring down Sunak’s government and comes after the highest court in the land, the Supreme Court, deemed the original plan unlawful.
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Figures uncovered by Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project journalist Peter Geoghegan revealed the Home Office has already paid out £2.1m fight legal challenges to the Rwanda policy. That includes more than £1m on divisional court defences, £276,000 in the Court of Appeal and a shade under £300,000 on Supreme Court legal fees. A further £475,000 was spent on remaining government legal division costs.
If the Home Office opted not to spend that money defending a pointless, unworkable deterrent to demonise vulnerable people, it could – and hear us out – make it so people claiming asylum don’t live in abject poverty.
Asylum support is £47.39 a week or just £9.58 a week for people living in a hotel. The wasted £2.1m could pay for 44,313 people to receive asylum support or 219,206 people to receive the pittance of an allowance to stay in a hotel every week.