Advertisement
Opinion

MPs have backed Rishi Sunak’s offensive Rwanda bill. Here’s how it threatens our human rights

Rishi Sunak’s Supreme Court-busting Rwanda bill is offensive in a number of ways, writes leading human rights expert and Labour peer Shami Chakrabarti

They are wonderful movies but which serious political movement would actually name itself after the “five families” of The Godfather saga? Still, the governing right wing of the Conservative Party was more soap opera than cinema when their much-anticipated rebellion over the so-called “Safety of Rwanda Bill” evaporated. This allowed legislation designed to overturn the United Kingdom’s Supreme Court to pass through the House of Commons on Wednesday night.  

The Rwanda Bill is offensive in a number of ways. 

Firstly, as a matter of fact – facts found not by a “foreign” court, but our own supreme one – Rwanda is simply not safe for refugees. In the 1988 film Working Girl, a secretary warns a friend who is impersonating her boss: “Sometimes I sing and dance around the house in my underwear. Doesn’t make me Madonna – it never will.” It’s bad enough when politicians gloss, spin and even misrepresent the truth. With a weird combined fragility and arrogance worthy of Donald Trump, Sunak thinks he can legislate to actually change reality. How will we teach our young people to obey the orders of local magistrates when their prime minister offers two fingers to the highest court in the land?

Secondly, despite lecturing governments all over the world about their obligations, the UK’s Rwanda scheme breaches international law. The 1951 Refugee Convention was agreed in the wake of the Holocaust and ratified in this country by Winston Churchill. Its core principle is that you don’t send vulnerable people to unsafe places. The UN High Commissioner for Refugees is the guardian of the convention and restated only a couple of days ago that what the Tories are proposing would put the UK in violation. On the same day, Rishi Sunak described the European Court of Human Rights not as an “international” but a “foreign court”. The bill makes provision for ministers to ignore even interim orders of its judges not to remove people. Orders of this kind currently bar Vladimir Putin and the Russian Federation from executing Ukrainian prisoners of war. 

Thirdly, the bill and its philosophy brand asylum seekers – many of whom are in fact genuine refugees – as “illegal migrants”, when as a matter of law, logic and common humanity, a refugee can never be “illegal”. In 1985, Ronald Reagan, a Republican president not known for being “woke”, gave a speech at Bitburg airbase in Germany. He said: “I am a refugee in a crowded boat foundering off the coast of Vietnam. I am a Laotian, a Cuban and a Miskito Indian in Nicaragua. I, too, am a potential victim of totalitarianism.” What does Rishi Sunak say in 2024? “Stop the boats.” 

And even if it wasn’t illegal and immoral, this third dog-whistle immigration bill in as many years, with its expensive financial bill of millions and millions of pounds to Rwanda, simply will not work. The government talks “deterrence”, but the desperate people still come as they will, until we work more; not less internationally to make them, us and the world – safer.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Shami Chakrabarti is a Labour peer, former shadow attorney general and director of Liberty. Her new book, Human Rights: The Case for the Defence, is released 2 May 2024.

Advertisement

Buy a Big Issue Vendor Support Kit

This Christmas, give a Big Issue vendor the tools to keep themselves warm, dry, fed, earning and progressing.

Recommended for you

Read All
From The Traitors to White Lotus: Here's 6 dystopian TV predictions that could come true in 2025
TV's Claudia Winkleman
Lucy Sweet

From The Traitors to White Lotus: Here's 6 dystopian TV predictions that could come true in 2025

I was put into care after coming out as trans. But my loving foster family saw me for who I really was
Foster care

I was put into care after coming out as trans. But my loving foster family saw me for who I really was

Stonehenge can offer us wisdom from the deep and distant past
Paul McNamee

Stonehenge can offer us wisdom from the deep and distant past

Privatisation's thirst for profit will never be quenched. It's time to take our water back
Cat Hobbs

Privatisation's thirst for profit will never be quenched. It's time to take our water back

Most Popular

Read All
Renters pay their landlords' buy-to-let mortgages, so they should get a share of the profits
Renters: A mortgage lender's window advertising buy-to-let products
1.

Renters pay their landlords' buy-to-let mortgages, so they should get a share of the profits

Exclusive: Disabled people are 'set up to fail' by the DWP in target-driven disability benefits system, whistleblowers reveal
Pound coins on a piece of paper with disability living allowancve
2.

Exclusive: Disabled people are 'set up to fail' by the DWP in target-driven disability benefits system, whistleblowers reveal

Cost of living payment 2024: Where to get help now the scheme is over
next dwp cost of living payment 2023
3.

Cost of living payment 2024: Where to get help now the scheme is over

Citroën Ami: the tiny electric vehicle driving change with The Big Issue
4.

Citroën Ami: the tiny electric vehicle driving change with The Big Issue