The Home Office will notify the first group of people that they face a one-way ticket to the East African nation this week
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Asylum seekers are expected to be told this week they could be sent to Rwanda as part of the Government’s latest deportation policy.
It is understood the Home Office will notify the first group of people that they face a one-way ticket to the East African nation, amid legal challenges over the plans.
Previously the Prime Minister reportedly said he wanted to see the first flights take off by the end of May, but officials are still unable to say when removals could begin and how many people the Government is initially seeking to deport.
Priti Patel
JEAN BIZIMANA
Unconfirmed reports suggest the flights could take place within the next few weeks, with a small number of single men set to be removed in the first instance.
When he announced it last month, Boris Johnson said tens of thousands of people could be flown to Rwanda under the agreement.
But The Times reported that modelling by Home Office officials indicated that only 300 a year could be sent there. The department later said it did not recognise the figure and there was no cap on the number of people who may be sent to Rwanda.
On Friday activists accused Home Secretary Priti Patel of “racist” and “inhumane” policies and called on her to scrap the Rwanda deal during a speech she was giving at a Conservative party dinner.
At least 7,739 people have arrived in the UK after crossings the Channel this year so far, according to PA news agency analysis of government figures. This is more than three times the amount that had arrived in the same period in 2021 (2,439).