Legislating a lie: the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Act 2024

By Diana Baxter
Diana Baxter provides her opinion on the enactment of the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Act and the wider implications
In April 2022, the government first announced its plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda to have their asylum claims processed and determined there. They did this using the inadmissibility policy, which allows the Home Office to refuse to admit the asylum claims of those who had previously been present in or had another connection to a safe third country where they could have claimed asylum, and instead remove them to another safe third country, i.e., Rwanda.
The lawfulness of the initial Rwanda plan was immediately challenged in the courts, leading to the Supreme Court judgment of 15 November 2023 in R (AAA (Syria) and others) [2023] UKSC 42, in which the Lords found that the policy was unlawful as there are substantial grounds for believing that the removal of the claimants to Rwanda would expose them to a real risk of ill treatment by reason of refoulement, i.e., there was a real risk that Rwanda would return the asylum seekers, either directly or indirectly, to a country where they would be at risk, contrary to international protection law.
The government’s response to the ruling
In response to the Supreme Court judgment, and instead of abandoning the plan, the government ratified the ‘UK–Rwanda treaty: provision of an asylum partnership’ and parliament enacted the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Act 2024 (‘Rwanda Act’), both of which came into force on 25 April 2024.
The Rwanda Treaty is said to strengthen Rwanda’s ‘end-to-end asylum system’ and, in particular, it reconfirms both parties’ commitment to complying with the Refugee Convention and protection against refoulement. Under the treaty, Rwanda agrees not to remove any person relocated there from the UK to any country except the UK. It is clearly too soon to know whether and how the risks found by the Supreme Court are mitigated by this treaty.
The stated purpose of the newly enacted Rwanda Act is ‘to prevent and deter unlawful migration’. It is not to ensure the safety of those seeking protection, whether in the UK or Rwanda.
Under the Rwanda Act, Rwanda is officially designated a ‘safe country’, meaning a country to which persons may be removed from the UK in compliance with all the UK’s obligations under international law, including the Refugee Convention and the European Convention on Human Rights. It orders that ‘every decision-maker must conclusively treat the Republic of Rwanda as a safe country’, with decision-makers defined to include both Home Office caseworkers and courts or tribunals. The Rwanda Act also goes further to disapply certain provisions of the Human Rights Act 1998.
The situation now
Asylum seekers now at risk of removal to Rwanda must be considered inadmissible to the asylum system, have claimed asylum on or after 1 January 2022, be over 18 years old, had a ‘dangerous’ or ‘irregular’ journey to the UK, and not have a family with children under 18 with them.










