UK

Lords tell Sunak: Don’t send Afghan heroes to Rwanda

Rishi Sunak has been urged to ensure Afghan heroes who helped British forces against the Taliban are not deported to Rwanda, as the House of Lords tries to force a change in his flagship “stop the boats” bill.

Two former chiefs of the defence staff, a former defence secretary and a former British ambassador to the US, are among members who want to add an exemption to the Rwanda bill to stop those who have worked alongside the UK forces and arrive in Britain via unsafe and illegal routes from being sent to the African country.

On Monday, the government suffered a series of defeats to the bill at the hands of peers. The Lords backed a demand that parliament cannot declare Rwanda to be safe until the treaty, with its promised safeguards, is fully implemented.

Tory peer Lord Tugendhat accused the government of behaving like the ruling party in George Orwell’s dystopian novel 1984 as the debate in the Lords got under way. Labour former home secretary Lord Blunkett branded the bill “a nonsensical piece of legislation”. The exemption for Afghan military will be debated and voted on on Wednesday.

The call to help those who supported UK forces comes after a series of reports by The Independent which have highlighted the plight of Afghan heroes facing deportation to Rwanda after feeling forced to take dangerous routes to the UK.

One air force pilot who risked his life on combat missions in support of coalition forces was threatened with Rwanda after arriving in Britain on a small boat because he could not wait for help from the government’s Afghan resettlement schemes. That threat has now been removed and he has been granted asylum in Britain after the government was forced into a U-turn by this publication.

Leading lawyer Lord Carlile, the former independent reviewer of terrorism legislation who sits in the Lords, said it was “just, fair and required” to stop such people being deported, adding that there will be a lot of support within the upper chamber to back the amendment. General Sir Richard Dannatt, the former head of the army, also said he backed the move.

The amendment is being brought forward by former Labour defence secretary Lord Browne of Ladyton, who highlighted his concerns with the proposed law by citing four examples of cases uncovered by The Independent.

They include former members of the Afghan special forces units, known as The Triples, who fought alongside and were paid and trained by the UK special forces. One former senior British diplomat said it “beggared belief” that these soldiers, who were forced to flee the Taliban, could face being deported to the east African country after all they had been through.

Under the terms of the Illegal Migration Act, the government is required to remove illegal migrants who entered the country after 20 July 2023, when the act received royal assent. The act also bans ministers from granting asylum to anyone who entered the UK illegally on or after 7 March 2023, when it had its first reading.

The new clause, which is also being proposed by crossbench peers Lord Houghton of Richmond, Lord Stirrup, and Lord Kerr of Kinlochard, would mean that people of any nationality who supported the armed forces overseas in an “exposed or meaningful manner” or who were “employed by or indirectly contracted to provide services to the UK government in an exposed or meaningful manner” would be ineligible for Rwanda deportation. It would also exempt their family members from deportation.

Lord Carlile told The Independent he would support the amendment, adding that those affected would be at risk of being deported back to Afghanistan from Rwanda – further putting their lives in danger.

“If it is put to the vote, there will be a lot of support for not sending people who worked with Britain in Afghanistan to Rwanda – provided peers are satisfied it is drawn in a way which would not allow for people to use the system illegitimately,” he said.

“Obviously, we want to help genuine Afghans who would be in real trouble if, via Rwanda, they were returned to Afghanistan,” he added.

“We have to understand that the House of Lords cannot simply wreck government legislation, we are not trying to do that.

The Independent has highlighted the plight of Afghan heroes facing deportation to Rwanda after feeling forced to take dangerous routes to the UK

“But if there is something that is just and fair and required, then we will say to the government, ‘this is not acceptable’.”

Gen The Lord Dannatt, former chief of the general staff, also said he supported the amendment, though he wasn’t present in the Lords on Monday.

Tim Willasey-Wilsey, a former diplomat who worked closely with Triples unit 333 and is now a visiting professor at King’s College London, welcomed Lord Browne’s amendment and said that the idea that men and women who had been forced to flee to escape murder in Afghanistan because of their service in the Triples could be sent to Rwanda “beggared belief”.

He added: “It is imperative that the House of Commons should accept Lord Browne’s amendment.”

One Afghan special forces sniper who fought alongside Brits has been left languishing in a UK hotel for 17 months without asylum

Our exclusive story on 13 August 2023

Xural.com

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