The United Kingdom will not have to pay Rwanda millions of pounds over the collapsed asylum agreement that was cancelled by Keir Starmer shortly after he took office, an international court has ruled.
The Rwandan government had sought to sue the UK for more than £100 million, saying it had breached the terms of the deal.
Signed by the previous Conservative government, the deal was meant to see the UK pay Rwanda to host asylum seekers who had arrived illegally in the UK.
Lawyers representing the UK during the three-day hearing in the Netherlands argued that it was “entirely logical” the plan would be scrapped when Labour came to power and “simple common sense” that no further payments would be due. They also denied the UK breached parts of the deal.
“Rwanda is not entitled to any of the forms of relief it seeks,” they told the Hague’s Permanent Court of Arbitration.
Former Prime Minister Rishi Sunak introduced the scheme as a deterrent to those looking to illegally cross the English Channel in small boats. The plan had first been announced in 2022 by then-prime minister Boris Johnson, but faced challenges both in the courts and in Parliament.
Scrapping the scheme was one of Labour’s manifesto pledges ahead of the 2024 general election, and when Starmer came into office he declared the plan “dead and buried.”
