The Irish government
and the UK government seem to be saying much the
same thing about an increase in the number of asylum-seekers entering the
Republic from the north of Ireland – that it’s somehow to do with fear of being
sent to Rwanda. Reliably enough, the extreme Unionists in the north have a
rather different explanation,
which is that it’s the fault of the Republic for demanding an open border with
the north; there’s nothing that they’d like more than to build a nice big wall
across the island. Disregarding the latter group – it is another reliable
factor in politics that the unionists have very special spectacles for looking
at events – that rare unity of interpretation doesn’t seem to have much basis
in hard fact, being based more on anecdotal evidence from a few individuals who
have made the journey.
Sunak’s celebration
of it as an indicator of the ‘success’ of his Rwanda policy is based on
redefining what success looks like. From the outset, he’s been saying that
success is all about ‘stopping the boats’; now he seems to be saying that the
policy will still be a success if the boats keep coming, as long as all the
passengers promptly decamp to the Irish Republic. A train ticket from Dover to
Liverpool would at least be a great deal cheaper than a charter plane to
Kigali, but I probably shouldn’t put ideas into their heads. The Irish
government is planning emergency legislation to allow the arrivals to be deported
back to the UK, although it’s not exactly clear how that might work, given that
the UK government will presumably decline to accept people under such
circumstances. And even if they did, the lack of border controls means that
they can immediately get onto a ferry to Belfast and then return to the
Republic. There would be a certain circular irony, though, in the idea that the threat of being deported to the UK would deter people from travelling to Eire.
In the meantime, the
passing of the shameful Safety of Rwanda Act has led to the news
that the government is to institute a major round-up of asylum-seekers across
the UK, with the aim of placing thousands into detention awaiting a flight to
Kigali. They could be held in detention for months, even if the government
succeeds in getting flights off the ground in 10 -12 weeks time as they hope,
despite the unlikelihood in practice. Assuming each aircraft has a capacity of
200 passengers (we don’t know yet what planes are to be chartered), and that
each ‘passenger’ requires at least 2 border guards to restrain them, that would
be a maximum of around 66 migrants per flight (in reality, the chance of filling
flights, given the legal and practical processes involved, to say nothing of
the risks of transporting a large number of reluctant passengers and the capacity of Rwanda to accept them, is small). If
there were to be three flights per week, that’s a maximum of 200 deportees each
week. With 2200 held in detention at any one time, the ‘standard’ waiting time
in a detention facility rapidly grows from the initial 10-12 weeks for the
first recipients of the government’s ‘compassion’ (© Rishi Sunak) to at least 21-23
weeks – or five months plus – for the last of the first 2200 to be rounded up,
and at least three months for all those later detainees who fill the places as
they empty.
Sunak and those around
him clearly believe that millions of people will be motivated to vote Tory by
the sight of Border Force guards roaming the streets, swooping on people, forcibly
carting them off, and then placing them in detention centres for months where
they are denied full legal representation, before forcibly carrying them in
handcuffs onto planes to send them to a country which they have never visited
and where they have no wish to live. It’s evocative of some of the worst
aspects of past history, both in Europe in the last century and the earlier use of transportation (even those convicts transported to Australian penal
colonies for trivial offences had some sort of formal trial first, however
unfair that trial might have been) and is a long way removed from any
understanding I’ve ever had of modern ‘British’ values. I really hope that they’re
as wrong as they should be about the likely voter reaction.
3 comments:
Events are always interesting ,as they sometimes come out of nowhere.
The government of the Republic are I a bit of a problem with its historic demand for an open boarder with the North, where they have insisted that not one CCTV will monitor the crossing.
But hold on, I now read Sinn Fein in the Republic have woken up and remembered that they never said anything of the kind, and they now want a hard border.
The sacred Good Friday Agreement is toast with them overnight.
This is a sign that Sinn Fein are developing into a mature political party, where politicians don`t care a jot about international treaties as domestic policies always trump everything – welcome to the real world.
"Sinn Fein in the Republic ... now want a hard border". Are you sure about that? I haven't seen any news reports suggesting that, and it sounds vanishingly unlikely to me...
The news out of the Republic has been a little suppressed over the last twelve months.
Talking to people that have returned from Dublin the demonstrations have been very large, but Irish papers only reported that there were only hundreds attending. In one recently that I have seen a big crowd was chanting` Sinn Fein traitors` as clearly, they were stuck with their northern border stand on a united Ireland.
Next month there is an election in Ireland, and they have now had spokespersons out there trying to square the circle stating that reviews of past policy are called for, as their policy may not apply to the current situation.
In short, support is vanishing from them like frost in the desert sun and to get people elected to Europe – although the job of the member is not significant ,the money the party get from European Parliament is – as you and I have seen in another party, most welcome.
So panic mode is the order of the day and say anything to stop the flow of their support at this late stage is the only option, as they do not have the time to change policy.
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